What are the active ingredients and their doses in MemoryLift supplements?

Checked on December 7, 2025
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Executive summary

Available promotional and retail materials list a recurring set of ingredients for “Memory Lift” — commonly including Bacopa monnieri, Ginkgo biloba, Rhodiola rosea, choline/AGP choline, B‑vitamins (B6, B12), selenium, biotin, lutein/zeaxanthin and plant extracts such as green tea and bilberry — but none of the provided sources publish a complete, single label with exact per‑ingredient doses (available sources do not mention precise doses) [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. Marketing releases emphasize a proprietary blend and a two‑capsule daily serving (30‑day bottle = 60 capsules) in some listings, but again do not show full per‑ingredient milligram or microgram amounts in the materials supplied here [5].

1. Ingredients repeatedly named across marketing materials

Multiple press releases and product listings for Memory Lift name the same core botanicals and nutrients: Bacopa monnieri (Brahmi), Ginkgo biloba, Rhodiola rosea, choline (sometimes “AGP choline”), vitamin B6 and B12, biotin, selenium, and carotenoids like lutein/zeaxanthin; some pages also list cinnamon extract, bilberry and green tea extract [1] [2] [3] [4]. These constituent names recur across GlobeNewswire, AccessNewswire and marketplace descriptions, indicating a consistent formulation theme in the available reporting [2] [1] [3] [4].

2. Dosing and proprietary blend language — the missing detail

Several items state a recommended serving (two capsules daily, 60 capsules per bottle = 30‑day supply) and refer to a “proprietary blend” or a formula of “specific doses,” but none of the supplied documents include a label showing exact milligram/microgram amounts per ingredient [5] [4]. Because many supplement makers use proprietary blends, marketers can list ingredients without revealing individual doses; the materials here follow that pattern [5] [4]. Therefore, exact active ingredient doses are not available in these sources (available sources do not mention precise per‑ingredient doses) [5] [4].

3. Claims manufacturers make about how the ingredients work

Promotional copy attributes mechanistic benefits to the listed ingredients: Bacopa and Ginkgo are tied to neurotransmitter support and memory; Rhodiola to stress reduction; choline and B‑vitamins to neurotransmitter production and neural communication; antioxidants like lutein/zeaxanthin, selenium, and bilberry to oxidative protection and blood flow — language consistent across press releases and review pieces [1] [2] [4]. Those are marketing explanations; the current sources present them as manufacturer claims rather than independent clinical proof [2] [4].

4. Variations between retailer listings and press releases — a caution

Retail listings (for example an eBay posting) include a broad ingredient roster that overlaps with press materials but also show discrepancies and even buyer complaints about mismatched labels, underscoring supply‑chain or listing inconsistencies in secondary marketplaces [3]. Several press pieces also contain affiliate disclosures and promotional language; readers should view single‑source product statements with caution and seek the official label before purchase [6] [5] [3].

5. What independent sources here do and do not confirm

The provided documents confirm the identity of many ingredients and the typical serving pattern (two capsules, 60‑capsule bottle) in marketing materials [5] [1] [2]. They do not confirm individual ingredient doses, clinical trial results for the finished product, or third‑party certificate‑of‑analysis values in the supplied reporting (available sources do not mention per‑ingredient doses or independent clinical data) [5] [4].

6. Practical takeaway for consumers and journalists

If you need exact doses (critical for drug‑supplement interactions and evidence appraisal), obtain a photographed Supplement Facts panel from the manufacturer, retailer, or a reputable third‑party seller; the sources provided here do not include that panel (available sources do not mention a full Supplement Facts label) [5] [4]. Be aware that marketing claims across GlobeNewswire/Newswire/AccessNewswire pieces emphasize natural ingredients and synergy but rely on manufacturer narratives; independent verification and full label transparency remain essential [2] [6] [4].

Limitations: This analysis is limited to the supplied documents. They consistently name ingredients and a serving regimen but do not publish per‑ingredient dosing; any assertion about exact milligram amounts cannot be made from the materials provided here (available sources do not mention precise doses) [1] [5] [4].

Want to dive deeper?
What clinical evidence supports MemoryLift's ingredient dosages?
Are MemoryLift supplements standardized for active compounds per batch?
What are potential side effects and interactions of MemoryLift's ingredients?
How do MemoryLift doses compare with those used in clinical trials for cognition?
Which regulatory body has evaluated MemoryLift's labeling and claims?