What are the active ingredients and dosages in NeuroMax supplements?

Checked on December 3, 2025
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Executive summary

NeuroMax is a name used by multiple products: a liquid "NeuroMax" from Nutritional Frontiers described as a phenol‑free dietary supplement containing DMG, betaine, folic acid, vitamins B6 and B12, zinc and magnesium (serving size ~7.5 mL) [1] [2]. Separately, “Neuro Max” as a 2025 nootropic product is promoted in press pieces but these articles do not list a complete ingredient panel or exact dosages [3] [4]. Available sources do not provide a single, authoritative ingredients+dosages label covering every product called “NeuroMax” (not found in current reporting).

1. Brand confusion: one name, several products

The term “NeuroMax” appears in at least two distinct contexts in the sources: a liquid, professional‑channel supplement (Nutritional Frontiers’ NeuroMax Liquid) with a published ingredient list focused on B vitamins, minerals and methyl‑donor nutrients [1] [2], and a 2025 marketing push for a capsule-style nootropic called “Neuro Max” that’s promoted in press releases and reviews but lacks a clear, complete supplement facts panel in those items [3] [4]. Reporters and buyers must distinguish which product they mean when asking for “active ingredients and dosages” [1] [3].

2. What the Nutritional Frontiers NeuroMax Liquid lists

Retail and professional supplement pages consistently describe NeuroMax Liquid as containing DMG (dimethylglycine), betaine, folic acid (Quatrefolic®/folate in some listings), vitamins B6 and B12, zinc and magnesium, plus excipients and flavoring; the stated serving size is 7.5 mL (about 1 teaspoon) with dosing directions that vary by age (over 12: 1 teaspoon 3–4 times daily in one listing) [1] [5] [2]. Those pages emphasize behavioral, immune and stress‑support claims, and list "other ingredients" such as purified water, glycerin, xanthan gum, natural flavors, malic acid, stevia and potassium sorbate [1] [5].

3. Missing numbers: dosages are not consistently published in the press pieces

Although product pages give serving sizes and dosing frequency for the liquid product, the specific milligram amounts of each active ingredient are not shown in the press snippets collected here; press articles about a 2025 "Neuro Max" nootropic trumpet a “clean‑label blend” and marketing promises but do not supply a full supplement facts table or per‑ingredient dosages [1] [3] [4]. Therefore, precise milligram/µg dosages for most active components are not available in the current reporting (not found in current reporting).

4. Other “NeuroMax / Neuro‑Max” products in the market and why that matters

Sources show similarly named formulations—MRM’s “Neuro‑Max II” and other retail listings—contain different active ingredients such as phosphatidylserine, ginkgo, vinpocetine, CDP‑choline and others, highlighting that the same or similar name is used by multiple manufacturers with distinct formulas [6] [7] [8]. That multiplicity creates risk for misidentification: a consumer seeking dosages for one “NeuroMax” could be given information for a different product [6].

5. Safety and marketing claims: what sources say and omit

Manufacturer and retail pages for NeuroMax Liquid highlight behavioral and immune benefits and recommend age‑based dosing, but the available texts are promotional and stop short of providing full clinical trial data; separate review sites raise concerns about side effects for some nootropic formulas (dizziness, sleepiness, digestive discomfort) though those comments seem aimed at a different commercially promoted “Neuro Max” formula and are not tied to a single, verifiable label here [9] [3]. The press pieces from 2025 make broad “science‑backed” claims yet do not publish ingredient quantities that would allow independent safety or efficacy assessment [3] [4].

6. Practical next steps for anyone seeking exact active ingredients and dosages

To get authoritative ingredient amounts, request the supplement facts panel or product monograph from the seller, distributor or label photos; for the Nutritional Frontiers liquid, contact the manufacturer or check the full product page on professional distributor sites which sometimes publish full panels [1] [2]. If comparing similarly named products, verify manufacturer (e.g., Nutritional Frontiers vs. MRM vs. other nootropic brands) before relying on any dosage information [7] [6].

Limitations: the files provided include marketing/retail snippets and product descriptions but do not contain a complete, single supplement facts label listing per‑ingredient milligram or microgram dosages for every “NeuroMax” variant (not found in current reporting).

Want to dive deeper?
What clinical evidence supports NeuroMax's effectiveness for cognitive function?
Are there any known side effects or contraindications for NeuroMax ingredients?
How do NeuroMax dosages compare to therapeutic doses used in clinical studies?
Are NeuroMax supplements third-party tested for purity and label accuracy?
Can NeuroMax interact with prescription medications or worsen medical conditions?