Who owns or commercializes Memory Lift and where is it available for sale?
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Executive summary
Memory Lift appears in two distinct types of offerings: a browser-based cognitive-training product run by Steel Trap Labs LLC at memorylift.com (explicitly not a supplement) and multiple dietary-supplement products marketed under the same or similar “Memory Lift” name sold through a variety of commercial sites and press releases (including GlobeNewswire / Newswire promotions) [1] [2] [3]. Available reporting shows the Steel Trap Labs product is a digital training tool; the supplement versions are promoted via several commercial landing pages, third‑party marketplaces and PR channels, with launch claims for U.S., Canada and Australia [1] [4] [5].
1. Two different “Memory Lift” products — a digital trainer and a supplement
Public records distinguish a browser-run training program, Memory Lift, operated by Steel Trap Labs LLC that explicitly denies affiliation with any dietary-supplement product [1]. Separately, multiple press releases and commerce sites advertise a Memory Lift dietary supplement — a 60‑capsule nootropic formula promoted in GlobeNewswire and other PR pieces and sold through dedicated “official” storefronts [2] [3] [6].
2. Who owns or runs the browser-based Memory Lift
The Memory Lift training tool’s site text names Steel Trap Labs LLC and includes a disclaimer that the program does not make medical claims and is “not affiliated with Memory Lift Supplements,” identifying Steel Trap Labs LLC as the operator of the browser product [1].
3. Who is behind the supplement claims — press releases and commercial sites
The supplement version’s public footprint is primarily PR and commercial landing pages rather than an obvious corporate registry. GlobeNewswire/Newswire press releases promote a Memory Lift nootropic supplement with launch claims and product details (60 capsules, two per day) [2] [3]. Commercial “official” storefronts (memorylift.us; memorylift-official.com; memorylift-us-us.com and variants) present product pages, pricing, and marketing copy asserting U.S. manufacturing and money‑back guarantees but do not clearly display a single corporate owner name in the snippets provided [5] [7] [8].
4. Where the supplement is marketed as available for sale
Press releases and product pages claim launches and availability across multiple countries — notably the United States, Canada and Australia — and GlobeNewswire copy repeats U.S.-centric launch language [4] [2]. Several “official” sales sites present U.S. pricing and checkout offers [5] [8]. Marketplace listings (Walmart, eBay) and independent sellers also list “Memory Lift” or “Memory Lift Pro” products, indicating third‑party distribution beyond the branded sites [9] [10].
5. Fragmentation, multiple vendors, and potential for unrelated products
Search results show a fragmented ecosystem: different domains, “Pro” formulations on retail sites (Walmart listing for Memory Lift Pro), and marketplace lots on eBay and third‑party retailers selling variants or bundles [9] [10] [11]. This pattern raises the likelihood that multiple, unrelated manufacturers or re‑branders are using the Memory Lift name or similar marks to sell different formulations [9] [11].
6. Credibility signals and red flags in available reporting
PR-distributed launch announcements (GlobeNewswire/Newswire) provide product specs and marketing claims but do not substitute for regulatory filings or corporate disclosures tying a named manufacturer to the supplement [2] [3]. Several “official” commerce pages make strong marketing claims (price discounts, money‑back guarantees, U.S. manufacturing in FDA‑registered/GMP facilities) without accompanying verifiable manufacturer identity in the cited snippets [5] [7]. The Steel Trap Labs disclaimer explicitly separates the browser product from supplement claims, underscoring the risk of brand confusion [1].
7. What sources do not say (limitations)
Available sources do not provide a single, verifiable corporate manufacturer name for the supplement beyond promotional domains and PR outlets; they do not show regulatory approvals or third‑party lab certificates in the provided snippets (not found in current reporting). The reporting does not document a consolidated distribution network or exclusive retailer for the supplement beyond the multiple “official” domains and marketplace listings (not found in current reporting).
8. Practical takeaway for buyers and researchers
If you seek the browser-based Memory Lift training program, the site names Steel Trap Labs LLC and disclaims any supplement affiliation [1]. If you seek a Memory Lift supplement, expect multiple seller sites, PR announcements claiming U.S./international launches, and marketplace listings; exercise caution, verify seller identity, and request manufacturing or lab‑testing details before purchase [4] [5] [9].