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Has Steven Guntry posted endorsements of Iron Boost on social media or his website?

Checked on November 23, 2025
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Executive summary

Available reporting in the provided set does not show Steven Gundry (also spelled "Gundry" in sources) explicitly endorsing a product named "Iron Boost" on his personal website or social media; the sources instead show Gundry’s brand Gundry MD promoting its own supplements and at least one third‑party site accusing scammers of faking Gundry endorsements (not of Iron Boost specifically) [1] [2]. Sources do document many Gundry MD product promotions and press activity but do not mention "Iron Boost" by name [1] [3] [4].

1. What the supplied reporting actually covers: Gundry MD products and PR, not "Iron Boost"

The material in the provided results largely documents Gundry MD — Dr. Steven Gundry’s commercial brand — promoting products such as Energy Renew, Bio Complete 3, polyphenol‑rich olive oil and other Gundry MD items, including press releases about retail deals and awards [5] [3] [4] [1]. These items show Gundry and his company actively marketing supplements and publishing health content on gundrymd.com [1] [6]. None of those sources refer to a product called "Iron Boost" or to Gundry personally posting an endorsement of such a product [1] [3] [4].

2. A separate theme: fake or misleading endorsements exist in the supplement space

One result explicitly warns about fraudulent campaigns that use deepfakes and fake endorsements to sell supplements — it describes a deepfake of “Dr. Steven Gundry” promoting a product called Memory Lift and concludes Gundry has never endorsed that product [2]. That item establishes there is precedent in the wider reporting for scammers using Gundry’s identity in false endorsements, but it does not mention Iron Boost [2].

3. What this means for the specific question about “Iron Boost”

Because the provided documents list Gundry MD’s own products and a warning about a separate, fake Memory Lift endorsement, but contain no reference to "Iron Boost," available sources do not mention whether Gundry posted endorsements of Iron Boost on social media or his website [1] [2]. The absence of reporting here is not proof of absence — it simply means the supplied set does not include evidence for an Iron Boost endorsement.

4. Two plausible hypotheses, given the available evidence

  • Hypothesis A — Gundry did not endorse Iron Boost: it would be consistent with the documented pattern that Gundry and Gundry MD promote their own branded supplements and that third‑party sites have flagged fake endorsements using his likeness [1] [2].
  • Hypothesis B — Gundry did endorse Iron Boost but that endorsement is not present in the supplied reporting: because Gundry’s commercial activity and press presence are well documented, an endorsement could exist outside this dataset; however, such a claim is not supported by the current sources [1] [3].

5. How to check this more definitively (next reporting steps)

To settle this question, examine Gundry’s official channels (gundrymd.com, his verified social accounts) and authoritative fact‑checks or brand statements. The Gundry MD website and its news/press pages are represented in the current results and are the logical first places to look for any official endorsements [1] [3]. Also search fact‑check outlets and the specific product’s marketing to see if they show screenshots or links alleging his endorsement; the provided deepfake warning [2] shows how scammers can fabricate endorsements, so primary verification matters.

6. Caveats and source limits

This analysis relies strictly on the supplied documents. The sources confirm Gundry MD’s active product promotion and a known fake‑endorsement case involving Memory Lift, but they do not mention Iron Boost one way or the other; therefore, I cannot assert that Gundry did or did not post an Iron Boost endorsement based on these files alone [1] [2]. Any definitive claim beyond "not found in current reporting" would require additional sources.

Want to dive deeper?
Has Steven Guntry publicly disclosed any financial ties to Iron Boost or its makers?
What specific claims has Steven Guntry made about Iron Boost’s benefits or ingredients?
Have independent fact-checkers evaluated Steven Guntry’s endorsements of Iron Boost?
When and on which platforms did Steven Guntry post about Iron Boost (e.g., Facebook, X, Instagram, personal website)?
Have followers or commenters challenged or corroborated Steven Guntry’s Iron Boost posts?