Index/Topics/Supplement labeling

Supplement labeling

The importance of clear labeling and transparency in supplement packaging.

Fact-Checks

6 results
Feb 6, 2026

Lumine organic magnesium complex

markets a multi-form “Magnesium Complex” promising broad benefits from sleep to muscle cramps and cellular energy, relying on customer testimonials and a proprietary “8-Form Restoration System” claim ...

Feb 2, 2026

How can consumers verify whether a brain‑enhancing supplement contains unapproved drugs or adulterants?

Consumers can reduce risk by combining careful label and background checks with independent verification: search product listings in public databases, favor supplements with third‑party testing, and—w...

Jan 11, 2026

What active ingredients are listed on keryleaf supplement labels?

Keryleaf-specific active ingredients cannot be listed from the supplied reporting because none of the provided sources include a Keryleaf label or product sheet; however, the available material establ...

Jan 10, 2026

How do marketers package preliminary lab findings about natural products into supplement claims, and what red flags indicate misleading advertising?

Marketers routinely translate preliminary lab work—cell, animal, or single small human studies—into consumer-facing supplement claims by leaning on vague qualifiers, selective citations, and non-autho...

Jan 8, 2026

What is the official Supplement Facts label for Rosabella Moringa as printed on 2025 bottles?

The official Supplement Facts panel on 2025 Rosabella Moringa bottles identifies the active ingredient as the leaf of Moringa oleifera—listed as “Horseradish Tree (Moringa) (moringa oleifera) (leaf)”—...

Jan 6, 2026

What do regulatory agencies and third-party lab tests reveal about Burn Peak's purity and label accuracy?

Publicly available reporting shows Burn Peak and its promoters repeatedly claim third‑party batch testing, manufacture in FDA‑registered/GMP‑certified facilities, and transparent ingredient disclosure...