More often than not a weight loss promise or guarantee is a weight loss scam. There are hundreds if not thousands of these products that boast weight loss results and are really just pushing cheap caffeine pills at a ridiculous mark up. In some cases, yes this will be effective for weight loss because the users are on stimulants, essentially speed pills, that will prevent them from eating or having an appetite. It will also give them energy to workout. The problem with caffeine pills is that eventually, you become desensitized, build up a tolerance, and come crashing back down. It is not a sustainable method for weight loss.
Is Lipo 30 just another stimulants being upsold for 10 times what it is worth, which is essentially just the cost of a cup of coffee?
What the company promises:
The makers of Lipo 30 claim that this is an all natural weight loss supplement that guarantees clinically proven results. Each and every ingredient has been tested to prove that it contributes to weight loss in a safe and effective way. Every bottle on the website sells for $49.95 unless you buy a 90 day supply for $89.95. Every single order has a money back guarantee. Lipo 30 is designed to boost metabolism and burn fat to give you results only getting a liposuction procedure could do.
Lipo 30 Ingredient and Amount List
Caffeine anhydrous usp, Phytosome green tea, Irvingia 7% albumins, Cissus Quadrangularis 2.5%, Alchemila vulgaris 4:1, Olea Europaea L 3:1, Chromax, green coffee bean extract, CoQ10, Cuminum cyminum 5:1, Mentha Longifolio L 5:1, and vegetable glycerin.
This list is the full ingredients found and clinically tested in Lipo 30. The values and percentages based on daily intake are listed on the company’s website.
What’s Fishy?
We aren’t here to talk about all of the great things this pill promises to do, if you want to read that go to the company’s website. We are here to discuss what they claim versus what this pill can actually do. Looking at the ingredient list they have included a rebranded version of Chromium, which is a common ingredient in weight loss pills. The problem is that based on how much you should be intaking even if you are trying to see weight loss results, this amount is far too much. There is a serving size of over 300 mcg when the daily cap off point is at 200 mcg. To make matters worse, if you took the 3 suggested servings daily you would be taking in upwards of 1000 mcg of chromium, which they refer to as Chromax. Chromium is no longer even believed to be associated with weight loss. No tests have been conducted on Lipo 30 itself. There were no trials where they tested on humans and even though they have been done on its individual ingredients, we would be curious to see the results on people trying to lose weight. This has yet to be seen.
The Truth:
This product is insanely priced and is really just a hyped up caffeine pill with nearly dangerous amounts of an ineffective ingredient.