What is Lipozolve?
Lipozolve considers itself a fat burner. That really shouldn’t come as a shock to anyone considering the name of the product right? Could they make it sound any closer to liposuction? Anyways, name aside, our goal is to take you a little bit further into the mechanics of such a weight loss pill to determine if your hard-earned dollars should go towards investing in this product.
What do we know about Lipozolve?
Lipozolve is fueled by less then a handful of ingredients. That’s certainly one approach, considering some products will jam as many as 20 to 30 ingredients into one pill. To be honest, I’m not sure which route I prefer.
Some pills are guilty of over-stuffing the products to the point where you get a lot of supplements but not enough of the supplements to make them effective. Other products under stack their ingredient lines causing them to underperform or reduce the products overall value. When I look at Lipozolve’s ingredient line-up it feels to me like it will underperform. They have basically 4 key ingredients:
- Reservatrol
- Green Tea
- Cha de bugre
- Hoodia Gordonii
Reservatrol comes from grapes and from red wine. Some feel like the antioxidants in this supplement result in weight loss, and while I don’t disagree with them entirely, it’s been noted that the wine and the antioxidants contained therein flow through the body too quick for the antioxidants to be absorbed and take effect.
Green Tea is probably the best ingredient you’ll find in Lipozolve; the caffeine found in Green Tea is able to boost metabolism, increasing the rate at which the body burns fat.
Green Tea is also rich in other antioxidants such as EGCG but it is important to realize that for Green Tea to really be effective it needs 400 mg per serving. That’s probably going to be a reach for Lipozolve, as I don’t see the profile containing that much of it. This lack of proper amounts makes their best ingredient invalid and doesn’t bode well for the success of the product.
Talk about overhyping an ingredient, Cha de bugre is an extract taken from a Brazilian herb. There’s a lot of talk about what this guy can do but there’s no concrete evidence to back up those claims. Until something changes I really won’t look at Cha de bugre as a viable weight loss ingredient.
Hoodia Gordonii may be one of the more controversial supplements out there. Sure there is some thought that this product will help suppress your appetite and help you lose weight. But there’s also the chance that this supplement could be a fake. A recent report suggested that two-thirds of all Hoodia used in diet supplements isn’t real South African Hoodia. I have a hard time trusting this ingredient.
Final thoughts
Consumers are luke warm on the product and that makes me a little nervous. You’ll never find a product that draws a 100% approval rating but good products usually draw a majority of favorable reviews.
The main ingredient, Green Tea, is underused and the other ingredients don’t do much for us. Because of that and the high $50 price tag makes us feel uneasy about giving it solid marks. We think you can do better.


