Claims on website deliberately misleading
Absolutely bombarded by ads from this company in my Facebook feed, no doubt because I meet their target demographic and then made the mistake of clicking on one of their ads.
The product looks legitimate and contains "as seen on" logos for trusted brands such as Good Housekeeping, WebMD and Healthline, but I did a bit of research and although Good Housekeeping did run an article comparing Sleep Aid Supplements on 30 July 2025, there is absolutely no mention of this product, only some of the ingredients that they claim their product contains.
Worse, there is a Trustpilot 5* logo on the checkout page, stating they have "173,000 happy customers", but there is no link to their page on Trustpilot and I subsequently discovered that it doesn't in fact exist. When I queried it with Customer Service, I was told that it was because UK customers are sometimes unable to view their Trustpilot page, as it is US-based. This is untrue because I can see pages for companies on the US version of Trustpilot and they're not there. There are pages for similarly named companies, one of which sells sleep devices, but not supplements. They said they're in the process of setting up their UK page so I said I'd help by creating one for them, based on my experience with them so far... Hence the review!
Customer Services instead directed me to the positive reviews and photos featured on their own website, but I am not inclined to believe that they are genuine or independent, based on the misleading nature of the logos.
I'm not certain this is a scam and the product might live up to their claims, but I'm not going to risk spending money on, let alone ingesting, something that hasn't been independently proven as safe or efficatious.
24 gennaio 2026
Non scritta su invito