This shorter version of my full Nuphedrine review will give you a brief look at Nuphedrine so that you can make better decisions when choosing a diet pill. Nuphedrine provides a lot of promises and claims, but does it deliver the results? During this review we look at the product itself, as well as the company behind it.
The first thing you see when you get to Nuphedrine’s website is the claim that it is only pill that contains hoodia and Advantra Z. This sounded familiar, so I looked and just as I thought, Miracle Burn has the exact same claim. If I had to guess, these two product are made by the same company, but even if that’s true, it’s still a completely false claim.
Aside from these two ingredients, we don’t really know what’s in Nuphedrine because they don’t provide a list of the ingredients anywhere on the site. This is always a red flag. Hoodia gordonii is a diet pill ingredient that has gotten to be very popular lately for it’s claimed appetite suppressing abilities. But despite this popularity, hoodia has not been proven in a single clinical study to actually work. Advantra Z contains synephrine which has been shown in studies to aid in weight loss. But its certainly not enough to cause great weight loss unless it’s accompanied by other good ingredients.
Another thing worth noting is their interesting upsell during the checkout process. You have access to free shipping, but in order for you to get it, you have to agree to enroll in some weight loss program that costs $4.92 a month. Maybe you’ll like it, I dont know. But I suspect it’s not much of a program or product. They bill you annually, so watch out for a charge of $59.04 after you’ve accepted. This is your classic example of trying to squeeze more money out of the consumer. Make sure you read what you’re getting yourself into.
The ‘testimonials’ were also a bit of a red flag. I was curious about the amounts of weight that they all claimed to lose. I used a Benford test (see my full review for more info on this test) and to make a long story short, the results showed that the amounts of weight that the testimonials showed was lost, pointed to the fact that they were likely fabricated results. Bottom line: it appears that Nuphedrine made up the testimonials. Also, below most of the testimonial photos they have ‘results not typical.’ Why not tell us what is typical?
My favorite part about the Nuphedrine website are the before and photos. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen such sad excuses for photos in my life. In many cases, it is very clear that the two photos are of completely different people. And in the ones that are the same person, classic tactics are used (such as changing the lighting, pushing the gut and sucking it in, etc.) For a good collage of their photos, see my full review on Criticalorie.com. Note: Since writing my original review, Nuphedrine has taken off many of the before and after photos that I called into question.
To sum it up, Nuphedrine doesn’t seem to much in terms of a quality product. The few ingredients that we know it does contain aren’t enough to do much to actually help you to lose weight. And as far as their marketing goes, that’s enough by itself to avoid Nuphedrine. Thumbs down for Nuphedrine.
