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Safety 7 min read

Things to know before you buy anything

Before buying anything, slow down. Most bad experiences start with rushed decisions: unclear labels, missing batch numbers, vague claims, or products that pretend to be medicines when they are not.

Visual snapshot
Identity
Match
label, batch, and COA agree
Purity
Clear %
shown by independent lab
Support
Traceable
seller answers basic questions

The three basic checks

First, confirm what the product claims to contain. Second, confirm whether that exact batch has a third-party lab report. Third, confirm the seller gives clear storage, handling, and support information.

If any of those three checks fail, it is safer to walk away. A cheap vial becomes expensive if the identity or purity is uncertain.

Common red flags

Be careful with sellers that promise guaranteed body changes, use medical before-and-after claims, hide company information, or publish COAs that do not match the product batch.

Another warning sign is pressure: limited-time countdowns, private payment only, or customer support that pushes you to buy instead of answering basic questions.

The safest mindset

Think like a researcher, not a fan. Your job is not to find reasons to trust a product; your job is to look for reasons not to trust it. If the product still looks strong after that, you have a better starting point.