Is This Supplement Legit

Legitimacy check

Is Burdock root (Arctium) legit?

Independent ingredient analysis - not a product endorsement. Open full verdict hub

Burdock root (Arctium) scores 56/100 overall in our editorial model, with separate tracks for evidence strength, safety, and marketing noise. This page answers the “is it legit?” question directly: what’s well supported, what’s overclaimed, and how we label the verdict - not a substitute for your clinician’s judgment.

Insufficient evidenceOverall 56/100
How we score →

Evidence

48

Human trial breadth and quality

Safety

72

Tolerability and known risks

Hype gap

64

Marketing vs proof (higher = more hype)

Signal

What human evidence tends to support

Human data quality varies by indication and extract. Registry evidence tier: low. Use the evidence score on this page as a directional read, not a substitute for systematic reviews for your specific question.

Context

Where claims often outrun the trials

Marketing and influencer stacks often outpace replicated human outcomes for this category.

Retail framing

What products usually promise

Retail copy for Burdock root often generalizes mechanisms or pilot outcomes. Compare any “clinically proven” language to primary endpoints, population, and dose.

Our verdict label

Insufficient evidenceOverall 56/100

Not enough quality human research to justify confident conclusions - treat bold promises skeptically.

Same ingredient, other questions

Focused pages for common searches about Burdock root (Arctium). Each uses the same underlying evidence file with a different lens.

Explore further

A few hand-picked entry points around Burdock root (Arctium): categories, answers to narrow questions, and comparisons.