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Gut Glucose Investigation: Reviewing the Beomma Supplement Facts for Healthy Blood Sugar Support

Barchart·07/10/2026 11:35:00
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As interest in blood sugar wellness support continues rising in 2026, this Gut Glucose review examines Beomma's brand-stated 458 mg proprietary blend, the chewable tablet format, ingredient-level research, pricing discrepancies, and key details buyers may want to verify before ordering.

LAKELAND, FL / ACCESS Newswire / July 10, 2026 / A quick note on the title: "Investigation" here means this article's own sponsored publishers editorial review - not a regulatory or legal action against the brand. Nothing below should be read as independent proof of the brand's marketing claims. Read on for the actual breakdown.

Quick disclosure, then let's get into it: this is a paid advertorial, written for consumer education about a real product on the market, and a commission is earned if you buy through a link in this article. Every claim below is attributed to the brand, not independently verified. Gut Glucose is a supplement, not a drug - it's not FDA-approved, and it's not meant to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Official site: gutglucose.com, reviewed alongside the physical label and the brand's own video in July 2026.

Gut Glucose Investigation 2026: Reviewing the Beomma Supplement Facts Before Buyers Order (Consumer Research)

TL;DR: Gut Glucose Supplement Facts, Explained

Here's the quick version. Gut Glucose - also written "GutGlucose," or called Beomma Gut Glucose - is a chewable tablet, not a capsule (worth knowing, since some Gut Glucose content online describes a capsule instead), built around a 458 mg proprietary blend of ten ingredients including berberine HCL, Ceylon cinnamon, and banaba leaf extract. It's positioned for adults already managing blood sugar through diet and exercise who want an extra daily supplement - not a replacement for medication or your doctor. One catch worth knowing before you go further: the Gut Glucose official website and its separate VSL tell a somewhat different story, and this article breaks down exactly where they diverge.

You saw an ad for Gut Glucose. Maybe it was a Facebook post, an Instagram reel, or a short video featuring a man introduced as "Dr. Brian Karaan" talking about a gut-based approach to blood sugar. Something caught your attention, and now you're doing exactly what smart buyers do before spending money: checking the details first.

See Gut Glucose's current package options and pricing

Gut Glucose Quick Verification Snapshot - As of July 2026

Here's what's confirmed and what isn't, in one place, before you read the full breakdown below. Start here.

  • Confirmed on the physical label: chewable tablet, 458 mg proprietary blend, ten named ingredients, 30 tablets per bottle, one tablet daily

  • Confirmed on the official order page: 2-, 3-, and 6-bottle package tiers

  • Not yet confirmed - worth checking before you order: the exact 3-bottle total (the brand's own pages show two different figures)

  • Also unconfirmed: the exact guarantee start date and conditions

  • Also unconfirmed: which entity - Beomma or Eagle Labs, Inc. - is on your billing statement

  • Also unconfirmed: the presenter credentials cited in the video ad

None of these open items suggest the product is fake - they're specific, checkable gaps this article surfaces so you don't have to find them at checkout.

What Is Gut Glucose and Who Is It For?

Gut Glucose is marketed by Beomma as a chewable dietary supplement (one tablet, once daily) built around the idea that your gut health and your blood sugar regulation are connected. The brand positions Gut Glucose as a product that supports blood sugar levels already in a normal range, alongside diet and exercise - brand-stated positioning, not an independently verified clinical outcome. If you're already managing your blood sugar through diet and lifestyle and you want an additional daily supplement, that's the audience the brand says it's built for. It is not positioned as a substitute for prescribed diabetes treatment, and you shouldn't treat it as one. The brand's own FDA disclaimer, printed directly on your label, states plainly that these statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. The product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease, including diabetes.

Buyer Takeaway: if you have diagnosed diabetes, prediabetes, or any condition affecting blood sugar, the label itself directs you to consult a physician before using this or any dietary supplement - that's not this article's caution, it's the brand's own printed instruction.

What Does Gut Glucose Actually Do?

According to the brand, you take one chewable tablet daily (no loading dose, no multi-step schedule), and each tablet supplies a 458 mg proprietary blend the brand positions as supporting your glucose metabolism and your general gut wellness. The brand's marketing frames this as a "gut-based protocol." The idea: supporting digestive-system function is connected to how your body handles blood sugar. That gut-metabolism connection is real. It's an active area of nutritional science. But the brand's own materials don't present clinical data on the finished Gut Glucose tablet itself performing this function. The research citations the brand publishes relate to individual ingredients studied independently, not to this specific supplement you'd be taking.

Buyer Takeaway: "gut health affects metabolism" is a legitimate research area; "this specific tablet has been clinically shown to affect it" is a separate claim the brand's own published materials don't make.

What the Video Presentation Says vs. What the Official Site Says

Gut Glucose is promoted through two distinct surfaces that don't always agree with each other: the brand's official order page at gutglucose.com, and a separate video advertisement (VSL) hosted on a different marketing domain. This is a common structure in the supplement space, and it isn't inherently a problem - but the two surfaces present the product differently enough that buyers should know what they're looking at before they decide which version to trust.

The official order page presents Gut Glucose in a relatively restrained register: a fixed 458 mg proprietary blend listed on a standard Supplement Facts panel, a standard FDA disclaimer, and a conventional shipping and refund framework. The video advertisement uses a considerably more dramatic register. It is narrated by a person introduced as "Dr. Brian Karaan," who is described as having more than 22 years of experience and having personally treated more than 4,000 people with type 2 diabetes. The video presents a "gut-based protocol" that it describes as having been "confirmed by Harvard researchers in 2024" - a claim this article could not independently verify, since no specific paper, author list, or institutional source is identified anywhere in the materials reviewed. The video also uses on-page urgency devices - a countdown-style framing and a limited-units message - that go beyond anything stated on the official order page.

Buyer Takeaway: when a brand's video presentation and its official order page disagree, the more conservative source - typically the official site and the physical label - is the safer one to base a purchase decision on. That's the approach this article takes throughout.

Review the current Gut Glucose label and order details

Lander Phrase Glossary: Decoding Gut Glucose's Marketing Language

The video advertisement and surrounding marketing for Gut Glucose use several phrases worth breaking down before you take them at face value.

"Confirmed by Harvard researchers in 2024." Source: the video presentation. What it means: the brand is asserting that a specific finding was validated by researchers at Harvard. What it doesn't mean: this article located no citation, paper title, author, or journal reference anywhere in the brand's materials that would allow this claim to be checked. Until the brand provides that citation, it should be treated as an unverified marketing statement rather than a scientific fact.

Buyer Takeaway: a specific researcher, institution, and publication year is a checkable claim only if a citation exists - this one doesn't, in the materials reviewed.

"Gut-based protocol." Source: the video presentation. What it means: the brand's framing that supporting gut health is the mechanism behind the product's intended benefit. What it doesn't mean: an FDA-recognized treatment protocol for any diagnosed condition.

Buyer Takeaway: "protocol" here is marketing language for "our approach," not a clinical term.

"Insulin free" and A1C-change testimonials. Source: brand-hosted testimonials displayed on the official order page and/or the brand's broader marketing materials. What it means: individual customers, in their own words, describing personal outcomes. What it doesn't mean: a representative or typical result, or evidence that the supplement itself caused any medical change - see the testimonials section below for the full treatment of this.

Buyer Takeaway: a testimonial is one person's account, not a clinical outcome, and it should never be read as a promise of what will happen to you.

Who Is "Dr. Brian Karaan"? What Could and Couldn't Be Verified

The video advertisement for Gut Glucose is narrated by a person identified as Dr. Brian Karaan, described as a physician with more than two decades of clinical experience (22-plus years, per the video) treating type 2 diabetes. This article could not locate an independent public record - a medical board listing, institutional faculty page, or published biography outside the brand's own marketing - confirming this individual's identity, licensure, or the specific credentials claimed in the video. That's not proof of anything either way. It means the claim currently rests entirely on the brand's own say-so.

Let's be clear about what this article is and isn't saying. This is not an accusation of fraud. It is not a claim that the presenter is fictional. It is a statement that no independent verification was found in the materials reviewed for this article, and that the "22 years of experience," "4,000 patients," and "confirmed by Harvard researchers" claims should be read as brand-asserted marketing statements rather than independently established facts until the brand provides supporting documentation.

Real research on the gut microbiome's role in metabolic health is active and growing - that underlying science is legitimate. What isn't independently confirmed is that this specific presenter, or this specific finished tablet, is the validated product of that research the video implies. Buyer Takeaway: separate the real science (gut-metabolism research exists) from the specific claim (this presenter and this product are the proven application of it) - the first is supported broadly; the second isn't, based on what's publicly checkable. Readers who want a closer walkthrough of the video presentation itself, question by question, can find a separate step-by-step review of the video presentation's gut-health claims covering that ground in more depth.

Check the current Gut Glucose order page directly

Ingredients: What the Beomma Supplement Facts Panel Shows

The physical Gut Glucose label lists a Proprietary Blend of 458 mg per chewable tablet, containing ten named components:

  • Xylitol

  • Ceylon cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum) bark

  • Corosolic acid from banaba (Lagerstroemia speciosa) leaf extract

  • Saffron (Crocus sativus L.) bulb extract

  • Fucoxanthin (from Laminaria japonica seaweed)

  • Fucoidan (from Laminaria japonica seaweed)

  • Citrus sinensis

  • Kudzu (Pueraria montana) flower extract

  • Oleuropein from olive (Olea europaea) leaf extract

  • Berberine HCL

Because this is a proprietary blend, the label does not disclose individual milligram amounts per ingredient - only the combined 458 mg total, marked with a dagger symbol indicating no established Daily Value. Other ingredients listed are natural flavors, stearic acid, magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide, and stevia (Reb A).

Buyer Takeaway: a proprietary blend means you know what's in the tablet but not how much of each individual ingredient - that's a legal and common label format, but it does limit how precisely any single component's research can be mapped onto this specific product.

The label also carries a qualified manufacturing statement: "Made in the USA with globally sourced ingredients." That qualifier matters - it is not an unqualified domestic-manufacturing claim, and this article quotes it in full rather than simplifying it to "Made in the USA."

What the Research Says About These Ingredients

The brand publishes its own reference list connecting several of these ingredients to blood-sugar-related research. It states explicitly that these references relate to individual ingredients, not to the finished tablet you'd actually be swallowing. That distinction matters, so here's the honest breakdown of what you're looking at:

  • Berberine: Yin, Xing, and Ye's 2008 work in Metabolism, and a 2015 meta-analysis in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology, both examining its effect in people with type 2 diabetes

  • Ceylon cinnamon: a 2013 systematic review in the Annals of Family Medicine

  • Banaba leaf extract / corosolic acid: a 2012 paper in Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine

  • Olive leaf / oleuropein: a randomized, placebo-controlled crossover trial in PLoS ONE, looking at insulin sensitivity in middle-aged overweight men

  • Fucoxanthin: a 2009 paper in Molecular Medicine Reports, in animal-model research

None of these studies tested the Gut Glucose tablet itself (that distinction matters more than it sounds). They tested the named ingredient, often at a different dose, in a different delivery form, in a different study population than what's actually in your bottle. The brand's own disclaimer confirms this: these references are informational only, and they don't imply Gut Glucose treats, cures, or prevents any condition. For readers who want the fuller gut-health-and-berberine research angle behind this category of product, earlier coverage of the broader gut-health positioning behind Gut Glucose's marketing goes deeper on that specific angle. Buyer Takeaway: real ingredient-level research existing is a meaningfully different claim from finished-product research existing. You're getting the former here, not the latter, based on what the brand has actually published.

Two Distributor Names on One Label: Beomma and Eagle Labs, Inc.

Two names, one label. The physical Gut Glucose label carries two different distributor names on different panels. The front-facing panel lists "Beomma.com, Lakeland FL 33804" (with a phone number attached). A separate panel of the same label lists "Distributed By: Eagle Labs, Inc." without a distinguishing address of its own. Neither the label nor the general terms-of-service text reviewed for this article resolves which of the two names is the primary operating entity, or whether they're affiliated divisions of the same company. This article documents both names rather than picking one to present as the sole operator, and treats "Beomma" as the primary reference point since it appears as the brand name on the front label and matches the domain used for customer support.

Adding to the picture, the separate video-advertisement landing page's terms-of-service text references yet a third name, "Natuvitta" (found only in that page's legal boilerplate) - a name that doesn't appear anywhere on the physical label or the official order page. This kind of multi-entity structure isn't unusual in the direct-response supplement space, where marketing, fulfillment, and legal entities are sometimes split across affiliated companies, but it does mean buyers shouldn't assume any single name is "the company" without checking. A closer side-by-side look at where the label and the marketing page disagree on other specifics is covered in separate coverage comparing what the Gut Glucose label discloses against what the marketing page claims, for readers who want that comparison in full.

Buyer Takeaway: if you need to resolve a billing or legal question, be prepared to reference Beomma, Eagle Labs, Inc., and Natuvitta by name, since materials reviewed for this article didn't establish a single unifying entity.

How to Use Gut Glucose

  • Suggested use: one chewable tablet daily, or as directed by a healthcare professional

  • Storage: away from heat, light, and humidity, in a cool, dry place, out of reach of children

  • Caution: do not use if the safety seal is damaged or missing

Buyer Takeaway: "or as directed by your healthcare professional" is on the label itself - if you're already under a doctor's care for blood sugar, that's a reason to loop them in before adding this, not just a formality.

What's Included

Each bottle contains 30 chewable tablets (a 30-day supply at the one-tablet-daily suggested use). The brand's order page structures purchases in multi-bottle packages rather than single-bottle-only; the specific package tiers and what a "180-day supply" versus "90-day supply" bottle count works out to are covered in the pricing section below.

See what's included in each Gut Glucose package

Gut Glucose Pricing and Package Options

The official order page currently presents three package tiers. The separate video-advertisement page shows per-bottle figures for these same tiers:

  • 2-bottle (60-day supply): roughly $89 per bottle, $178 total, plus $9.99 shipping

  • 3-bottle, "Most Popular" (90-day supply): inconsistent on the brand's own page - $79 per bottle with a $237 total shown in one place, a $207 total shown in another

  • 6-bottle (180-day supply): roughly $49 per bottle, $294 total, free shipping

Because checkout pages can change, treat the final checkout page as controlling. Confirm the exact total, shipping charge, and billing descriptor directly at checkout before you pay - this is a case where the brand's own pages disagree with each other, not a typo you can safely round off in either direction.

Buyer Takeaway: when a brand's own site shows two different totals for the same package, that's a checkout-page detail worth screenshotting before you buy, not something to assume will resolve in your favor.

What Buyers Are Saying: Gut Glucose Reviews and Complaints

The brand's order page displays Gut Glucose testimonials describing a range of experiences, including specific claims of A1C readings dropping from figures such as 9.0 to 6.1, 8.1 to 7.4, and 7.0 to 5.6 (self-reported figures, not lab-verified by this article), alongside "insulin free" testimonial language and reports of reduced swelling, more energy, and weight loss. These A1C testimonials are reproduced here only as a description of what the brand displays - not as claims this article verifies, and not as typical or expected outcomes. Brand-hosted sales materials display testimonials and, in some cases, rating-style claims, but this article did not locate an independent third-party review platform or verification methodology explaining how those testimonials were collected, moderated, or verified. For that reason, treat them as brand-hosted customer feedback rather than an audited sample of typical buyer outcomes.

Read that again slowly. Specific medical claims like A1C changes and discontinuing insulin (the two most sensitive things in this entire review) are the single highest-risk category of claim here. They should never be read as something Gut Glucose will do for you, or as evidence the product affects diabetes medication needs. Any change to insulin use or diabetes medication should only ever be made in consultation with the prescribing physician - never based on a supplement testimonial. Buyer Takeaway: a testimonial describing an A1C change is one person's self-reported account, not a clinical result, and it is never a reason to change or stop a prescribed diabetes medication on your own.

The Gut Glucose Guarantee

Materials reviewed for this article indicate a 60-day money-back guarantee is referenced in the brand's marketing (a figure repeated across brand pages). Sixty days sounds simple; it isn't, until you see the fine print. This article was not able to independently confirm the exact terms of that guarantee through a live fetch of the Gut Glucose refund policy page this session - whether the clock starts at the purchase date or the delivery date, whether opened bottles are eligible, who pays return shipping, and the exact processing timeline. Buyers should confirm the complete written refund terms directly with the brand or at checkout before ordering, rather than relying on the headline "60-day guarantee" language alone.

Buyer Takeaway: a guarantee is only as good as its fine print - get the exact start-date and condition terms in writing before you're relying on them.

Gut Glucose Scam Warning Explained

Search around and you'll find "Gut Glucose scam," "Gut Glucose complaints," and "is Gut Glucose legit" as common questions (all reasonable things to ask before you buy anything online). Here's the direct answer. Gut Glucose appears to be a real, labeled dietary supplement, not a fabricated or nonexistent product, based on what this review actually found. It has a disclosed Supplement Facts panel, a working order page, and multiple customer-support contact channels. That's a meaningfully different situation than a product with no label, no support contact, and no verifiable manufacturer - the pattern typically associated with an outright scam.

What buyers should stay cautious about isn't whether the product exists - it's whether the marketing outruns what's confirmed. The Dr. Brian Karaan Gut Glucose video's uncited "Harvard researchers" claim, the unverifiable presenter credentials, the internally inconsistent three-bottle pricing, and the dramatic A1C testimonials are all real reasons for healthy skepticism. None of them, on their own, add up to fraud. Together, they add up to a brand whose sales funnel is considerably more aggressive than its own label and order page.

Buyer Takeaway: "legit but oversold" is a more accurate read than either "totally legit, no questions asked" or "obvious scam" - and this article doesn't label Gut Glucose a scam based on what was reviewed.

See Gut Glucose's current guarantee and package terms

Is Gut Glucose Right for You?

Here's the honest split.

  • Reasonable fit: someone who already eats a blood-sugar-conscious diet, exercises regularly, and wants an additional daily supplement built around ingredients with some independent research behind them at the ingredient level - with realistic expectations that a chewable tablet is a supplement, not a treatment

  • Probably not a fit: someone looking to replace prescribed diabetes medication

  • Probably not a fit: someone who wants clinical-trial-grade evidence on the finished product itself, which the brand hasn't published

  • Probably not a fit: someone who isn't comfortable with a proprietary-blend label that doesn't disclose individual ingredient amounts

Buyer Takeaway: "supports blood sugar already in a normal range, alongside diet and exercise" is the honest scope of what a supplement like this can claim - anything sold as more than that outruns what's on the label.

How Gut Glucose Compares to Other Blood-Sugar-Support Categories

If you're comparing blood-sugar-support supplements, you'll generally run into three approaches:

  • Single-ingredient formulas built around one researched compound, like berberine alone or cinnamon alone

  • Multi-ingredient proprietary blends like this one, combining several botanicals at an undisclosed individual dose

  • Prescription or compounded medications, which require a clinical diagnosis and ongoing physician oversight

Gut Glucose sits in the second category (proprietary blends). That's not a red flag on its own. The general tradeoff you're accepting there is broader ingredient diversity in exchange for less per-ingredient dosing transparency - that's true across the whole category, not a knock on this brand specifically. This article doesn't make claims about named competitor products and isn't positioned as a head-to-head comparison for you.

Things to Verify Before You Order

Several specific items in this review remain genuinely unconfirmed. Rather than smoothing over these gaps, here is exactly what's outstanding and how to check it yourself.

  • Three-bottle pricing: check this before you click "buy," not after. The brand's own marketing shows two different totals ($207 and $237) for the same package, on the same page. Confirm the actual charge at checkout before completing payment.

  • Guarantee terms: know the start date before you buy. A 60-day guarantee only protects you if you know when the clock starts, and the exact start date, condition requirements, and return-shipping responsibility were not independently confirmed this session. Get the written refund policy from customer support before ordering.

  • Operating entity: Beomma, Eagle Labs, Inc., and Natuvitta all appear across different brand materials. If you have a legal or billing question, ask support directly which entity you're contracting with.

  • The presenter's credentials: "Dr. Brian Karaan's" licensure, institutional affiliation, and the "Harvard researchers" claim were not independently verifiable in the materials reviewed. Request documentation from the brand directly if this matters to your decision.

  • Review count and platform: no third-party review count or verification methodology is disclosed for the testimonials shown on the order page. Treat them as brand-selected examples, not an audited sample.

Buyer Verification Checklist

  1. Confirm you're on the official gutglucose.com order page, not a third-party reseller listing.

  2. Read the actual Supplement Facts panel - ten ingredients in a 458 mg proprietary blend - before you rely on ad copy.

  3. Screenshot the three-bottle price at checkout before you pay, given the documented pricing discrepancy.

  4. Get the full written refund policy in writing if the 60-day guarantee matters to your decision.

  5. Ask support directly which entity - Beomma or Eagle Labs, Inc. - is billing you.

  6. Treat every testimonial, including A1C-change claims, as one account, not an expected outcome.

  7. Confirm with your physician first if you're currently on diabetes medication.

Confirm current Gut Glucose pricing and guarantee terms

Fast Facts

  • Product Name: Gut Glucose (Beomma)

  • Format: Chewable tablet

  • Suggested Use: 1 tablet daily

  • Servings Per Container: 30

  • Proprietary Blend: 458 mg

  • Key Ingredients: Berberine HCL, Ceylon cinnamon, banaba/corosolic acid, saffron, fucoxanthin, fucoidan, citrus sinensis, kudzu, oleuropein, xylitol

  • Front-Label Distributor: Beomma.com, Lakeland, FL

  • Reverse-Panel Distributor: Eagle Labs, Inc.

  • Video-Ad ToS Entity: Natuvitta

  • FDA Status: Not evaluated by the FDA; not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease

  • Guarantee (brand-stated): 60 days, exact terms unconfirmed

  • 2-Bottle Price (brand-stated): approx. $89/bottle, $178 total + $9.99 shipping

  • 6-Bottle Price (brand-stated): approx. $49/bottle, $294 total, free shipping

  • 3-Bottle Price: brand pages show conflicting totals - unconfirmed

  • US Shipping Time: 5-7 business days

  • International Shipping Time: 10-21 business days

  • Order/Billing Contact: Mundpay (per label) and BuyGoods (per brand routing)

  • Return Address: Returns66, 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773

  • Trademark: Beomma®, as shown on the product label

Quick Answers

Is Gut Glucose FDA-approved? No. Gut Glucose is a dietary supplement, and per its own label, statements about it have not been evaluated by the FDA. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease, including diabetes.

What does the Gut Glucose label actually list? A 458 mg proprietary blend of ten ingredients - including berberine HCL, Ceylon cinnamon, and banaba leaf extract - in a once-daily chewable tablet, alongside standard other-ingredients like stevia and magnesium stearate.

How much does Gut Glucose cost? Brand-stated pricing runs from roughly $49 to $89 per bottle depending on package size; the 3-bottle tier shows conflicting totals on the brand's own pages and should be confirmed at checkout.

Who is Dr. Brian Karaan, the presenter in Gut Glucose's video ads? A person the video identifies as a physician with 22-plus years treating type 2 diabetes. No independent public record confirming this identity or credential was located during this review.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Gut Glucose?

A chewable-tablet dietary supplement. Gut Glucose is made by Beomma, built around a 458 mg proprietary blend of ten ingredients. It's marketed for adults who want to support blood sugar levels already in a normal range alongside diet and exercise. It is not a drug, and per its own label, it's not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Is Gut Glucose a capsule or a chewable tablet?

Chewable tablet. That's what the physical label and official order page describe, taken once daily. Some Gut Glucose-branded content found elsewhere online describes a capsule format with a different ingredient list - this article is based specifically on the chewable-tablet product sold at gutglucose.com, and buyers should confirm they're looking at the same listing before ordering.

How do you take Gut Glucose?

Per the label, the suggested use is one chewable tablet daily, or as directed by a healthcare professional. There's no loading dose or multi-tablet schedule listed on the label reviewed for this article.

Is Gut Glucose legit or a scam?

Legit, based on the materials reviewed - but oversold in its marketing. That's the short version. Gut Glucose appears to be a real dietary supplement with a disclosed label, a working order page, and multiple customer-support contact channels. This article does not label it a scam. Buyers should still separate label-confirmed facts from the stronger claims made in the brand's video marketing and customer testimonials - see the Scam Warning section above for the full breakdown.

How do I contact Gut Glucose customer support?

Support channels vary depending on the question - general customer service, product/ingredient questions, and order billing each route to a different contact. See the consolidated Contact Information section below for the full list, and use whichever processor and contact appears on your own order confirmation email.

Does Gut Glucose actually lower blood sugar or A1C?

The brand does not make a direct clinical claim that the finished tablet lowers blood sugar or A1C, and its own FDA disclaimer states the product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Gut Glucose A1C testimonials on the order page describe specific readings changing, but these are individual, self-reported accounts, not clinical trial data on the product itself, and should not be treated as a predictor of your own results.

Is Gut Glucose safe to take with diabetes medication?

The label instructs anyone with a known medical condition to consult a physician before use, and this applies directly to anyone taking prescription diabetes medication. Several of the ingredients in this blend, including berberine and cinnamon, have research suggesting they can interact with blood-sugar-lowering effects of certain medications, which is exactly why a physician conversation before starting matters here.

What is the "gut-based protocol" mentioned in the Gut Glucose video ad?

It's the video presentation's framing for the idea that gut health and glucose metabolism are connected - a real and active research area in general, but not a claim that this specific tablet has been clinically shown to deliver that outcome. The brand's own printed research disclaimer confirms its citations relate to individual ingredients, not the finished product.

Who manufactures or distributes Gut Glucose?

The physical label lists two different names: "Beomma.com" on the front panel and "Eagle Labs, Inc." on a reverse panel, without clarifying which is the primary operating entity or how the two relate. A third name, Natuvitta, appears in the separate video-advertisement landing page's terms of service. Buyers with billing or legal questions should ask customer support directly which entity applies to their order.

Why do the video ad and the official order page describe Gut Glucose differently?

This is a common structure (video ad hotter than the order page) where a brand's Gut Glucose VSL, hosted on a separate marketing domain, uses more dramatic framing - a named presenter, an urgency-driven countdown, and a broad claim about outside research - than the brand's own order page, which sticks closer to the printed label and a standard disclosure format. When the two disagree, this article defaults to the more conservative source. That's the official order page and the physical label.

Is the "confirmed by Harvard researchers in 2024" claim real?

This article could not verify it. No specific study, author, or publication was identified anywhere in the brand's materials that would let a reader check this claim independently. Until such a citation is provided, it should be treated as an unverified marketing statement rather than an established fact.

Is "Dr. Brian Karaan" a real doctor?

This article did not locate an independent public record confirming this individual's identity, licensure, or the specific credentials claimed in the video presentation. That is not a claim that the person is fictional - it means the credentials currently rest on the brand's own assertion alone, without outside confirmation this article could find.

See current Gut Glucose availability and pricing

What exactly is in the Gut Glucose proprietary blend?

Ten ingredients at a combined 458 mg per tablet: xylitol, Ceylon cinnamon bark, corosolic acid from banaba leaf extract, saffron bulb extract, fucoxanthin, fucoidan, Citrus sinensis, kudzu flower extract, oleuropein from olive leaf extract, and berberine HCL. Because it's a proprietary blend, individual per-ingredient amounts are not disclosed on the label.

Does Gut Glucose have side effects?

None are listed on the label itself. Because Gut Glucose includes botanicals and berberine HCL inside a proprietary blend with undisclosed individual amounts, buyers who are pregnant or nursing, under 18, taking medication, or managing a known medical condition should follow the label's instruction to consult a physician before use.

How long is the Gut Glucose guarantee, and what does it cover?

60 days, per brand materials - but the exact conditions aren't yet confirmed. Brand materials reference a 60-day money-back guarantee. This article could not independently confirm the exact start date, opened-bottle eligibility, or return-shipping terms through a live fetch of a dedicated refund policy page this session. Request the complete written terms from customer support before ordering.

How much does a 3-bottle package of Gut Glucose cost?

The brand's own marketing shows two different totals for this package - $237 in one location and $207 in another - an inconsistency this article cannot resolve from the outside. Confirm the actual price shown at checkout before submitting payment.

Where is Gut Glucose shipped from, and how long does delivery take?

Per the brand's shipping policy, orders are typically processed within 1-2 business days, with delivery estimated at 5-7 business days within the United States, 7-14 business days to Canada, and 10-21 business days for other international destinations, shipped via carriers including USPS, UPS, FedEx, and DHL.

Is Gut Glucose sold on Amazon or in retail stores?

Materials reviewed for this article do not confirm retail or Amazon availability. The brand's shipping and ordering structure points to its own official order page as the point of purchase; this article does not confirm or rule out third-party retail listings.

Can Gut Glucose replace my diabetes medication?

No. Nothing in the brand's own label or disclaimers supports that use, and testimonials describing reduced medication use should never be treated as guidance to change a prescription. Any medication decision should be made only with the prescribing physician.

Does Gut Glucose contain stimulants or allergens?

The label does not list common stimulants. Other ingredients include stevia (Reb A), a plant-derived sweetener, alongside stearic acid, magnesium stearate, and silicon dioxide. Buyers with specific allergies or sensitivities should review the full ingredient list against their own needs and consult a physician or pharmacist with questions.

Who do I contact with questions about my Gut Glucose order?

Materials reviewed point to more than one contact channel depending on the question - see the consolidated Contact Information section below for the full breakdown of customer support, product/ingredient questions, and order/billing support.

Is the Gut Glucose label the same as what's shown in the video ad?

The physical label and official order page describe a 458 mg, ten-ingredient proprietary blend in a chewable tablet. The video advertisement does not itemize this same ingredient breakdown on-screen; it focuses on the presenter's narrative and testimonial outcomes rather than restating the Supplement Facts panel. This article treats the label as the authoritative ingredient source.

The Bottom Line

Gut Glucose is real. It's a labeled dietary supplement with a disclosed 458 mg proprietary blend of ten ingredients (several with genuine independent research behind them at the ingredient level). But here's the thing to walk in knowing: the brand's video advertisement runs considerably hotter than its official order page - a named presenter with unverifiable credentials, a broad and uncited "Harvard" claim, and urgency tactics that don't appear on the order page itself. None of that makes the underlying product a scam. It means the marketing outpaces what's independently checkable, which is exactly the gap this article was built to document.

If you're considering ordering, the practical path is straightforward: read the actual label rather than relying on the video, confirm the three-bottle price at checkout given the documented inconsistency, get the exact guarantee terms in writing, and loop in your physician if you're managing diabetes or taking related medication. None of the open items above are reasons to assume bad faith - they're specific, checkable things worth resolving before you spend money, exactly like you'd want to know before ordering anything else.

Visit the current Gut Glucose order page to review pricing and terms

Gut Glucose Contact Information

Materials reviewed for this article point to more than one contact channel, depending on the type of question. Here's the full breakdown.

  • General customer support: help@beomma.com

  • Product/ingredient/formulation questions: info@eaglelabsinc.com

  • Order tracking, billing, and refunds: Mundpay, via orders.mundpay.com

  • Additional support contact referenced for this release: admin.beomma@gmail.com, +1 662-443-3878

  • BuyGoods order support (referenced separately in materials provided for this review): buygoods.com/contact, 302-404-2568

  • Returns/fulfillment address: Returns66, 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773, USA

  • Business hours (per brand materials): Monday-Friday, 9:00 AM-6:00 PM Eastern

Because Mundpay and BuyGoods both appear across materials reviewed as order-support contacts, this article cannot confirm which one currently processes a given order's billing - check your own order confirmation email for the correct one, or contact general customer support at help@beomma.com to be directed appropriately.

Disclosure and Compliance Information

Material Limitations: This article was prepared using the physical product label, the brand's official order page, shipping and contact information provided by the brand, and a live review of the brand's separate video-advertisement landing page. The order page's dynamic checkout pricing could not be captured through a direct fetch this session; pricing figures above reflect the video landing page and are marked as brand-stated and subject to confirmation at checkout. No product sample was obtained and no independent laboratory testing was conducted. The presenter identified as "Dr. Brian Karaan" in the video advertisement could not be independently verified - see the dedicated section above. Title phrases including "Investigation" refer to this article's own editorial review, not any external action. Facts that could not be confirmed, including exact guarantee conditions and the operating relationship between Beomma, Eagle Labs, Inc., and Natuvitta, have been disclosed as open items rather than assumed.

Third-Party Feedback Platforms: The accuracy of third-party review platforms, and of testimonials displayed directly on the brand's own order page, is not independently endorsed by this article. Readers should evaluate all customer feedback critically and recognize that individual results vary.

Forward-Looking Statements: This article reflects brand materials as reviewed in July 2026. Specifications, pricing, ingredients, and policies are subject to change without notice. Rely on the brand's official site for current information before ordering.

Marketing Language Notice: Attribution language throughout this article identifies statements as brand claims. Title and marketing phrases such as "gut-based protocol" and "confirmed by Harvard researchers" are brand-asserted marketing language, not independent rankings, lab-verified claims, or conclusions of this article.

California Proposition 65: This product may contain chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm. California buyers should verify the product label and any applicable Proposition 65 warnings published by the manufacturer before purchase. This standard advisory is included as a matter of practice for supplement coverage; it is not a statement that Beomma has published a Proposition 65 warning specific to Gut Glucose. California buyers should review the official checkout, product packaging, and any state-specific warnings provided by the seller before purchase.

Trademark Acknowledgment: Beomma® is used as shown on the product's official label. No independent USPTO verification was conducted for this article; the mark is presented as it appears on brand materials reviewed.

Geographic and Jurisdiction Notice: This article is intended for a United States audience. International buyers should confirm shipping availability, customs and duty responsibilities, and any region-specific regulatory requirements directly with the brand before ordering.

SOURCE: Beomma



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