Every active here is dosed below the amount studied to work. See how each one compares in the breakdown below.
Ingredients (7)
Organic Maitake
24%Dose
120 mg
Target
500–2500 mg
Form
—
Organic Reishi
30%Dose
300 mg
Target
1000–3000 mg
Form
—
Organic Chaga
24%Dose
120 mg
Target
500–2000 mg
Form
—
Organic Poria
24%Dose
120 mg
Target
500–3000 mg
Form
—
Organic Shiitake
12%Dose
120 mg
Target
1000–3000 mg
Form
—
Other Ingredients (3)
Rice ProteinFiller
Rice-based ingredients carry risk of inorganic arsenic contamination (FDA and Consumer Reports have documented elevated arsenic in rice products). Used as a cheap filler. Incomplete amino acid profile adds no meaningful protein benefit at excipient doses.
Rice FlourFiller
Rice-based ingredients carry risk of inorganic arsenic contamination (FDA and Consumer Reports). Rice accumulates arsenic from soil at higher rates than other grains. Used as a cheap filler — adds nothing beneficial.
Capsule ShellCapsule
Generic capsule shell where the label does not specify the material. Common materials are hypromellose (HPMC) for vegetarian capsules and gelatin for traditional capsules — both are GRAS-listed and safe. Fish gelatin and pullulan variants also exist.
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Sources & Scoring
Nutrient data (RDA, UL, and safety thresholds) sourced from: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and National Academies Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI).
This is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making changes to your supplement routine.
The score analyzes what's on the label: ingredient doses vs. clinical ranges, chemical forms, evidence levels, and known interactions. It does not verify label accuracy or test for contaminants — for that, look for third-party certifications like USP or NSF.



