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Is Lemme GLP-1 Daily a Real GLP-1 Product?

FAQ-000027

Direct Answer

No, Lemme GLP-1 Daily is not a GLP-1 medication and does not contain any actual GLP-1 hormone or receptor agonist, despite the name. This isn't disputed, the manufacturer itself states plainly that the product doesn't contain a synthetic GLP-1 hormone and isn't a GLP-1 receptor agonist like Ozempic. It's a $72-$90/month dietary supplement containing plant extracts, in the same general category as other products covered in this library, like Evolv, that use GLP-1-adjacent naming and marketing language without containing the actual medication.

What's Actually In It

The capsules contain three ingredients: Eriomin (a patented lemon bioflavonoid extract), Supresa (a saffron extract), and Morosil (a red orange fruit extract). The brand's marketing describes these as working together to "boost the body's natural GLP-1 levels," reduce hunger, and support insulin sensitivity.

What the Evidence Actually Shows

This is the most important detail: Eriomin, the ingredient positioned as the product's core GLP-1-related claim, was tested in a small clinical trial in people with prediabetes and type 2 diabetes over 12 weeks. That trial found no effect on body weight, BMI, lean mass, or fat mass. In other words, the manufacturer's own cited evidence for its flagship ingredient did not show a weight-loss effect. Independent analysis of the other two ingredients, Supresa and Morosil, found no direct evidence linking either to elevated GLP-1 hormone levels, despite the product's name and marketing framing.

Why the Name Matters Here

Naming a product "GLP-1" while containing none of the actual hormone or a receptor agonist is a marketing strategy built to capture search traffic and consumer association with real, evidence-backed medications, without being held to the same evidentiary standard. This is the same pattern covered in our Evolv review: a supplement borrowing the credibility of a real medical mechanism it doesn't actually deliver.

A Note on Celebrity Endorsement

A well-known founder or medical advisory board doesn't change the underlying evidence. The product's own cited clinical data, not the brand behind it, is what determines whether the weight-management claims hold up, and in this case, the flagship ingredient's own trial didn't show the claimed effect.

Real Risk Considerations

The individual ingredients are generally considered safe on their own, but there's no published data on their combined effects at the doses used in this specific formulation, and possible side effects like diarrhea, gas, and bloating have been noted. As with any supplement, talk to a healthcare provider before starting it, particularly if you take other medications.

References

  • Healthline: Kourtney Kardashian's "Natural Ozempic Alternative"
  • MedBound Times: Kourtney Kardashian's Lemme GLP-1, A Natural Ozempic or Just Hype?
  • eMarketer: Kourtney Kardashian's Lemme Brand Launches "All Natural GLP-1" Supplement

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DietApp.com combines evidence-based GLP-1 medication education with practical treatment tracking tools. This article is for general informational purposes and is not medical advice or an endorsement of any specific supplement. Talk to your doctor before starting any new supplement.

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