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Last verified: 20 days ago

Nature's Answer Licorice Root Extract Review 2026: Worth the Price?

It's actually fine. — Mostly Legit

  • "Supports digestive health"

    Licorice has anti-inflammatory properties in clinical trials, but this product doesn't specify the active compound dose, so effectiveness is unverifiable.

  • "2,000 mg per serving"

    Clinical licorice studies use 1.5g standardized extract (150-225mg glycyrrhizic acid). This label omits active compound content, making the dose assessment impossible.

    Internal: dose comparison to PubMed clinical trial doses
  • "Supports digestive health (no warnings)"

    Licorice can raise blood pressure and lower potassium; FDA-approved licorice products carry warnings. This label includes no safety guidance.

    PubMed: licorice clinical trials on hypertension and hypokalemia risk

Consumer advice

  • Before using this product:.
  • Check with your doctor if you take blood pressure medications, diuretics, or corticosteroids — licorice can interact with these.
  • Don't use long-term without medical supervision; licorice can raise blood pressure and lower potassium at high doses.
  • The label says '2,000 mg per serving' but doesn't specify the active compound (glycyrrhizic acid) — clinical studies typically use 1.5g of standardized extract. Ask the manufacturer for the glycyrrhizic acid content to confirm you're getting a therapeutic dose.
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Claims vs Evidence

MODEST

0 of 1 claims supported by evidence.

"Supports digestive health" Partial

Licorice has anti-inflammatory properties; traditional use supports this, but human clinical evidence is limited and dose-dependent.

Based on: Licorice Root Extract

1 partial

Ingredients

Evidence: strong · moderate · weak · debunked

Based on peer-reviewed research from PubMed and Examine.com

Licorice Root Extract

Herbal root with anti-inflammatory properties. Early evidence for oral health, allergy relief, and metabolic support in PCOS.

strong

Research-backed dose: 1.5 g/day extract (oral); topical doses vary by application

In this product: 2,000 mg per serving (underdosed)

2,000 mg per serving 1.5 g/day extract (oral); topical doses vary by application

Plain water used as a placebo in studies. No evidence it works as a supplement ingredient.

weak

Research-backed dose: No established dose from provided studies

In this product: Dose not disclosed

Vegetable Glycerin

Amino acid found naturally in the body. Limited clinical evidence supports most supplement marketing claims.

weak

Research-backed dose: No established dose from provided studies

In this product: Dose not disclosed

Certified Organic Alcohol (12-15%)

Amino acid derivative that supports energy metabolism. Evidence for most popular claims is limited or mixed.

weak

Research-backed dose: No established dose from provided studies

In this product: 12-15% by volume

Signals

  • Shows actual ingredient doses

Research sources: PubMed · Examine.com

Analyzed product: https://shipt.com/shop/products/c66b2942-cd6e-11ed-b6a8-7b2e05ed8b1f

Analysis generated: 2026-05-02 · Engine v1.0.0