Promising weight loss, appetite reduction, fat burn, and energy boost, Avesil promotes publications such as Woman’s Day and news programs such as ABC, Fox, and NBC for supposedly featuring their main ingredients. It claims to have “substantial published evidence” and tries to pull consumers in with a “risk free trial.” If nothing else tipped you off, this should. There is no such thing as a “free trial offer.” They always come with strings attached in the form of an extremely expensive auto-ship program on a worthless product. We have no problems with auto-ship programs. A lot of people like to use them for convenience purposes. But consumers should know what they are getting into, something which Avesil doesn’t allow.
Price: $89.95
Ingredients and Mechanism of Action
Though claiming to have proven ingredients, Avesil does not actually provide an ingredients list. Our guess is, due to its citation of several prominent news channels, Avesil is based either on the acai berry or hoodia gordonii. But you should keep in mind, they are hiding the ingredients list for a reason, and neither of the above named ingredients have actually been proven to promote weight loss.
Overall Impression of Avesil:
Avesil provides consumers with no information, expecting your average citizen to just trust them. They try to earn the trust by using a “free trial offer”, but then break that trust by automatically signing consumers up to pay $89.95 every month. There is no winning with Avesil, and we would not suggest choosing this product.
