Read The Label: A Line-By-Line Breakdown of What's Actually Inside RAZE
No vague "proprietary blends," no mystery fillers โ just every line of the label, explained in plain English. Tap any line to see exactly what it means and why it's there.
Most supplement labels are written to be skimmed, not understood. Long compound names, vague ratios, "blends" that don't disclose actual amounts. We think that's backwards โ so here's the opposite: every single line of RAZE's label, broken down, with nothing glossed over. Tap any row to expand it.
What it is: The core active ingredient โ true Ceylon cinnamon bark, concentrated at a disclosed 12:1 ratio (12 parts raw plant material โ 1 part finished extract). Why it's there: This is the compound most associated with steady blood sugar response and calmer energy. Why the ratio matters: Most labels just say "cinnamon extract" with no concentration disclosed โ which makes it impossible to know how potent it actually is.
What it is: The oil the cinnamon extract is suspended in, rather than packed as a dry powder. Why it's there: MCT oil is a fat-based carrier that's believed to support better absorption of fat-soluble plant compounds compared to dry powder capsules, which can pass through with limited uptake.
What it is: The outer capsule โ a simple three-ingredient softgel shell. Why it's there: It's what holds the liquid extract blend and allows it to be taken as a single easy daily softgel rather than a powder you'd have to mix.
What it is: A naturally occurring compound found in much higher levels in cassia cinnamon (the common grocery-store variety) than in true Ceylon. Why it's disclosed: Most labels don't mention this at all โ but it's arguably the single most important difference between cinnamon products, especially for daily long-term use. True Ceylon naturally contains only trace amounts.
What it is: A deliberate absence โ RAZE doesn't use undisclosed "proprietary blends" anywhere on its label. Why it matters: Proprietary blends let companies list ingredients without disclosing how much of each is actually in the product. Every active ingredient in RAZE is listed with its actual amount.
What it is: Independent lab testing โ performed by a lab with no financial stake in RAZE's sales โ confirming that what's on the label matches what's actually in the bottle. Why it matters: Self-reported label claims are the industry norm. Third-party verification is the exception, and it's the single best signal that a label can actually be trusted.
A Quick Checklist For Reading Any Supplement Label
Does it disclose the exact concentration ratio?
"Cinnamon extract" alone tells you nothing. "12:1 extract, 500mg" tells you everything.
Does it name the specific plant variety?
"Cinnamon" could be cassia or Ceylon โ two very different things. The species name should be on the label.
Are there any "proprietary blends" hiding amounts?
If you can't see how much of each active ingredient you're getting, you can't actually evaluate the product.
Is it third-party tested โ and can you verify it?
"Lab tested" with no named lab or certificate is effectively meaningless. Look for verifiable third-party testing.
RAZE's entire label fits the checklist above โ disclosed ratio, named variety (true Ceylon, not cassia), no proprietary blends, and verified third-party testing. That's not a marketing claim; it's literally what's printed on the bottle, line by line, above. See the full product page โ
We put this together because we think "trust the label" shouldn't require trusting a brand's marketing โ it should mean being able to actually read and verify what's printed on it. If more labels held up to this kind of breakdown, this wouldn't need to be a selling point. For now, it still is.*
The Label You Just Read โ In a Bottle
RAZE โ true Ceylon cinnamon extract (12:1) in MCT oil, third-party tested, sold as a simple one-time purchase.
See RAZE's Full Product Page โ* This breakdown reflects RAZE's own label and is presented for educational and transparency purposes. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results vary.