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Jelly Weight Loss Gummies Compared 2026

posted on May 18, 2026

This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Content is provided by TotalHealthRD.com, an independent health information editorial publication. Dietary supplements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results vary. Some links in this article may be affiliate links; any paid relationships are disclosed before the first link appears. Pricing information is current as of May 2026 and subject to change.

By Kim Larson, Health and Wellness Expert | TotalHealthRD.com

Product details, pricing, and refund terms last verified: May 18, 2026.

Quick Answer: Five products are fighting for the same search traffic under nearly identical names in 2026. Before spending $89–$294 on any of them, here is what the comparison actually shows: one product (JellyLean) discloses per-ingredient doses; four do not. Two (JellyFit) are a completely different product category despite the name. Three refund policies have conditions buried in fine print that contradict the main sales page. This comparison uses the same six criteria for all five products so you can make the call yourself.

How We Evaluated These Jelly ACV Gummy Products

This comparison evaluates five products in the “jelly” ACV gummy weight management category against six consistent dimensions. Products were selected based on SERP visibility, consumer search volume, and reader inquiry frequency across the TotalHealthRD.com editorial desk as of May 2026. Each product was evaluated against the same dimensions: formula transparency (does the Supplement Facts panel disclose per-ingredient doses, or does it use a proprietary blend?), ingredient verification (does the label match what the marketing page says?), price per 30-day supply, refund policy clarity (is it internally consistent?), sugar content and keto framing accuracy, and company transparency (is contact information clearly available?).

No independent product testing was conducted for this comparison. All information is sourced from each brand's published sales page materials, Supplement Facts panels where publicly accessible, and verified pricing as of May 2026. Two of the five products — JellyFit and JellyLean — have previously been reviewed in full on this site. Those reviews are linked within each product section. This comparison may include affiliate relationships disclosed in the article disclaimer above.

The Comparison Framework — Decision Points That Matter

The single most important thing to understand before buying any product in this category is that the “jelly” name covers fundamentally different products. They are not versions of the same thing. JellyFit is a liquid drops product targeting neurological wellness — it is not an ACV gummy. JellyLean, JellyThin, and JellyTide share a structurally similar ACV+BHB proprietary blend format. JellyBurn is a separate keto ACV gummy with different ingredients. Buying the wrong product because the names are similar is a real consumer risk in this SERP, and disambiguation is the most important service this comparison provides.

After confirming product identity, the practical decision dimensions for midlife women are: formula transparency (proprietary blends hide dose information that matters for evaluating realistic effects), sugar content (several products in this category market as “keto” while containing corn syrup and cane sugar), refund conditions (60-day guarantees with return requirements are not the same as free trial periods), and subscription risk (some products in this space auto-renew; knowing which do and which do not is material information).

One additional clarification before getting into the products: the “gelatin trick,” “pink gelatin trick,” and “jello trick” terms that appear in 2026 wellness searches describe a protein-preload strategy involving gelatin or collagen — not ACV-BHB gummies. None of the five products in this comparison are gelatin-based. The ad ecosystem for these jelly gummies overlaps with gelatin trick content, which is why confused search traffic flows between the two categories. If the gelatin approach is what you are actually researching, TotalHealthRD covers that topic separately.

JellyBurn

JellyBurn is a keto ACV gummy supplement targeting the same weight management audience as the other products in this comparison. Based on publicly available information, JellyBurn includes apple cider vinegar, B vitamins, and supporting ingredients. The Supplement Facts panel for JellyBurn is not prominently featured on all versions of the product's sales infrastructure, which makes per-ingredient dose verification less straightforward than for products with prominent label disclosure. Consumers should verify the panel before purchasing. Pricing varies by retailer; JellyBurn appears in third-party marketplace listings in addition to direct-to-consumer channels, which is different from JellyThin, JellyLean, and JellyTide, all of which sell exclusively through official sales pages.

For individuals who prefer purchasing through established marketplace platforms like Amazon with their own buyer protection frameworks, JellyBurn's broader distribution footprint may be relevant. For individuals prioritizing label transparency and verified panel access before purchasing, the confirmed availability of a prominent Supplement Facts panel from the official site is the first thing to verify.

JellyFit

JellyFit is meaningfully different from all other products in this comparison. It is a liquid drops product from JellyFit Research (myjelyfit.com) positioned as a neurological wellness and daily micronutrient supplement — not an ACV gummy. The naming overlap with JellyLean, JellyThin, and JellyTide causes significant consumer confusion in search results. JellyFit should not be purchased by someone looking for an ACV-BHB keto gummy; it is a different product category. Our full review at JellyFit Review 2026 covers that product's specific ingredients, positioning, and pricing in detail for readers specifically interested in JellyFit.

JellyLean

JellyLean is an ACV gummy supplement distributed through ClickBank, in the same weight management gummy category as JellyThin and JellyTide. Based on our full review, JellyLean contains apple cider vinegar powder (1,000mg per serving) as the primary active ingredient, with pomegranate juice powder, beet juice powder, and B-vitamins (B6, folate, B12) listed individually on the Supplement Facts panel. JellyLean's formula is notable for disclosing per-ingredient doses on the label, which allows for dose comparison against published research. The 1,000mg ACV dose is at the higher end for the gummy category. JellyLean's marketing has been associated with fake celebrity endorsement claims (Jillian Michaels and Serena Williams), which were not endorsed by those individuals — a documented red flag worth noting for any consumer evaluating the brand's overall credibility.

JellyLean is priced at approximately $39.95 for a one-month supply through some listings. Serving size is two gummies per day, which means a 60-count bottle is a 30-day supply — not a 60-day supply as some marketing implies. Our full review at JellyLean Gummies Review covers the verified label, research context, and refund terms in detail.

JellyThin

JellyThin is an ACV and BHB keto gummy distributed by JellyThin (11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773) and sold through BuyGoods. The Supplement Facts panel is clearly displayed and has been independently verified for this comparison. JellyThin contains a 525mg proprietary blend of ACV and BHB salts (Calcium BHB, Magnesium BHB, Sodium BHB). Unlike JellyLean, per-ingredient doses within the blend are not disclosed — the entire active formula is contained in one proprietary blend. This limits dose verification for individual ingredients.

JellyThin pricing as of May 2026: $89 (one bottle, 30-day supply) to $294 (six bottles, 180-day supply with free shipping and digital bonuses). The product is a confirmed one-time purchase with no subscription. The 60-day money-back guarantee has a refund policy conflict between two pages on the site — the Terms of Service limits returns to unused bottles, while the Shipping and Returns page requires return of all bottles including used ones. Buyers should clarify before purchasing. Our full review at JellyThin Review 2026: Before You Buy, Read the Label covers the complete label, dose math, and all verified terms.

JellyTide

JellyTide is structurally similar to JellyThin — ACV and BHB salts in a 525mg proprietary blend, sold via BuyGoods, assembled in the USA. JellyTide is sold by Jellytide Research through thejellytide.com, with support infrastructure at yourorderwasconfirmed.com. Independent review of the JellyTide Supplement Facts panel confirms the same 525mg proprietary blend structure with the same ingredient list: ACV, Calcium BHB, Magnesium BHB, Sodium BHB. The same dose math caveats that apply to JellyThin apply to JellyTide. Verify current pricing and terms at the official site before purchasing, as promotional pricing varies.

Side-by-Side: The Six Decision Points

Formula Transparency: JellyLean leads — per-ingredient doses disclosed. JellyThin and JellyTide use a 525mg proprietary blend with no per-ingredient breakdown. JellyBurn's panel visibility varies by listing. JellyFit is a different product category.

Ingredient Verification: JellyThin's marketing describes four ingredients as if each has independent meaningful dosing, but the panel shows all four share a single 525mg blend. JellyLean's marketing has been associated with false celebrity endorsement claims. JellyTide appears consistent between panel and marketing copy.

Price per 30-day supply (as of May 2026): JellyLean approximately $40 (third-party listings). JellyThin $89 (single bottle). JellyTide comparable to JellyThin. Multi-bottle bundles reduce per-bottle cost significantly on both JellyThin and JellyTide.

Refund Policy Clarity: JellyThin has a documented conflict between two refund policy pages — verify before purchasing. JellyLean's refund terms should be verified directly with ClickBank. JellyTide's refund terms should be verified at the official site.

Sugar Content vs. Keto Framing: JellyThin, JellyLean, and JellyTide all contain corn syrup and cane sugar as listed other ingredients. The “keto” marketing framing is aspirational for these products. Individuals strictly managing carbohydrate intake for ketosis should factor in the added sugar content.

Company Transparency: JellyThin provides the clearest company transparency in this comparison: named distributor address, direct customer service email, toll-free phone number, and named retailer (BuyGoods) with their own contact information. JellyLean processes through ClickBank. JellyTide uses a secondary domain for support.

Which Formula for Which Situation

Affiliate disclosure: TotalHealthRD.com may earn a commission if you purchase through links in this section. This does not influence which products are included or how they are described. All evaluations above apply the same criteria regardless of affiliate relationships.

If you want maximum ingredient transparency and per-dose verification: JellyLean's panel discloses individual ingredient amounts — specifically the 1,000mg ACV dose — making it easier to compare against published research dosing. The tradeoff is the brand's history of misleading celebrity marketing, which is a credibility signal worth weighing.

If you want a clearly structured one-time-purchase gummy from a traceable company: JellyThin offers the clearest company identity, direct phone support, and confirmed no-subscription model. The dose transparency tradeoff (proprietary blend) is the main limitation. Resolve the refund policy discrepancy with customer service before ordering.

If you want a product with a similar structure to JellyThin at comparable pricing: JellyTide has a comparable formula, comparable pricing structure, and comparable distribution model. Confirm current pricing and terms at the official site.

If you are looking for a neurological wellness drops product, not an ACV gummy: JellyFit is the only product in this comparison designed for that purpose. Our full JellyFit review covers it in detail.

If you are undecided and want to understand the research before choosing: The mechanism overview at How ACV and Ketones Support Metabolism: 2026 Overview and the research deep-dive at ACV and BHB Gummy Research 2026: What Studies Show provide the ingredient-level context that makes any of these purchase decisions easier to evaluate honestly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between JellyThin, JellyLean, and JellyFit?

These are three separate products from three different companies with different formulas, pricing, and distribution. JellyThin (jellythin.com) is an ACV and BHB keto gummy sold through BuyGoods, distributed from Largo, FL. JellyLean is a separate ACV gummy distributed through ClickBank with a different formula that discloses per-ingredient amounts including 1,000mg ACV per serving and B-vitamins. JellyFit (myjelyfit.com) is a liquid drops supplement positioned as a neurological wellness product — not an ACV gummy. The naming similarity is a consumer confusion risk. Confirm which product you are researching by checking the domain name and Supplement Facts panel before purchasing.

Which jelly gummy has the most transparent ingredient label?

Among the ACV-BHB gummy category, JellyLean's Supplement Facts panel discloses the most per-ingredient information, listing individual amounts for its ACV component (1,000mg), pomegranate juice powder, beet juice powder, and B-vitamins separately. JellyThin and JellyTide use a single 525mg proprietary blend with no per-ingredient breakdown. Per-ingredient disclosure allows for more direct comparison against published research dosing, which is why it is the leading transparency indicator in this comparison.

Are any of these jelly gummies truly keto-compatible?

None of the products in this comparison are strictly keto-compatible in the sense of being free of added sugars. JellyThin, JellyLean, and JellyTide all contain corn syrup and cane sugar as listed other ingredients, contributing 1 to 2 grams of added sugars per serving. The “keto” framing in this product category refers primarily to the BHB ketone salt component, which is associated with the ketogenic diet framework, rather than to the product being compatible with a strict low-carbohydrate diet. Individuals managing carbohydrate intake carefully for ketosis should account for the added sugars in these products.

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. This article is for informational and educational purposes only. Individual results vary.

Filed Under: Weight Loss

TotalHealth Research Desk · Independent editorial research on nutrition, supplements, and wellness for women in midlife · Editorial Lead: Kim Larson, Health and Wellness Expert
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