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. Consult your healthcare provider before starting any supplement, especially if you take prescription medications or have existing health conditions. Pricing information reflects the official JellyThin sales page as of May 2026 and is subject to change.
By Kim Larson, Health and Wellness Expert | TotalHealthRD.com
Pricing, refund terms, and Supplement Facts panel last verified: May 18, 2026.
Quick Answer: JellyThin is worth understanding before purchasing — not because it's a bad product, but because the label tells a more specific story than the marketing does. It's a once-daily ACV and BHB keto gummy in a 525mg proprietary blend with no per-ingredient dose disclosed. Pricing runs $49–$89 per bottle depending on package size. The 60-day money-back guarantee has a documented conflict between two policy pages on the site that buyers should resolve with customer service before ordering. One-time purchase, no subscription confirmed.
Bottom Line Before You Read Further
What it is: A once-daily ACV and BHB keto gummy supplement in a 525mg proprietary blend, distributed by JellyThin (Largo, FL), sold through BuyGoods.
What it costs: $89 for one bottle down to $49 per bottle at six bottles. One-time purchase confirmed — no subscription, no auto-renewal.
What to know first: Two refund policy pages on the site conflict — the Terms of Service limits returns to unused bottles only, while the Shipping and Returns page requires return of all bottles including empty ones. Clarify this with customer service before ordering if a return is at all possible.
Who it fits: Adults 30 and older who want a simple daily ACV habit in gummy form, are not on blood sugar or blood pressure medications, and are not expecting dramatic standalone results.
Who it doesn't fit: Anyone following strict keto — this product contains corn syrup and added sugar. Anyone expecting a clinical trial exists for this formula — it doesn't. Anyone who needs per-ingredient dose transparency — the proprietary blend format doesn't provide it.
You've probably seen the ad. A gummy format, daily metabolic support, apple cider vinegar without the burn. And then you noticed a problem: the internet is currently full of products called JellyThin, JellyLean, JellyFit, JellyTide, and JellyBurn. They look similar. They use similar language. They run ads in the same ecosystem. This review is specifically about JellyThin — the product sold at jellythin.com, distributed through BuyGoods, and located at 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773. It is not JellyLean. It is not JellyFit. Those are separate products covered in separate reviews on this site.
What this review does is simple: it checks what is actually on the Supplement Facts panel, compares that to what the marketing page says, explains what the research says about those ingredients at that dose, covers pricing and refund terms accurately, and tells you who this makes sense for and who it does not. No fabricated celebrity endorsements. No invented studies. Just the label.
What Is JellyThin?
JellyThin is a chewable gummy dietary supplement positioned as a metabolic support product. Each bottle contains 30 gummies, with one gummy per day as the recommended serving. The formula combines apple cider vinegar and exogenous BHB (beta-hydroxybutyrate) ketone salts in a single 525mg proprietary blend. The product is distributed for JellyThin at 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773, with customer support at [email protected] and +1 (877) 257-0825. Transactions are processed through BuyGoods, a Delaware-registered direct-to-consumer supplement retailer.
The product label notes it is “assembled in the USA” with “domestic and foreign ingredients.” The sales page uses the phrase “manufactured in the USA.” These are different statements. “Assembled” typically means final formulation or packaging occurred domestically, while ingredient sourcing may be international. No GMP certification or FDA-registered facility claim appears on the verified Supplement Facts panel itself — only on the marketing copy. This is noted as a disclosure gap, not a defect.
JellyThin exists in a crowded naming ecosystem. In 2026, at least five distinct products use “jelly” in their name and run ads in the same weight management space: JellyBurn, JellyFit, JellyLean, JellyThin, and JellyTide. Each has a different formula, different company, different pricing, and different refund terms. The confusion is not an accident — it is a structural feature of a market where name-adjacent positioning drives ad traffic. What cuts through it is the label. That is what this review is anchored to.
One more disambiguation worth making: if you found this page through searches related to the “gelatin trick,” the “pink gelatin trick,” or the “jello trick,” those viral terms describe a different category of weight management approach — one built around gelatin or collagen as a protein preload, not around ACV and BHB ketone gummies. JellyThin is not a gelatin-based product. The naming crossover happens because several “jelly” products run ads in the same ecosystem as gelatin trick content, creating search confusion between two distinct categories. If you are specifically researching the gelatin trick concept, TotalHealthRD's coverage of that topic is a better starting point than this review.
Who JellyThin Is For
JellyThin's own FAQ describes its target user as an adult 30 and older who experiences a sense of slowed metabolism, afternoon energy dips, and difficulty managing cravings — and who wants a simple daily supplement addition rather than a full routine overhaul. The gummy format specifically addresses two practical barriers that research on supplement adherence consistently identifies: pill fatigue and the sensory difficulty of liquid apple cider vinegar. One gummy, once a day, before a meal.
For midlife women who have already read through the ACV research and are looking for a low-friction daily addition alongside dietary habits they are already working on, the gummy format is a legitimate format preference. Convenience matters for compliance, and compliance is what determines whether any supplement has the opportunity to do anything at all.
Who JellyThin Is NOT For
JellyThin is not appropriate as a substitute for dietary change. The formula contains corn syrup and pure cane sugar as listed other ingredients — each serving provides 2g of total carbohydrates and 1g of added sugars. Individuals following a strict ketogenic diet seeking to maintain ketosis should be aware that this product contains added sugar, which is atypical for a product marketed under the “keto” frame. This does not mean the product is harmful in a general wellness context; it means the keto marketing framing requires scrutiny for anyone genuinely managing carbohydrate intake.
Anyone currently taking blood sugar medications, blood pressure medications, or anticoagulant medications should consult their healthcare provider before using an ACV-containing supplement. Acetic acid, ACV's active component, has documented interactions with these drug classes. That consultation matters more as a first step than any supplement decision. The safety guide covering these interactions in detail is available at ACV and BHB Gummies Safety Guide 2026.
JellyThin is also not the right choice for anyone expecting a product tested in a clinical trial. Like virtually all dietary supplements, JellyThin has not been studied as a finished formula in a peer-reviewed randomized controlled trial. The ingredient-level research exists and is meaningful, but it is not the same as a trial of this specific product at its specific dose structure.
How JellyThin Works: The Proposed Mechanism
JellyThin's formula proposes two mechanisms working together. The apple cider vinegar component, via acetic acid, is associated in the research literature with supporting digestive comfort, slowing gastric emptying, and modulating post-meal blood glucose responses. The BHB salt component is an exogenous ketone that, when absorbed, raises blood ketone levels transiently — which some research associates with reduced ghrelin (the hunger hormone) and subjective appetite suppression.
The marketing uses the phrase “compounded metabolic slowdown” to describe the problem this product addresses. That specific phrase is the brand's marketing construct, not an established clinical diagnosis. The underlying mechanisms — acetic acid and exogenous ketone effects on satiety and glucose response — are real areas of active research. But the research has limitations that the marketing does not acknowledge, and the dose math raises specific questions about how much of each mechanism this product can realistically deliver at 525mg total across four ingredients.
A detailed breakdown of both mechanisms, including what the studies used as dosing parameters and how gummy-format delivery compares to studied delivery methods, is covered in How ACV and Ketones Support Metabolism: 2026 Overview.
What We Verified
This report independently verified the following as of May 18, 2026:
Supplement Facts panel: Fetched directly from the official JellyThin sales page (jellythin.com/funnelb3/). Confirmed: 525mg proprietary blend containing ACV and BHB calcium/magnesium/sodium salts. Calcium 1mg (0% DV), Magnesium 0.75mg (0% DV), Sodium 25mg (1% DV). Label revision date: REV 04/24.
Pricing: Confirmed from sales page as of May 18, 2026. Single bottle: $89 plus shipping. Three-bottle: $177 ($59/bottle) plus shipping. Six-bottle: $294 ($49/bottle) with free USA shipping and three digital bonuses. Prices subject to change — verify before purchasing.
Contact information: Confirmed. Support: [email protected]. Phone: +1 (877) 257-0825 (USA toll-free and international). Distributor address: 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773. Retailer: BuyGoods, 1201 N Orange Street Suite #7223, Wilmington, DE 19801.
Refund policy conflict: Two separate policy pages on the JellyThin site contain different eligibility conditions. The Terms of Service specifies that only unused bottles in perfect condition are eligible for return. The Shipping and Returns page specifies that all bottles — including empty, partially used, and bonus bottles — must be returned. These are not reconcilable. Before initiating a return, contact [email protected] to confirm current conditions in writing.
Marketing vs. label discrepancy: The sales page “What's Inside” section describes Apple Cider Vinegar, Calcium BHB, Magnesium BHB, and Sodium BHB as if each has an independent, meaningful dose. The Supplement Facts panel shows all four ingredients share a single 525mg proprietary blend with no per-ingredient breakdown. This is documented below in the dose math section.
Naming confirmation: JellyThin is a distinct product from JellyLean and JellyFit, which are covered in separate reviews on this site. Different companies, different formulas, different distribution infrastructure.
The Dose Math: What 525mg Proprietary Blend Actually Means
This is the section the marketing page does not include. The Supplement Facts panel lists one proprietary blend of 525mg total. That blend contains four ingredients: Apple Cider Vinegar, Calcium BHB, Magnesium BHB, and Sodium BHB. The individual amounts of each are not disclosed.
Here is why that matters. The published research on apple cider vinegar for metabolic support has typically studied liquid ACV at dosages equivalent to 750mg to 1,000mg of acetic acid daily — often expressed as 1–2 tablespoons (15–30ml) of liquid ACV with approximately 5–6% acetic acid content. If JellyThin's 525mg total blend were entirely ACV powder, it would be a low-to-moderate dose. But the blend also includes three BHB salt forms. How the 525mg is divided among all four ingredients is unknown.
The Supplement Facts panel discloses Calcium at 1mg and Magnesium at 0.75mg per serving. Those are mineral disclosure amounts — they reflect the calcium and magnesium content of Calcium BHB and Magnesium BHB, not standalone mineral supplementation. The daily reference value for calcium is 1,300mg. At 1mg, the calcium present is a trace amount consistent with the mineral portion of Calcium BHB within a small proprietary blend, not a dose with any standalone bone-health relevance.
Research on exogenous BHB supplementation has primarily used dosages of 6 to 12 grams per serving — roughly 10 to 20 times the total proprietary blend in JellyThin. A fraction of 525mg is a fraction of that. This does not mean the ingredients have zero biological activity at lower doses. It means the gap between what research has studied and what a 525mg proprietary blend delivers is a meaningful factor in evaluating realistic expectations.
For a category-wide breakdown of ACV and BHB research dosing standards and what they mean when reading gummy supplement labels, see ACV and BHB Gummy Research 2026: What Studies Show.
Pricing and Policies
JellyThin is available at three price points as of May 2026. One bottle (30-day supply) is $89 plus standard USA shipping of $9.99, for a total of approximately $98.99. Three bottles (90-day supply) is $177 plus shipping. Six bottles (180-day supply) is $294 with free USA shipping and three digital downloads included: The Keto Kickstart, The Jelly Diet, and The Metabolism Journey. International shipping is available at $19.90.
JellyThin describes itself as a one-time purchase with no subscription, no automatic renewals, and no hidden charges. The product is sold exclusively through the official sales page. It is not on Amazon, at retail stores, or through third-party sellers, according to the brand's FAQ.
The 60-day refund guarantee is presented as unconditional on both the main sales page and the FAQ (“no hoops, no questions asked”). However, the detailed refund policy on the Shipping and Returns page requires physical return of all bottles to the fulfillment address, and the Terms of Service page limits eligible returns to unused bottles in perfect condition. Those conditions are not the same. If you are considering a purchase with a possible return in mind, contact [email protected] before purchasing to confirm which conditions apply to your order. Return shipping is at the customer's expense.
“Compounded Metabolic Slowdown” — What This Term Means
JellyThin's marketing introduces the term “compounded metabolic slowdown” as the problem the product addresses. This phrase appears on the brand's sales page and is framed as an emerging area of research. It is not a clinical diagnosis, not a medical term, and not a condition defined in the medical literature. It is a marketing construct that describes a real but already well-understood phenomenon: the age-related convergence of reduced insulin sensitivity, decreased muscle mass, changes in adipose tissue distribution, and hormonal shifts that affect metabolic rate in adults over 35.
The underlying biology the term gestures toward is legitimate and well-documented. The branding of it as a newly discovered mechanism with a specific name is marketing. This distinction matters because it frames ordinary age-related metabolic change as something requiring a specific product to fix — rather than as something that responds to well-established interventions like protein adequacy, strength training, sleep quality, and stress management, with or without supplemental support.
JellyThin may be a reasonable daily addition for someone already working on those foundations. It is not a replacement for them.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is JellyThin?
JellyThin is a dietary supplement gummy formulated with apple cider vinegar and BHB (beta-hydroxybutyrate) ketone salts. It is distributed by JellyThin at 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773, and sold through BuyGoods as the authorized retailer. Each bottle contains 30 gummies — a 30-day supply at one gummy per day. The active ingredients are combined in a single 525mg proprietary blend. The product is marketed for metabolic support and is positioned for adults seeking a daily supplement to support appetite awareness and digestive comfort.
What are the ingredients in JellyThin?
According to the verified Supplement Facts panel (REV 04/24), JellyThin contains a proprietary blend of 525mg total: Apple Cider Vinegar and BHB salts (Calcium BHB, Magnesium BHB, Sodium BHB). The individual amounts of each ingredient within this blend are not disclosed. The panel also lists Calcium at 1mg (0% DV), Magnesium at 0.75mg (0% DV), and Sodium at 25mg (1% DV). Other ingredients include corn syrup, purified water, pure cane sugar, apple pectin, citric acid, sodium citrate, tapioca starch, natural flavors, and beet root powder. The marketing page describes each active ingredient separately, but all four share the single 525mg blend.
How much does JellyThin cost?
JellyThin is priced at three package levels as of May 2026. A single bottle (30-day supply) is $89 plus standard shipping. A three-bottle bundle (90-day supply) is $59 per bottle, totaling $177, with shipping charges. A six-bottle package (180-day supply) is $49 per bottle, totaling $294, with free USA shipping and three digital bonus downloads included. These prices are from the official sales page and may change. Verify current pricing at the official JellyThin website before purchasing.
What is JellyThin's refund policy?
JellyThin offers a 60-day money-back guarantee from the date of purchase. To receive a refund, you must return bottles to the fulfillment address at 11870 62nd St N, Largo, FL 33773, within 60 days. Contact customer support at [email protected] or +1 (877) 257-0825 to initiate a return. There is a discrepancy between two refund policy pages on the JellyThin site: the Terms of Service states only unused bottles in perfect condition are eligible, while the Shipping and Returns page states all bottles including empty and partially used bottles must be returned. Clarify with customer service before returning. Return shipping costs are the customer's responsibility.
Is JellyThin the same as JellyLean or JellyFit?
No. JellyThin, JellyLean, and JellyFit are three distinct products from three different companies. They share a similar gummy supplement format and overlapping marketing in the weight management space, which causes consumer confusion. JellyThin is distributed by JellyThin and sold via BuyGoods. JellyLean is a separate product distributed through ClickBank. JellyFit is a different liquid drops product from JellyFit Research. All three have different formulas, different pricing, different refund policies, and different company contact information. Our separate review of JellyLean Gummies covers that product's specific label, ingredients, and terms in full.
Does JellyThin require a subscription?
According to JellyThin's official FAQ, the purchase is a one-time payment with no subscriptions, hidden charges, or automatic renewals. The site states what you order today is what you pay — nothing more. JellyThin is sold exclusively through its official sales page and is not available on Amazon, in retail stores, or through third-party sellers. Processing is handled by BuyGoods, a direct-to-consumer supplement retailer. Verify this directly on the official JellyThin website before completing a purchase, as terms may change.
Final Assessment
JellyThin is a single daily gummy supplement containing ACV and BHB salts in a 525mg proprietary blend. The format solves a real compliance problem — liquid ACV is unpleasant and difficult to sustain. The ingredients have legitimate published research supporting their individual mechanisms. The dose structure is limited by the proprietary blend format: 525mg total across four ingredients leaves less room than the research-backed dosing for ACV alone, and far less than the dosages used in BHB research.
The refund policy conflict between two pages on the site is a buyer-awareness issue, not a disqualifier. Contact customer service to clarify before purchasing. The one-time payment structure, confirmed no-subscription model, and 60-day return window are straightforwardly presented.
JellyThin may be a reasonable daily addition for an adult who wants a gummy-format ACV supplement with the added BHB framing and is not expecting dramatic standalone results. It is not appropriate as a substitute for dietary fundamentals, and the “keto” framing requires scrutiny for anyone actively managing carbohydrate intake given the added sugar content.
For readers still comparing options in the “jelly gummy” category, the full side-by-side breakdown across five products is available at Jelly Weight Loss Gummies Compared 2026. For the mechanism behind how ACV and BHB work in the body, see How ACV and Ketones Support Metabolism: 2026 Overview. For safety considerations before starting, see ACV and BHB Gummies Safety Guide 2026. For the research behind this ingredient category, see ACV and BHB Gummy Research 2026: What Studies Show.
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. Individual results vary. Consult your healthcare provider before starting any supplement. This article is for informational purposes only.