Reviewed
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Most Transparent Batch Data
Huge Supplements

Huge Supplements TUDCA 300mg, 60 Servings Review

Huge Supplements leans into transparency: each bottle carries a QR code linking to third-party batch lab results, which is exactly the kind of open-book verification this category needs. The dose is a touch above standard at 300mg per serving. The trade-off is premium sports-supplement pricing at roughly $0.67 per serving, and the same unavoidable honesty flag as everything here — purity and dose are the axis you're paying for, not proven outcomes. For buyers who want to actually see the batch data before swallowing, it's a strong option.

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Read the complete TUDCA guide →
▸ THE SCORE

How we built the SAC Product Score™7.2/10

Form, Bioavailability & Purity25%7/10

Standard TUDCA at a slightly higher 300mg/serving. Purity is well-supported by accessible batch data, though the form offers no bioavailability edge.

Third-Party Testing30%7.8/10

QR-code batch lab results are a genuine transparency win — you can read the actual per-batch third-party report, which few competitors let you do directly.

Dose vs Clinical Range20%7.5/10

300mg/serving is modestly above the 250mg baseline and comfortably inside the 250-500mg range — a small but real advantage for those targeting the middle of the range in one serving.

Tolerability & Safety10%7.5/10

300mg is well within tolerated territory; expect the usual mild bile-related GI effects. No specific safety concerns from the added 50mg.

Value15%6/10

~$0.67/serving reflects premium sports-supplement positioning. You're paying partly for the transparency infrastructure, but it's pricier than mainstream 250mg options.

▸ SPECS

The product at a glance

Form
Capsule (pure bile salts)
Dose
300mg per serving
Count
60 servings
Standardization
Pure TUDCA bile salts
Testing
Third-party batch results via scannable QR code
Cost per dose
~$0.67/serving
▸ TRUTH CHECK

Marketing claims vs. reality

Verified

Each batch's third-party lab results are accessible via QR code.

Product provides scannable QR links to per-batch third-party lab results, a direct-access transparency mechanism confirmed in the listing.

Partial

300mg per serving is a more effective dose than standard 250mg products.

300mg is inside the 250-500mg range and modestly higher than 250mg, but no evidence shows the extra 50mg produces better outcomes; the dose-response for OTC TUDCA is not established.

▸ THE DEEP DIVE

What our test actually found

01Batch-level transparency you can actually read

Most brands claim 'third-party tested'; Huge lets you scan a QR and read the specific batch report. For a category where verification is everything, direct access to per-batch data is a meaningful differentiator worth part of the premium.

02Dose is a marginal, not decisive, edge

300mg vs 250mg is a real but small difference. It helps you reach the mid-range in a single serving, but there's no outcome evidence that 300mg beats 250mg — don't overweight it.

▸ THE TRADE-OFFS

Pros & cons, no sugar-coating

Pros
  • QR-scannable per-batch third-party lab results — best direct transparency here
  • Slightly higher 300mg/serving reaches mid-range in one serving
  • Pure bile-salt formulation, no filler stack
  • Reputable manufacturing for a sports-supplement brand
Cons
  • Premium pricing (~$0.67/serving) vs mainstream 250mg options
  • Sports-supplement brand rather than a liver/clinical specialist
  • Extra 50mg has no demonstrated outcome benefit
▸ THE BOTTOM LINE

Transparency premium, well executed

Huge Supplements makes a real case on one axis: you can scan and read the actual batch lab report, which is the gold standard of supplement transparency. Add a slightly higher 300mg dose and it's a legitimately good product. It lands at #4 because you pay a premium and the dose edge is marginal — but if seeing the data is what earns your trust, it delivers.

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▸ ALTERNATIVES

If this doesn’t fit — try these

▸ RESEARCH

Sources & further reading

  1. Kars M, et al. Tauroursodeoxycholic acid may improve liver and muscle but not adipose tissue insulin sensitivity in obese men and women. Diabetes. 2010;59(8):1899-1905.Kars M, Yang L, Gregor MF, et al. · 2010 · Diabetes · PMID 20522594

    Tauroursodeoxycholic acid may improve liver and muscle but not adipose tissue insulin sensitivity in obese men and women

    A rare human TUDCA RCT (1,750mg/day) improved hepatic insulin sensitivity — but the effective dose far exceeds typical 250-500mg OTC servings, tempering supplement-dose expectations.

  2. Vang S, et al. The unexpected uses of urso- and tauroursodeoxycholic acid in the treatment of non-liver diseases. Glob Adv Health Med. 2014;3(3):58-69.Vang S, Longley K, Steer CJ, Low WC · 2014 · Global Advances in Health and Medicine · PMID 24891994

    The unexpected uses of urso- and tauroursodeoxycholic acid in the treatment of non-liver diseases

    Reviews TUDCA's cytoprotective mechanisms supporting its use rationale.