Amazing Nutritionals Review 2026: Honest Labels, Disease Promises

Amazing Nutritionals doses its turmeric at a checkable 300 mg — then promises to eliminate UTIs in the product name itself. Buy the labels, never the promises.

1 min read

Last reviewed July 2, 2026

Disclosure: La Petite Labs publishes this review and sells its own pet supplements. La Petite Labs sells no turmeric, cranberry, or omega product, so nothing here compares Amazing Nutritionals products against a La Petite Labs product, and no substitution is implied.

Amazing Nutritionals Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Real per-active disclosure on most of the line, with no proprietary blends on the three core SKUs: Turmeric Root Extract 300 mg; Cranberry 150 mg + Apple Cider Vinegar 50 mg; itemized Omega 3-6-9 fish oil.
  • State-level manufacturing disclosure with substance: a GMP, organic-certified facility in Florida, batch testing described ("each batch is always tested for safety, potency, and to ensure no mercury or other contaminants"), and a stated Long Beach, California headquarters.
  • The trust content is genuinely findable: FAQ and Why Buy pages sit one click from home in the footer, and they carry the real manufacturing and testing statements rather than fluff.

Cons

  • The weakest claim discipline in our 34-brand set (1/10): diagnosable conditions — rheumatoid arthritis, staph infection, urinary tract infection — named as prevent/eliminate/remedy targets across most of the line, with "ELIMINATES JOINT PAIN INFLAMMATION" as a page headline and an unqualified "Guaranteed results, or your money back!"
  • No citation to any named study, journal, or author anywhere on the site — the outcome language stands on nothing a buyer can read.
  • "Veterinary science approved" repeats across the home, turmeric, cranberry, and omega pages as an ingredient-panel bullet — naming no veterinarian, and no formulator or nutritionist appears anywhere.
  • No third-party laboratory, public COA, or lot lookup for any product; the batch-testing description is internal and undocumented.

The Quiet Brand: Labels and a Located Facility

Credit first, because it is real. The core product pages publish quantitative panels a buyer can actually use — 300 mg of turmeric root extract is a checkable number, and the cranberry SKU's 150/50 mg split beats the blend-total labeling of brands three times this company's polish. The FAQ speaks concretely where most brands gesture: ingredient rejection on failed tests, batch testing for potency and contaminants including mercury, a GMP organic-certified Florida facility, a Long Beach HQ. Accessibility is honest too — the substantive pages are footer-linked, not buried behind support tickets.

If the words above the labels matched the labels, this would be a mid-50s brand with a value story.

The Loud Brand: Naming Diseases as Targets

Here is the pattern, quoted from the brand's own pages: a headline reading "ELIMINATES JOINT PAIN INFLAMMATION TO HELP YOUR DOG MOVE BETTER"; copy stating the turmeric formula "remedies hip joint pain, aids rheumatoid art[hritis]"; a cranberry product whose full retail name includes "Prevents and Eliminates UTI in Dogs"; staph infection named among targets; and "Guaranteed results, or your money back!" across the surface.

Why this matters, stated plainly and without legal conclusions: the pet-supplement category operates on support-and-maintain language precisely because prevent/eliminate/remedy claims about named diseases are the vocabulary of medicine, and they demand the kind of evidence — controlled trials on the actual product — that this site does not offer anywhere. Our full-text search found no citation of any kind. A money-back guarantee is a refund policy, not evidence. Every disciplined brand in our set, including deep-discount ones, manages to avoid this pattern; its presence here is a choice, and it fired the lowest claim score we have recorded.

For a buyer, the practical translation: treat any supplement that promises to eliminate or prevent a named disease as making a claim it cannot support — and treat the condition itself (recurrent UTIs, joint pain, skin infection) as a veterinary diagnosis to get, not a chew to buy. A real UTI needs a vet; cranberry chews marketed as eliminating them are the reason the distinction exists.

How to verify Amazing Nutritionals yourself: ask for (1) any study behind any prevent/eliminate claim — specifically for the product, (2) the COA for your lot with the testing lab named, and (3) the veterinarian behind "veterinary science approved."

Public Transparency Score: 41.5/100

Under the 2026 Brand Transparency Rubric, Amazing Nutritionals earns a 41.5/100 Public Transparency Score — Sparse Public Evidence (scored as of 2026-07-03). The score measures what a buyer can publicly verify before purchase — labels, rationale, evidence, named experts, testing access, manufacturing disclosure, claim discipline, and findability. It is not an effectiveness score, a safety score, or a best-brand ranking.

The shape is the strangest in our set: manufacturing 8 and accessibility 7 — genuinely good — against claim discipline at 1, the floor of our scale, with evidence at 2 and no named human anywhere. A brand that discloses this well has no need to promise this loudly; the gap between its labels and its headlines is the whole review.

Best fit: label-literate bargain shoppers who can read the 300 mg and ignore the capital letters. Keep comparing if: the disease language is what drew you here — that is precisely the claim style to walk away from, in any brand.

Owner Reviews and Price

The owner-review sample (51 items across 16 sources, checked 2026-07-03, low confidence) is mildly positive-practical: owner-reported changes lead (16 — personal observations, not proof), serving-routine notes follow (12), with small palatability (6), shipping (7), and price (6) clusters and no tolerance complaints registered.

Prices checked 2026-07-03: the cranberry chews at $23.97 (120 chews); the omega and turmeric SKUs in the same band. Value-tier pricing consistent with the brand's Amazon-era roots.

Where La Petite Labs Fits

It doesn't. La Petite Labs sells no turmeric, cranberry, urinary, or omega product; this review makes no comparison, and no product card follows it.

What transfers is the discrimination skill this brand forces you to practice: separating a label you can verify from a promise you can't. The 300 mg is real; the "eliminates" is not evidence-bearing language. Buyers who can hold both facts at once will navigate this whole category better.

Final Verdict: Should You Try Amazing Nutritionals?

If you buy: buy the labels, not the promises — the doses are disclosed, the facility is located, the price is low, and the products may serve fine as ordinary supplements used with ordinary expectations. Do not buy them for the headline outcomes: no evidence on the site supports eliminating or preventing anything, and the conditions named in the marketing — UTIs, joint disease, skin infection — are veterinary diagnoses first. If a brand's claim style is part of how you judge trust, this one told you everything in capital letters.

FAQ

Is Amazing Nutritionals legit?

It is a real 2005-founded company with a state-named GMP organic-certified facility and properly dosed labels. Its marketing claims are the least disciplined in our 34-brand set — both facts matter.

Does the cranberry product really prevent and eliminate UTIs?

That claim — which appears in the product's own retail name — is disease-treatment language with no cited evidence anywhere on the site. Recurrent urinary issues need a veterinary diagnosis; no chew's marketing changes that.

What is actually in the products?

Honest panels on the core line: Turmeric Root Extract 300 mg; Cranberry 150 mg with Apple Cider Vinegar 50 mg; an itemized Omega 3-6-9 fish oil. No proprietary blends on those three SKUs.

Is Amazing Nutritionals veterinary approved?

"Veterinary science approved" repeats as a label bullet across the line — naming no veterinarian. No formulator, nutritionist, or any individual appears anywhere on the site.

Does Amazing Nutritionals publish COAs or name a lab?

No. Batch testing is described in the FAQ (including mercury screening) but no laboratory is named and no COA or lot lookup exists. Request your lot's certificate.

Where are the products made?

In the company's GMP, organic-certified facility in Florida, with headquarters in Long Beach, California — state-level disclosure that beats most of the value tier.

What does "Guaranteed results, or your money back!" mean?

A refund policy. It is not evidence of anything, and no study appears anywhere on the site behind any outcome claim.

How much does Amazing Nutritionals cost?

Checked 2026-07-03: cranberry chews $23.97 for 120; the turmeric and omega SKUs sit in the same value band.

Are there studies behind the turmeric claims?

None cited — our full-text search of every page found no study, journal, or author reference anywhere. The turmeric dose (300 mg) is disclosed; the arthritis language around it is unsupported.

Is there a La Petite Labs alternative to Amazing Nutritionals?

No. La Petite Labs sells nothing in these lanes, and this review makes no comparison or substitution claim.

What should I verify before buying Amazing Nutritionals?

Your lot's COA and lab (by request), any product-specific study behind any claim that influenced you (expect none), and — before buying for a named condition — a veterinary visit for the condition itself.

Sources Reviewed

Sources note: Brand pages, owner-review surfaces, and prices were checked as of 2026-07-03. Public materials show what a buyer can verify; they cannot establish product safety, efficacy, medical suitability, or current pricing. Quoted marketing language reflects the pages at the check date.

Amazing Nutritionals brand and trust pages

  • Amazing Nutritionals homepage — reviewed for claim style and the repeated "veterinary science approved" bullet.
  • Amazing Nutritionals FAQ and Why Buy pages — reviewed for the facility, batch-testing, and headquarters statements.
  • Amazing Nutritionals About and Products pages — reviewed for named-person absence and navigation paths.

Sampled product pages

  • Turmeric chews — sampled for the 300 mg disclosure and the "ELIMINATES JOINT PAIN INFLAMMATION" headline and arthritis language.
  • Cranberry chews — sampled for the 150/50 mg panel and the prevents/eliminates product naming.
  • Omega 3-6-9 and probiotic/multivitamin pages — sampled for panel format and claim register.

Owner-review surfaces

  • Retail and forum surfaces — sampled 2026-07-03 (51 extracted items across 16 sources, low confidence); used only as buyer-experience context, not efficacy evidence.