Why a Flagged-Brand List Is Incomplete by Design
Any list of FDA-flagged honey pack brands is a snapshot, not a registry. The FDA tests a tiny fraction of the supplement market, relies heavily on adverse-event reports to trigger investigations, and often names specific product SKUs rather than parent brands. A brand that sells twelve different honey pack variants can have one variant flagged while the other eleven remain untested. That is not proof the untested variants are clean — it is proof they have not been tested.
Treat the flagged list as a floor, not a ceiling. Any brand on it should be avoided. Absence from the list should not be read as endorsement. Our brand directory tracks known enforcement history alongside third-party lab results where available.
Common Names on the Enforcement Record
Brands that have appeared repeatedly in FDA consumer alerts for undeclared sildenafil, tadalafil, or their analogues include several marketed under "Royal Honey" and "VIP Honey" branding, as well as various "Africa Black Ant," "Stiff Bull," and "Mad Dog" sexual-enhancement honey products. Specific product names change frequently — a flagged product is often reformulated, relabeled, and re-released under a near-identical name.
Because brand names morph, the more reliable signal is the manufacturer or importer of record listed on the packaging. If the importer has been named in any FDA enforcement action, treat every product from that importer as higher risk regardless of the brand on the front of the packet.
2026 FDA Honey-Product Snapshot
The FDA honey-products page is current as of 2026-04-22 and lists 4 warning-letter firms plus 24 public-notification honey-based products. HoneyPackFinder's normalized archive currently tracks 78 alert records across FDA notices, recalls, warning letters, and related internal product records.
| Product | Date | Tracked hidden ingredient | Evidence status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boner Bears Honey | 2026-03-14 recall cluster | Sildenafil and tadalafil | FDA/lab-confirmed record |
| Red Bull Extreme | 2026-03-14 recall cluster | Sildenafil | FDA/lab-confirmed record |
| Blue Bull Extreme | 2026-03-14 recall cluster | Sildenafil | FDA/lab-confirmed record |
Use the FDA Alert Archive for the complete normalized table, including source URLs, UPCs, lots, and the difference between direct FDA findings, related-product evidence, and category-risk records.
How to Check a Specific Brand Yourself
Three free government databases will tell you most of what you need to know about a brand's enforcement history:
- FDA Tainted Products Database — searchable list of sexual-enhancement products flagged for hidden ingredients. Search by brand name and by the distributor name on the packaging.
- FDA Warning Letters Archive — full text of every warning letter the agency has issued. Search by company name.
- FDA Import Alerts — list of manufacturers subject to automatic detention at the border. If a brand's manufacturer appears here, authentic imports are being blocked and anything on a US shelf either slipped through or is counterfeit.
We mirror the honey-pack-specific entries from these sources on the FDA enforcement timeline.
The Counterfeit Complication
Some honey pack brands have sued distributors for selling counterfeit versions of their product, arguing that the adulterated packets flagged by the FDA were never made by the real company. This is sometimes true and sometimes a legal shield. The net effect for consumers is the same: you cannot reliably tell an authentic packet from a counterfeit one by looking at it.
If a brand has a known counterfeit problem, the only reliable way to buy it is through the manufacturer's own website or an authorized distributor with a verifiable paper trail. Gas-station and smoke-shop inventory is the highest-risk channel precisely because the supply chain is untraceable. See how to spot fake honey packs for the physical markers worth checking.
A Simple Filter Before You Buy
Run any honey pack through this four-question filter before purchase:
- Does the brand or manufacturer appear on any FDA warning letter or consumer alert?
- Does the manufacturer have an active import alert?
- Is a third-party certificate of analysis available for the specific lot?
- Is the seller an authorized distributor with a physical address and real customer service?
A "yes" to question 1 or 2, or "no" to questions 3 or 4, is enough reason to walk away. The honey pack market has enough choice that you do not need to accept an opaque supply chain. If you still want to proceed, follow the full protocol in the safety guide.
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