Explore Some Smart Ways To Buy Weight Loss Supplements for Ultra-Cheap
Provided your sleep, diet, and workouts are on point, supplements can boost your progress from 100 to 110%. They can compensate for shortcomings in the aforementioned three factors in the short term. Two caffeine tabs can negate the side effects of an awful night of sleep on your workout. When you’re lazy or in a time fix, a scoop or two of whey can come in handy. Not eating as nutritious as you ideally should?
But supplements are painfully expensive — thanks to the exorbitant sums choked out by the companies to sponsor athletes, run fancy ads, and pay distributor commissions. Here are some smart ways to bypass the price barrier so that you can enjoy quality supplements without shelling out a big amount of money.
Always Buy in Bulk
Whether in supplement shops, online marketplaces, or even your gym, a higher quantity will always mean a lower price. Experiment with a few brands for each supplement, find your favorite, and then order that in bulk. Roping in a friend or two will further lower the price. If the quantity is large enough, say 20 to 30, you can visit wholesalers or contact the company directly.
Make the Right Brand vs. Quality Tradeoff
The most popular or expensive brand doesn’t always mean the best quality. Look past the hype, dig deep, and compare brands across price points. With enough experimentation, you’ll hit a sweet spot — decent quality for a reasonable price.
Since a supplement can determine only 5 to 10% of your progress but the best exercise for fitness and weight loss determine your overall progress— the difference between an A1 supplement and an “okay” one is almost negligible. This doesn’t mean you buy cent-store dusty boxes — ultra-cheap can mean past-expiry date, harmful chemicals, and poor contamination-prone packaging.
Source the Individual Ingredients
Pre-workouts are notorious for being overpriced. But in reality, their primary ingredient is cheap caffeine.
Cognizant of this, a college friend put on his nerd cap, bought a micro-weighing scale, and sourced the ingredients in bulk.
It was a win-win — not only did he get them for 1/5 times the price, but he also gained the flexibility to tweak the quantities of each ingredient to his liking and necessity.
Higher caffeine for insane energy, higher L-citrulline for vascular roadmaps, more creatine for monstrous endurance, and so on.
The only downside is the effort. He’d be an alchemist at work — deciding quantities, meticulously weighing each powder, and mixing them. With a pre-workout, you only need a second to scoop it out.
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