Critical risk detected
Fake Glucozen supplement site using lottery-scam template, fake media logos, and urgency timers on a 4-month-old domain. Our security stack flagged multiple threat indicators on this website. Don't enter personal information, deposit money, or download files.
Is www.vitalwellbeingguide.com legit or a scam?
Fake Glucozen supplement site using lottery-scam template, fake media logos, and urgency timers on a 4-month-old domain.
These checks passed — but they don't clear the site. A clean antivirus result, valid SSL, and a calm server only mean it isn't hosting malware; they say nothing about whether the business is real. This verdict is based on the site's conduct and content, not a malware detection.
Analysis Summary
MT Intelligence
The page promotes Glucozen as a blood-sugar supplement but triggers lottery-scam and countdown-urgency detections. The domain was registered only four months ago with no business registration or contact details found. Visual analysis shows fabricated news logos and a future-dated copyright, classic signs of health-product scam pages. Our antivirus network returned only one spam flag while browser blocklists stayed clean, yet the overall pattern of urgency pressure and missing legitimacy signals outweighs that. The evidence package confirms zero scam reports but also zero positive reviews or real business footprint, which fits a low-traffic scam site rather than a legitimate product.
Website Preview
Automated page render — captured in a safe sandbox. What an ordinary visitor would see when loading the site. See full visual analysis →
Visual Screenshot Analysis
We capture a fresh screenshot of the live page and ask a vision model to look for scam visual patterns — fake trust badges, countdown timers, overlay pop-ups, and visual clones of legitimate brands.
Visual red flags detected in the screenshot
Page shows fake media logos and intrusive video overlay typical of health-product scam sites.
What our vision model saw
3 signalsMajor news logos (NYT, CBS, ABC, FOX, CNN) displayed as endorsements without verification
Intrusive pink modal overlay on video player prompting "Click to listen"
Footer copyright for invented brand "Glucozen 2026" with future year
Web Research Findings
Our live research agent queries scam-report databases, consumer-review sites, news coverage, and general web search for www.vitalwellbeingguide.com, then cross-checks business-registration records and look-alike domain patterns. Everything below is pulled from what it actually found.
- Domain vitalwellbeingguide.com created January 23, 2026 (approximately 4 months old as of May 2026).
- Scam Detector validator assigns trust score of 15.9/100, flagging it as suspicious/high-risk with tags 'Controversial. High-Risk. Unsafe.'
- WHOIS shows privacy protection via Withheld for Privacy ehf (Iceland address: Kalkofnsvegur 2, Capital Region, IS); registrar NameCheap.
- No mentions or user reports found on Reddit or other complaint sites linking directly to the domain.
- Domain promotes Glucozen blood sugar supplement (page title/description match); Glucozen marketing often features urgency/countdown tactics per provided detection.
- No blacklisting detected; valid HTTPS (Let's Encrypt); no website content retrievable by validator.
- No positive reviews, business filings, or specific scam complaint excerpts located across web searches.
Scam Network Intelligence
Antivirus Engines
Security Scans
Checked against the major public blocklists used by browsers and security tools — no hits.
Contact Verification
We fetched the page and looked for real-world contact details. Legitimate businesses almost always publish an email on their own domain, a phone number, and a postal address. Scam shops usually don't.
- No email uses the site's own domain — legitimate shops usually do.
- No phone number listed on the page.
- No postal address visible on the page.
- Countdown timer or 'limited time' urgency pressure detected.
- Scam family match: Lottery Scam.
- Scam family match: Countdown / Urgency.
Domain & Encryption
Server Reputation
Scam-Type Likelihood
2 scam-type patterns detected
0 of 13 categories showed signals
We check every URL against 13 distinct scam categories so the verdict tells you not just how risky the page is, but what kind of risk it carries. Each meter pulls from page signals, web reports, our AI analyst, vision, and the scam-network cluster — not from raw AV labels.
- AI analyst tagged this as a miracle-supplement scam.
- AI analyst tagged this as a giveaway / airdrop / lottery scam.
0 of 13 categories showed signals
We check every URL against 13 distinct scam categories so the verdict tells you not just how risky the page is, but what kind of risk it carries. Each meter pulls from page signals, web reports, our AI analyst, vision, and the scam-network cluster — not from raw AV labels.
- AI analyst tagged this as a miracle-supplement scam.
- AI analyst tagged this as a giveaway / airdrop / lottery scam.
Miracle-supplement scam
Signals common to keto-gummy, weight-loss, CBD, and "miracle cure" scam funnels were detected. These products are typically shipped from unregulated sources and double-billed via subscription traps.
- Do not interact with www.vitalwellbeingguide.com
Do not enter credentials, deposit money, download files, or install browser extensions from this site.
- "Doctors hate this" and "melt belly fat in days" are marketing red flags
No real supplement causes dramatic overnight weight loss, cures chronic illness, or has to hide from "big pharma." These claims are illegal in most countries — legitimate brands simply don't make them.
- Check for hidden subscription billing
Many of these sites ship a "free trial" and then auto-charge your card every month. Read the fine print at checkout, and if you already ordered, call your bank to block further charges and dispute the ones already made.
- OpenReport the product
Report to the FTC (reportfraud.ftc.gov), your country's consumer-protection body, and the MalwareTips scam forum so others searching for the product find the warning.
Trust History
Reputation Sources
How this domain rates across independent threat-intelligence and blocklist providers.
Referenced Domains
Outbound domains this page links to or loads resources from. Each links to its own security scan.
Safety FAQ
Common questions about this site, answered from the scan data on this page. These are auto-generated — not hand-written — so they always match the underlying report.
- Our automated security review flags www.vitalwellbeingguide.com as dangerous. Multiple threat indicators were detected — treat the site as a scam until proven otherwise.
- No — www.vitalwellbeingguide.com scored 20/100 on our trust scale. We detected active threat indicators, so we recommend avoiding the site entirely.
- Yes. www.vitalwellbeingguide.com presents a valid TLSv1.3 certificate issued by Let's Encrypt · E8, expiring in 59 days. Note that SSL only encrypts the connection — it does not guarantee that the site itself is trustworthy.
- 1 out of 92 antivirus engines in our malware network flagged www.vitalwellbeingguide.com as malicious or suspicious. Even one detection is a meaningful signal.
- No. www.vitalwellbeingguide.com is not currently listed on the major browser blocklist feeds that modern browsers use.
- www.vitalwellbeingguide.com resolves to an IP operated by OVH SAS in US (usage type: Data Center/Web Hosting/Transit). Hosting location alone doesn't make a site good or bad, but unusual geography for a brand's claimed country is one of many signals we weigh.
- We cache results for 24 hours. Signed-in MalwareTips members can trigger a manual rescan at any time using the "Rescan" button on the report page, which re-runs every check from scratch and refreshes this page.
User reviews & comments(0)
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