DANGEROUS

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.

Security Review

Is www.vitalwellbeingguide.com legit or a scam?

Our verdict:Dangerous· 20/100

Fake Glucozen supplement site using lottery-scam template, fake media logos, and urgency timers on a 4-month-old domain.

www.vitalwellbeingguide.comScanned 13d ago
0
Trust score
DANGEROUS
Heuristics 17·MT 22
Category tags
lottery-scam#Lottery Scam#Fake Supplements85% MT confidence
Technical red flags (2)

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.

View density

Analysis Summary

Threat Intelligence
0/92
Engines flagged this URL
Domain Age
Registration date unknown
MT Intelligence
Dangerous
High likelihood · 85% confidence

MT Intelligence

Advanced threat intelligence
MT Security Analyst
High scam likelihoodengineMT · Guardiantrust22/100
MT AgentLive web researchVisual inspectionNetwork correlation
0%
Confidence
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.
Full dossier
Analysis complete

Page Content

Page sells Glucozen supplement with heavy urgency language, a live countdown timer, and fake customer-review scores. No phone, address, or domain-matched email is present.

Infrastructure

Valid Let's Encrypt SSL on IP 51.81.73.149 with zero abuse reports. Multiple CDNs and video scripts load, but no sandbox results were available.

Domain History

Domain created January 23, 2026 and is roughly four months old. Privacy-protected WHOIS via NameCheap with no business filings located.

Web Reputation

No scam reports or complaints surfaced in searches. One third-party validator gave a 15.9/100 trust score labeling it high-risk.

Risk Factors
5
  • Domain only four months old with no business registration records.
  • Fake news logos (NYT, CBS, ABC, FOX, CNN) displayed as endorsements.
  • Countdown timer and 'limited time' pressure typical of scam marketing.
  • Lottery-scam template fingerprint detected with no real contact information.
  • Footer copyright claims 'Glucozen 2026' — a future year.
Positive Signals
3
  • Zero malicious flags from our antivirus network (only one spam flag).
  • Valid SSL certificate with no browser blocklist hits.
  • Hosting IP shows zero abuse reports.
AI Recommendation
Do not order from this site or click any links. If you already shared payment details, monitor your accounts and consider contacting your bank.
Scam network detected
2 linked domains correlated

Lottery-winner template detected with processing-fee bait.

cdnjs.cloudflare.comcdn.jsdelivr.net
Next-gen fraud intelligence
Evidence-backedCross-checked

Website Preview

Screenshot of www.vitalwellbeingguide.com
LIVE RENDER
www.vitalwellbeingguide.com

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.

75
/ 100
Critical visual risk

Visual red flags detected in the screenshot

Page shows fake media logos and intrusive video overlay typical of health-product scam sites.

Visual risk75/100

What our vision model saw

3 signals

Major 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.

Business registration
No public record found
Could not match the site to a registered company — common for small sites.
Clone check
Not a clone
No well-known site's layout or branding detected here.
Typosquat check
No look-alike match
The domain doesn't resemble any well-known brand's spelling.
Web mentions
No scam reports found
No complaints, no negative coverage turned up in our sweep.
Key findings
7 headline facts from open-web research
  • 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.
Research summary
Narrative write-up from our AI analyst, grounded on the facts above
We searched scam-report databases, consumer-review sites, and general web sources for vitalwellbeingguide.com and didn't find scam reports or complaints. For a new or low-traffic site this is expected and is not by itself a sign of trust.

Scam Network Intelligence

Cross-site correlation

This site shares signals with a broader cluster

Moderate correlation

Many scams don't operate alone. We correlate third-party scripts, hosting infrastructure, brand-impersonation signals, and the AI evidence package to detect when a site is part of a broader scam network.

Suspicion score
0/100
ClearLowModerateHighCritical
Evidence (1)
  • Lottery-winner template detected with processing-fee bait.
Linked signals (3)
cdnjs.cloudflare.comcdn.jsdelivr.netTemplate · Lottery Scam

Antivirus Engines

Detection matrix · live
1 engine flagged this URL

We cross-check every URL against our antivirus network of 92 malware and blacklist engines. Each detection is listed below by engine name — even a single hit is a meaningful signal.

0Malicious1Suspicious56Harmless92Engines
0
of 92
Fortinet
Suspicious· spam

1 antivirus engine flagged this URL. Even a single detection is a meaningful signal — treat this site with extra caution and avoid entering credentials, payment info, or downloading any files.

Security Scans

Blacklist Check
Not flagged on major threat lists

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.

What We Found
Has contact info, but not on the site's domain
Emails on site's domainNone
Phone numbersNone
Postal addressNot listed
Linked social profiles0
Signal Summary
Several contact red flags
  • 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

Encryption Certificate
StatusValid
ProtocolTLSv1.3
IssuerLet's Encrypt · E8
ExpiresJul 22, 2026 (59d)
Self-signedNo
Hosting & Technology
HostingOVH SAS
Server locationUS

Server Reputation

Abuse Intelligence
Confidence score0%
Reports on file0
ISPOVH SAS
Usage typeData Center/Web Hosting/Transit

Scam-Type Likelihood

2 scam-type patterns detected
Scam-Type Likelihood

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.

Top match: Supplements Sale
Supplements Sale
Low-level signals
0/100
  • AI analyst tagged this as a miracle-supplement scam.
Fake Giveaway
Low-level signals
0/100
  • 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.

  • Report 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.

    Open

Trust History

Trust score over time
Last 4 public scans of www.vitalwellbeingguide.com
20/100
-6 vs May 3
May 3May 24

Reputation Sources

How this domain rates across independent threat-intelligence and blocklist providers.

Google Safe Browsing
Not listedCheck ↗
VirusTotal
ListedCheck ↗
AbuseIPDB
Not listedCheck ↗

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.

Final Verdict

0
Trust / 100
Final Verdict·www.vitalwellbeingguide.com
DANGEROUS

This is a Glucozen blood-sugar supplement sales page using lottery-scam marketing tactics. Our analysis flags it as malicious due to the new domain, fake news logos, urgency countdowns, and low trust signals. Avoid clicking links or providing payment details.

Do not order from this site or click any links. If you already shared payment details, monitor your accounts and consider contacting your bank.

AV engines
92
MT passes
2
Net signals
3
Scan another URL
Security review completemalwaretips.com/url-scan
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Community review

User reviews & comments(0)

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This report is generated automatically by combining threat intelligence, domain signals, and an AI security analyst. It is informational, not legal advice. Always use your own judgement before sharing personal information or money online.