Sacred Serpent | CHEAP SHILAJIT VS EXPENSIVE SHILAJIT @SacredSerpent | Uploaded February 2022 | Updated October 2024, 1 week ago.
People ask me all the time " what shilajit brand is the best? " I have tried the majority of the best selling shilajit products on the market and I found that the cheap Pure Himalayan Shilajit products work just as well as the more expensive shilajit resins and pills. There is no need to spend an arm and a leg on this supplement. Shilajit is a sticky resinous substance that is chalk full of bio available minerals, humic and fulvic acid. It is most certainly one of the greatest, if not the greatest, nautral mineral supplements on the market. Cheap shilajit does not mean its bad quality, and expensive shilajit does not mean its great just by default. Experiment and find what works best for you. I take 200-800 mg of shilajit daily, in tablet form, and dissolved into water, or sublingual.
One of the biggest and most obvious differences between cheaper shilajit and more expensive varieties is the differences in how they dissolve. The expensive Purblack for instance, dissolves very easy, whereas the pure Himalayan shilajit takes much longer and tends to clump. This does not mean that it is bad quality. Expensive brands take their resin through a extraction process and refining process that makes their end product more capable of predictable dissolving patterns.
People ask me all the time " what shilajit brand is the best? " I have tried the majority of the best selling shilajit products on the market and I found that the cheap Pure Himalayan Shilajit products work just as well as the more expensive shilajit resins and pills. There is no need to spend an arm and a leg on this supplement. Shilajit is a sticky resinous substance that is chalk full of bio available minerals, humic and fulvic acid. It is most certainly one of the greatest, if not the greatest, nautral mineral supplements on the market. Cheap shilajit does not mean its bad quality, and expensive shilajit does not mean its great just by default. Experiment and find what works best for you. I take 200-800 mg of shilajit daily, in tablet form, and dissolved into water, or sublingual.
One of the biggest and most obvious differences between cheaper shilajit and more expensive varieties is the differences in how they dissolve. The expensive Purblack for instance, dissolves very easy, whereas the pure Himalayan shilajit takes much longer and tends to clump. This does not mean that it is bad quality. Expensive brands take their resin through a extraction process and refining process that makes their end product more capable of predictable dissolving patterns.