In April 2026, online users searched for Dr. Phil’s Glyco Harmony — as well as Glyco Harmony drops reviews — to locate information about an alleged honey and red grapes recipe to provide blood sugar support and reverse type 2 diabetes for good. Those users looked for more details after viewing scam advertising videos initially promoting a supposed diabetes “reversal ritual” recipe, followed by the reveal of a miracle product in the form of Glyco Harmony drops.
In short, Dr. Phil McGraw never created or endorsed Glyco Harmony or any special diabetes cure, including anything involving honey and red grapes. Scammers created deepfake AI and fully-AI depictions of TV news hosts from “60 Minutes,” as well as Dr. Phil, Dr. Oz, and other famous people to allege they provided positive Glyco Harmony reviews involving a diabetes reversal recipe. No evidence supports Glyco Harmony or simple pantry ingredients of any kind as a miracle product for diabetes.
An investigation of this product appears below in a YouTube video from Jordan Liles, titled, “Glyco Harmony Drops Reviews — Glyco Harmony Dr. Phil Legit or Scam Check.” After that, look for a transcript from my Glyco Harmony YouTube video. I advise victims of this scam to report fraud to the FTC and to read up on NIA-funded diabetes research.
Transcript from my Glyco Harmony YouTube video
The following is a word-for-word transcript from the above Glyco Harmony YouTube video:
Full Video Transcript (Click To Expand)
It is April 2026. If you’re looking around online for something called Glyco Harmony Drops, this is a product that’s going around right now. And I just noticed it. I think in the last 24 hours, someone in my comments told me about it. And they said that a product known as Sugar Harmony is now going around as Glyco Harmony. And that to me is a continuation of online scam marketing that I saw for Sugar Harmony and other products with similar names. And I want to talk about this.
There is scam marketing out there for a lot of different type 2 diabetes reversal products and you maybe saw a video on a website with famous doctors like Dr. Phil, Dr. Oz, Dr. Peter Attia, maybe someone else who has relevancy to being a TV doctor, something like that. And they have nothing to do with this. Dr. Oz has never endorsed this. Dr. Phil has never endorsed this, nor has anyone else who’s a famous doctor or any sort of a normal doctor.
And the way these things normally go is that there’s an ad on social media or a website and that leads you to a website, a landing page which will have a lengthy video with a progress bar that goes really fast at the beginning, but then it slows down more and more and the video lasts an hour. And at the beginning of the video, you’re going to be told by someone that this is going to be a miracle sort of a thing. It’s going to reverse your type 2 diabetes, this special mixture that we have for you, a recipe involving some ingredients in your pantry.
And then after that, it keeps—the host keeps promising you that over and over again, “Hey, the next two minutes we’re going to reveal the recipe to you of how we reversed our type 2 diabetes involving this Glyco Harmony product.” So, if you’re looking for Glyco Harmony reviews, I’m telling you, do not order this because it does not have the miracle properties you saw in online marketing for it.
By the end of the video, they finally reveal, oh, it’s not a recipe in your pantry ingredients. It is a dropper bottle, Glyco Harmony drops. And the people in the video, normally it’s deepfake AI marketing, meaning manipulated lip movement with AI-generated audio. So when you see Dr. Phil or Dr. Oz talking about Glyco Harmony or a special mixture that they’re going to reveal to you, that all is fake and fraudulent marketing claiming to you that you are going to be able to reverse your type 2 diabetes with a recipe that ends up being a bottle of drops or something like that.
And it’s difficult to find any information specifically about where the marketing is coming from, maybe where the bottles are coming from, something like that, something legitimate having to do with you being able to trust this sort of a thing. And these products have been going around. There are thousands of different medicinal product scams going around in the last few years. And a lot of them come from Brazil. And there are a lot of them that claim that it’s a dropper bottle product that can reverse type 2 diabetes.
In every single video, every single scam marketing video—which I could not find any legitimate marketing for this anywhere in the sense of, “Hey, here’s the founder. Hey, here’s where we’re located. Hey, we want to give you transparency”—which tells me a lot. This product will claim to be some miracle for type 2 diabetes reversal. And there have been other names for the same sort of product that begins with the word Sugar or Glyco or Gluco. And the second word, Harmony, in this case, Glyco Harmony, it’s just the latest product name in a long line of similar product names, hoping to be able to dominate search results on Google and other search engines to be able to sell enough products before someone like myself comes in and tries to educate people with the truth without trying to get you to buy anything.
And that’s what honesty is. That’s why I’m trying to bring you this video. Glyco Harmony has no legitimacy in the way of it being a miracle product that can reverse type 2 diabetes. Hit the like button down below; that can help my video get out there to Google search results and YouTube search results so that people can find my video and avoid this completely.
The way these sorts of scams work, I already told you, the ad to the long video on the—on the website and then finally it goes to a page where you can order it. And maybe that’s on MyCartPanda, maybe it’s on ClickBank, maybe it’s on a suspect website I’ve not heard of. And on that website, it’ll claim there’s a money-back guarantee. You cannot trust that going through a scam funnel. It’ll claim that, you know, it has no auto-ship. Like I just said, you know, it—it—it’s going to have no subscription charges and it might have subscription charges of hundreds of dollars a month because a lot of the time these scam funnels trying to sell you these products, whether it’s something to do with the original company or not, it’s all it is is a way to try to get money from you.
And on a monthly basis, if they can do that, because that’s what the scammers want. They want to try to sell you something that does not have the miracle properties that they claim it does and try to extract money from your bank account, your credit card account, whatever, until you figure out what’s going on. That’s what this is. And you cannot find information easily about where this is coming from. You might see on the back of the bottle a fulfillment center address here in the US, but that’s not where it’s made.
And none of this is good. And I noticed that the—the marketing for this just started ramping up like a day or two ago. Today’s April 6th or 7th, I believe the 7th of 2026, and there are now these really nondescript Facebook pages and websites and Google ads trying to push this because there is also scam marketing out there, lengthy videos with famous doctors and everyone else trying to make you think that they have talked about this when in reality no one has.
So, if you’re someone out there who is not too, too tech-savvy and you are maybe older in age, elderly, and you need help with this sort of a thing, first off, go see a doctor. Please go see a doctor. Don’t order weird stuff you see online. If you find it on Walmart.com, that does not make it legitimate. That means that someone is trying to take advantage of the fact that there’s scam video marketing out there to get you to go to Walmart and buy this, not in a store, only online. Walmart on their website allows third-party sellers. You will never find this product in a physical store in your town ever. Same goes with Amazon.com, it’s a third-party seller.
If—if you see it on there and with eBay and other supplements websites that maybe you haven’t heard of, but they sell supplements, that does not make it legitimate. My advice is that with there being so many different scams out there claiming, “Hey, miracle, we can reverse your type 2 diabetes,” and they have, I don’t know, Morgan Freeman or Tom Hanks or whoever celebrities—Halle Berry in these ads and Dr. Oz, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Dr. Phil McGraw, whoever. All of this again is just a—it’s just a—a method to try to get you to give up a lot of your money, maybe even on a monthly membership basis, even though it doesn’t really specify it’s going to be a membership. That’s what this is.
And so, I really hope that I’ve helped you. I kind of went all over the place, but I wanted to cover this because it just started and that to me means that this Glyco Harmony product is going to be out there for at least a few weeks and then it’s going to change to some other product name involving Harmony or Glyco or maybe it’ll be—let’s see if we got—maybe it’ll be Gluco Harmony next, right? Because I don’t think I’ve seen that yet. I’ve seen Sugar Harmony and now I’ve seen Glyco Harmony. Next is Sugar Harmony. And if it’s the same dropper bottle, yeah, it’s not going to be worth anything—any—any of your money. Not even one penny.
If you go and ask a doctor about these products, they’ll be like, “I don’t know what you’re talking about. There are a lot of scams out there. Let me help you with that.” Hopefully, that’s what they do. I’m here to help. If you have any questions, there is no product out there that I know of that can help you reverse type 2 diabetes that’s been endorsed by major doctors. And just don’t believe it if you see it unless you find authoritative news sources.
Now, sometimes these scammers will design the websites presenting you the long videos with the deepfakes and all that—the AI Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Dr. Phil, Dr. Oz, whatever, the AI looking like them. They’ll design those websites to look like it’s CNN.com or FoxNews.com or “The Today Show.” Just make sure in your web address bar at the top of your screen that you’re actually on CNN.com, FoxNews.com, Today.com, because you’re not going to be on those websites.
If you can’t find information from major publications through a Google search—not looking at sponsored ads, but looking at authoritative websites about a medicinal product you’re looking into—it’s not going to have the legitimacy you think it will. And you might say, “Well, maybe the mainstream media wants to cover this up.” No, it’s not about that. It’s even independent blogs, left or right-leaning political blogs. No one will be covering this because it involves scam marketing.
So, I hope that I helped you. I—I just want to help people as much as possible because there aren’t enough people creating authentic content out there, especially with someone in front of a camera like I am, someone real to help keep people away from scams like these. Glyco Harmony does not have legitimacy in the way of being a miracle product. Do not buy this.
If you did fall for it, call your credit card company. Plead with them. Plead with them to give you a refund or try to stop future subscription charges. Tell them, “Hey, it may come with monthly charges. I was defrauded by a scam marketing video. I want to stop the charges. What can you do?” Hopefully, they’ll help you out. I hope they do. Like, comment, subscribe. The join button is down below. Glyco Harmony reviews. My review: Do not buy this. Thank you for watching.

Why Dr Phill and Dr Oz make a video advertising the product knowing that is a scam I am retire with diabetes and saw this cure spend my money to get it and to know it was a scam by people you trust
Hello Rodolfo! Check out the video near the top of my article here. In the video, I explain how scammers used what’s known as deepfake AI technology to make it appear as if Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz endorsed Glyco Harmony drops, when in fact they never even spoke about it. Scammers took videos of the two doctors and manipulated their lip movements and vocals to make it look and sound like they talked about Glyco Harmony. No doctors, hospitals, universities or famous people ever endorsed Glyco Harmony or a special recipe to reverse type 2 diabetes. I’m so sorry that scammers are such awful, awful people.
thank you
I spent 178 dollars on this liquid. How do I get my money back