For healthcare professionals
Free Electrolyte Samples for Clinicians
Dietitians, physicians, and nurses: request free samples of a high-sodium, zero-sugar electrolyte mix, with published per-lot lab results your patients can check for themselves.
Why clinicians ask about it
A simple formula you can read in one line
Sodium worth the packet
800mg per serving where most electrolyte drinks carry 50 to 300mg. For anyone advised to raise sodium and fluids, fewer servings cover the target you set.
Zero sugar, minimal list
Three minerals, no dyes, no caffeine, no proprietary blends. Flavors are sweetened with Reb M rather than stevia leaf; about 10 calories.
A truly plain option
Raw Unflavored is salt and minerals only, no sweetener at all. Its roughly 2g of salt lightly seasons water or juice, easy for sensitive patients to sip all day.
Proof you can point to
Per-lot lab results for heavy metals, microbials, and label accuracy are published on every product page, and the Certificates of Analysis are online for anyone to read.
Label transparency
The full formula
Each serving carries 800mg sodium from sodium chloride, 240mg potassium from potassium citrate, and 60mg magnesium from dimagnesium malate. Raw Unflavored is those three mineral salts and nothing else: about 3g of powder, zero calories, no sweetener.
The flavored sticks add natural flavors and OnoSweet, a Reb M sweetener made by fermenting rice rather than extracted from stevia leaf, at about 10 calories per serving. There are no dyes, no sucralose, no sugar alcohols, and no caffeine in any of them. Full nutrition panels are on every product page.
Saltivate is made in the USA with imported ingredients.
Free samples
Samples for your practice
Tell us about your practice and we will send a mix of flavored stick packets and Raw Unflavored, enough for your staff to try and a few to hand to patients. If your clinic could use a larger batch, say so in the note.
For your patients
HSA and FSA cards work at checkout
Patients can pay directly with their HSA or FSA card. No Letter of Medical Necessity, no reimbursement paperwork, no third-party approval step.
Reading
References and patient pages
The clinical literature clinicians most often cite around high-sodium routines:
Sheldon et al. (2015), Heart Rhythm Society expert consensus on the diagnosis and treatment of POTS
Cleveland Clinic, Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome overview
Pages on this site written in patient language, if you want something to send along: POTS, GLP-1 medications, menopause, and hyperhidrosis.
Clinician questions