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Drug Recall Safety Alert

A Wellness Supplement Sold Online Was Secretly Spiked With Kratom — The FDA Just Issued a Recall

Better Weather Fix Elixir was marketed as a natural supplement. It contained undeclared kratom compounds — including a version more potent than the kratom itself — that can cause addiction, hallucinations, and in some cases, death. The FDA announced the recall on May 28, 2026.

By Lawsuit Loop Staff · Published May 29, 2026 · 5 min read
Stock image — not an actual product or client
⚠ Recall Alert — Stop Using This Product Now

If you have Better Weather Fix Elixir (15 ml) at home, stop using it immediately and do not give it to anyone else. All lot numbers are included in this recall. Contact info@xdeor.com with questions about what to do with the product.

What happened: Better Weather Actives LLC has voluntarily recalled all lots of Better Weather Fix Elixir — a 15 ml supplement sold online as a wellness product — after testing found it contained two undeclared kratom compounds: mitragynine and mitragynine pseudoindoxyl (MP). Neither ingredient was listed on the label. Consumers who took this product had no idea they were ingesting a substance that acts on the same receptors in the brain as opioids, can cause serious health problems, and can be addictive.

Approximately 448 boxes of the product were distributed. The FDA announced the recall on May 28, 2026.

What Is the Better Weather Fix Elixir?

Better Weather Fix Elixir is a 15 ml liquid supplement sold online under the branding of Better Weather Actives LLC. It was marketed as a wellness product. The recall covers all lots of this product.

The product was sold between November 9, 2025 and March 28, 2026 through two websites: xdeor.com and masensupplements.com. It was not sold in retail stores, only online.

A separate recall notice was also issued by XD Investments LLC for the same product, reflecting the interconnected distribution chain.

What Is Kratom — and Why Is It Dangerous?

Kratom comes from the leaves of a tree called Mitragyna speciosa, which grows in Southeast Asia. Its active ingredient is mitragynine, a chemical that binds to opioid receptors in the brain. At low doses it produces stimulant-like effects; at higher doses it acts more like a sedative. The substance is not approved by the FDA as a drug or dietary supplement.

What makes this recall especially serious is not just the presence of mitragynine — it is the presence of mitragynine pseudoindoxyl (MP). MP is a converted form of mitragynine that is significantly more potent than mitragynine itself. According to the FDA, consumption of MP — especially alongside other medications or substances — can produce severe or fatal effects.

Known health risks from these compounds include:

  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Rapid heart rate (tachycardia) and heart palpitations
  • Hallucinations
  • Extreme sedation
  • Anxiety and agitation
  • Loss of consciousness
  • Respiratory depression — the lungs slow down or stop, which can be fatal
  • Psychological and physical dependence, with severe opioid-like withdrawal symptoms when stopped
  • Liver damage, especially when combined with other medications
  • Psychotic symptoms in some users
“Consumption of products that contain mitragynine or MP, especially in the context of use of other drugs, could result in severe or fatal physiological effects.” U.S. Food and Drug Administration, May 2026

Why This Is Especially Concerning

The core problem here is not that someone knowingly bought a kratom product. It is that these compounds were not declared on the label. People who purchased Better Weather Fix Elixir had no idea what they were actually taking.

Someone managing a health condition, taking prescription medications, or simply trying a wellness supplement had no way to know that the product contained an opioid-receptor-active compound — much less a highly potent derivative of one. The interaction risk alone — kratom compounds combined with blood pressure medications, antidepressants, or other common prescriptions — can be dangerous or fatal.

The FDA has been increasingly focused on kratom-containing products in the supplement market. Kratom is not legal to sell as a dietary supplement under current federal law, and the FDA has repeatedly warned companies against selling products that contain it.

What You Should Do

If you purchased Better Weather Fix Elixir from xdeor.com or masensupplements.com between November 2025 and March 2026:

  • Stop using the product immediately. All lots are included in the recall.
  • Do not give it to anyone else. Do not donate, share, or resell it.
  • Contact the company at info@xdeor.com for information about returning the product or getting a refund.
  • If you are experiencing symptoms — unusual heart rate, difficulty breathing, confusion, extreme drowsiness, or any other concerning effects — seek medical attention right away. Tell the doctor what you took.
  • If you have had a serious reaction, you or your doctor can report it to the FDA’s MedWatch program at fda.gov/medwatch or by calling 1-800-FDA-1088.

As of the time of this recall, the company said it had not received any reports of adverse events. But the absence of reports does not mean the product is safe — many people do not connect symptoms to a supplement they recently took, especially when the ingredients are not disclosed on the label.

Sources

  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. “Better Weather Actives LLC Recalls Better Weather Fix Elixir Due to Undeclared Mitragynine and Mitragynine Pseudoindoxyl.” FDA Safety Alerts, May 28, 2026. fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts.
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. “XD Investments LLC Recalls Better Weather Fix Elixir Products Due to Undeclared Mitragynine and Mitragynine Pseudoindoxyl.” FDA Safety Alerts, May 2026. fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts.
  3. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. “FDA and Kratom.” fda.gov. Accessed May 2026. (FDA position on kratom as an unapproved substance.)
  4. National Institute on Drug Abuse. “Kratom.” nida.nih.gov. Accessed May 2026. (Health effects and addiction potential of kratom/mitragynine.)

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