The label, in full
The Horse Boost Formula, Ingredient By Ingredient
Written by the Horse Boost product team. Reviewed by our formulation and quality group. Last reviewed: July 13, 2026.
The 10-Second Answer
Horse Boost puts six plant-based actives in one strawberry gummy: L-Arginine for blood flow support, Maca and Catuaba for drive, Tribulus and Muira Puama for stamina, and Ashwagandha for the stress side of energy. Every dose is printed below; nothing hides in a proprietary blend.
Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 1 Gummy · Servings Per Container: 30
| Amount Per Serving | Per Gummy | % DV |
| L-Arginine | 100 mg | † |
| Maca Root Extract (Lepidium meyenii) | 75 mg | † |
| Tribulus Terrestris Extract (fruit) | 60 mg | † |
| Ashwagandha Root Extract (Withania somnifera) | 50 mg | † |
| Muira Puama Bark Extract (Ptychopetalum olacoides) | 40 mg | † |
| Catuaba Bark Extract (Erythroxylum catuaba) | 40 mg | † |
| † Daily Value (DV) not established. |
Other ingredients: glucose syrup, cane sugar, pectin, purified water, citric acid, natural strawberry flavor, fruit and vegetable juice (for color), coconut oil, carnauba wax.
Pillar one
Circulation And Stamina
Stamina starts with blood flow, and that is where Horse Boost commits a third of its formula. L-Arginine (100 mg per gummy) is the amino acid your body converts toward nitric oxide, the signal that tells blood vessels to relax and widen; it is one of the most used ingredients in performance nutrition for exactly that reason[3].
Tribulus terrestris (60 mg) has decades of use in training culture for physical performance and vitality; modern reviews describe it as a traditional tonic with active saponins[4]. Muira Puama (40 mg), an Amazonian bark so associated with male vitality that its folk name is potency wood, completes the circulatory trio.
Pillar two
Drive And Desire
Maca root (75 mg) is the best-researched botanical in this category: human trials summarized by independent reviewers report support for libido and mood in men with regular use[2]. Horse Boost uses a concentrated root extract rather than raw powder, which is how a meaningful amount fits in a gummy.
Catuaba bark (40 mg) is its South American counterpart, brewed for generations in Brazil as the go-to preparation for male drive. The two botanicals cover the same goal from different traditions, which is deliberate: drive rarely has a single lever.
Pillar three
Stress, Mood, And Staying Power
The quiet saboteur of male vitality is background stress. Ashwagandha (50 mg) is an adaptogen with clinical research on the body's stress response, sleep quality, and sense of calm[1]. Customers usually describe this pillar first: steadier afternoons, better mood, deeper sleep, and the confidence that follows from all three.
Because Horse Boost is stimulant-free, this pillar works with your existing routine. There is no caffeine to stack on top of your coffee and no crash to schedule around[5].
Dosing philosophy
What A Fair Dose Looks Like
Every active in Horse Boost is printed with its exact per-gummy amount, and there is no proprietary blend on the label. The doses are moderate by design: this is a once-daily gummy meant for months of steady use, not a pre-workout megadose meant for one loud hour. If you compare labels, compare honestly: a blend that hides its numbers cannot be compared at all[6].
Two things Horse Boost does not claim: it does not treat, and it does not replace. It is not a treatment for erectile dysfunction, low testosterone, or any medical condition, and it does not replace medication your doctor prescribed[7]. It supports normal function in healthy men. That is the honest scope of any supplement in this category.
The sum of the parts
How The Three Pillars Fit Together
Read the formula as one system rather than six separate bets. Circulation sets the physical ceiling, drive sets the appetite to use it, and the stress pillar decides whether either shows up on a hard day. That is why customers who review Horse Boost at week six describe a stack of small changes, steadier afternoons, better evenings, more in the tank, rather than one dramatic switch flipping.
It is also why the serving is one gummy rather than a handful: the doses are tuned to run together daily for months. A sourcing note for label readers: the botanicals are standardized extracts, so 75 mg of Maca extract here is not comparable to 75 mg of raw Maca powder in a smoothie; concentration is the point.
Terms worth knowing
A Short Glossary
- Nitric oxide
- A signaling molecule that relaxes blood vessel walls, supporting healthy circulation.
- Adaptogen
- A botanical studied for helping the body maintain balance under stress, like Ashwagandha.
- Standardized extract
- A botanical concentrated so each batch delivers a consistent amount of its key compounds.
- cGMP
- Current Good Manufacturing Practices, the FDA's quality rulebook for supplement production.
- Daily Value (DV)
- The FDA's reference intake; botanicals like Maca have no established DV, marked with a dagger.
- Excipient
- A non-active ingredient, like pectin, that gives a gummy its body and shelf life.