In-depth review
Pur Shilajit Review: Sun-Dried Altai Resin
The verdict
Pur Shilajit sells sun-dried shilajit resin (plus tablets and vegan capsules) sourced from the Altai Mountains. What stands out is the transparency: molasses-free, filler-free, ISO-17025 US lab tested with batch-traceable certificates in a public database, and below California Prop 65 heavy-metal limits. That matters, because the shilajit market is full of diluted or fake product. Just keep expectations grounded, human research on shilajit is still limited and early.
See the current range on the official Pur Shilajit store.
Visit Official Site →Overview
Shilajit is a sticky, mineral-rich resin that seeps from high-altitude rock. Pur Shilajit's flagship is a sun-dried resin, with tablets and vegan capsules for people who don't want to deal with the sticky resin format. It's marketed on purity: molasses-free, filler-free, no added water, gold-graded raw material and wild-crafted at high altitude.
On testing and safety the brand is more transparent than most. It says every batch is ISO-17025 US lab tested, batch-traceable to certificates in a public database, and sits below California Prop 65 heavy-metal limits. It ships to 160+ countries and cites a large customer base.
The honest caveat is about the ingredient, not the brand. Shilajit has a long history in Ayurvedic tradition and contains fulvic acid and trace minerals, but the modern human research is limited and uses different forms, so claims about energy, focus or testosterone should be treated as early and individual rather than proven.
What they sell
The core product, a dense sun-dried resin. Dissolve a pea-sized amount (about 0.5g) in warm water, tea or coffee once a day.
Visit official site →Pressed tablets for people who want the resin's profile without the sticky handling. Dissolve or swallow per the label.
Visit official site →Capsules for daily use, the most travel-friendly way to take shilajit.
Visit official site →Who it's for
A good fit if you want a transparent, lab-tested shilajit with public certificates and prefer being able to choose resin, tablets or capsules.
Maybe not if you want proven, guaranteed health outcomes, dislike the strong earthy taste of resin, or would rather wait for stronger human evidence on shilajit.
Pros and cons
What's good
- Molasses-free, filler-free, no added water
- ISO-17025 US lab tested with public, batch-traceable COAs
- Below California Prop 65 heavy-metal limits
- Choice of resin, tablets or capsules
- Ships to 160+ countries
What to keep in mind
- Human research on shilajit is still limited and early
- Resin is sticky and an acquired taste
- Marketing claims (energy, focus, detox) run ahead of the evidence
- Premium pricing versus cheap, often fake, alternatives
Buying advice
If you're new to shilajit, the capsules or tablets are the easiest start; the resin is more authentic but messy (warm the jar to soften it). Stick to the label dose, around a pea-sized 0.5g of resin a day, and take it consistently.
Because fake and diluted shilajit is common, the public lab certificates are the main reason to buy from the official store rather than a marketplace.
Check the latest resin, tablets and offers on the official store.
Visit Official Site →Frequently asked questions
Is shilajit proven to work?
Shilajit has a long traditional history and contains fulvic acid and trace minerals, but modern human research is limited and early. Treat benefit claims as unproven and individual, and speak to a healthcare professional first.
Is it safe / tested for heavy metals?
Pur Shilajit says every batch is ISO-17025 US lab tested and sits below California Prop 65 heavy-metal limits, with certificates in a public database. This testing is important with shilajit specifically.
Resin, tablets or capsules?
Resin is the most traditional but sticky; tablets and capsules are more convenient. The underlying shilajit is the same idea, so pick the format you'll actually use daily.