ProcoHQ
Summary
You buy a pre-workout with a label that lists creatine, citrulline, and beta-alanine — then find out months later every dose was a fraction of what clinical trials actually used. Proco is an iOS app built to catch that before you buy.
The core workflow is a camera scan of any supplement label. Proco reads each ingredient and dose, compares them against clinical research thresholds from its database of 50+ ingredients, and returns a breakdown: effective dose or underdosed, with the evidence behind the call. The database covers performance ingredients like creatine and citrulline alongside sleep, longevity, and micronutrient categories. The tool is not yet publicly released — it is in a waitlist phase ahead of an iOS launch, so no one has put it through real-world volume testing. Teams or practitioners expecting an API, a web interface, or Android support will find none of those options described anywhere on the current page.
Bottom line: The right pick for a fitness-focused consumer who wants a fast, evidence-backed check on a single supplement before purchase — but a non-starter for anyone who needs cross-platform access, API integration, or a tool they can put in front of users before the iOS app ships.
Pricing Plans
Free- Free Tier
- Currently in early access via waitlist; full pricing structure not yet disclosed
Free
Early access waitlist for iOS app launch
- Supplement label scanning
- Dose comparison against clinical thresholds
- Access to 50+ ingredient database
View full pricing on procohq.com →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Dose-versus-clinical-threshold comparison for each scanned ingredient, so you can see the exact gap between what a label claims and what trials used — not just whether the ingredient is present.
- Database spans 50+ ingredients across performance, sleep, longevity, and micronutrient categories, so a single scan covers a multi-purpose supplement stack rather than just stimulant-focused pre-workouts.
- Evidence citations surface alongside each ingredient verdict, which means you can trace the claim back to the research rather than trusting a black-box score.
- Free early access tier available via waitlist signup, so users who join before launch avoid a paywall during the evaluation window.
Cons
Sign in to edit- The app has not launched publicly — it is iOS-only and waitlist-gated, so any team or individual who needs a working tool before the iOS release date hits a hard stop with no workaround described on the page.
- No API and no web interface are mentioned anywhere in the page content, which means developers building supplement-checking into their own product, or practitioners wanting to run batch label audits, cannot integrate Proco and will need to evaluate a different solution entirely.
- The database covers 50+ ingredients, but the page notes 'more coming soon' — any supplement containing ingredients outside that set returns no clinical threshold data, and the page gives no guidance on how gaps are handled or flagged during a scan.
- iOS-only delivery means Android users have no access path at launch, and teams evaluating tools for a mixed-device user base will need a competitor with cross-platform support.
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About
- Platforms
- iOS (coming soon)
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-09T06:02:20.080Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Consumers skeptical of supplement marketing
- Fitness enthusiasts evaluating performance supplements
- Health-conscious users wanting evidence-based choices
- People researching supplement safety and efficacy
What it does well
- Verify supplement doses before purchase
- Identify underdosed pre-workout formulas
- Compare ingredient efficacy across brands
- Research clinical evidence for supplement ingredients
- Screen for ingredient interactions
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is ProcoHQ free?
- ProcoHQ is a paid tool. No permanent free tier is offered.
- Is ProcoHQ open source?
- No — ProcoHQ is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- What platforms does ProcoHQ support?
- ProcoHQ is available on: iOS (coming soon).
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Curated lists that include this category
Supplement labels list ingredients by name and dose without telling you whether those doses match what clinical trials actually tested. Proco addresses that gap with a three-step iOS workflow: point the camera at a label, let the app parse each ingredient and quantity, then read a verdict — effective dose or underdosed — sourced from clinical research thresholds rather than marketing copy. The vendor states the database covers 50+ ingredients spanning performance, sleep, longevity, and nutrition categories, including creatine monohydrate, L-citrulline, ashwagandha, magnesium glycinate, omega-3, and NMN, among others.
The differentiating design choice is the evidence layer. Rather than returning a binary pass/fail, the app surfaces the clinical dose range for each ingredient alongside the actual label amount, so you can see not just that creatine is underdosed at 1,000mg but that the clinical threshold sits between 3,000 and 5,000mg. Proco also publishes editorial content — research summaries with citations across sleep, longevity, performance, and nutrition — which the vendor describes as educational information, not advice.
The tool fits one specific job: pre-purchase vetting of a supplement by an individual consumer on iOS. It does not fit workflows that require an API, batch label analysis, web access, or Android support — none of which the current page describes. The app has not launched publicly as of the page content reviewed; access is via waitlist signup, which means production behavior, database accuracy under edge cases, and scan reliability on atypical label formats are unverified by independent sources.
