FDA Recall Alerts: Undeclared Tadalafil/Sildenafil in “Male Enhancement” Supplements (2026)

A practical, plain-English guide to what these FDA recalls mean and how to protect yourself by tracking exactly what you take.

Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Do not start, stop, or change any medication or supplement based on this page. If you have symptoms, take prescription medications (especially for blood pressure/heart conditions), or have questions about interactions, consult a licensed healthcare professional.

If you searched for this, you’re probably seeing an FDA notice about a “dietary supplement” (often marketed for sexual enhancement) being recalled because testing found undeclared tadalafil or undeclared sildenafil. Those are active pharmaceutical ingredients that should not be hidden in an over-the-counter product.

Quick takeaway: If you use supplements, especially anything marketed as a “fast-acting” enhancement product, the safest move is to verify the exact brand, lot, and where you bought it—and keep a simple log of what you take so you can respond quickly to recall notices.

What “undeclared tadalafil/sildenafil” means

“Undeclared” means the product label does not list the ingredient, but laboratory testing found it anyway. FDA recall notices in this category are typically about mislabeled/adulterated consumer products—not prescription medications dispensed by a licensed pharmacy.

Why it matters: Hidden drug ingredients can create unexpected side effects and interactions. If you think you may have taken an affected product, a licensed clinician or pharmacist can help you decide what to do next.

How to check whether you’re affected (10-minute checklist)

1) Find the exact product identity

2) Compare against the FDA recall notice

3) Decide what to do next (with a professional if needed)

How to reduce your risk going forward (practical, non-judgmental)

Track what you take (brand + dates)

Recall notices are hard to act on if you can’t remember the exact product name or when you used it. A simple habit that helps: keep a running log with product name, dose/serving, and start/stop dates.

Be cautious with “too good to be true” claims

Want an easy log for supplements + peptides?

Jabbit helps you track what you take, when you took it, and notes—so if a recall or safety alert hits, you can quickly confirm whether you’re impacted.

Download Jabbit on the App Store

FAQ

Is every “male enhancement” supplement unsafe?

No. But FDA recalls show that adulteration does happen, and it can be hard for consumers to detect without testing. The best defense is buying from reputable sources and tracking what you use.

How do I know if a product contains hidden drugs?

As a consumer, you often can’t. That’s why recall notices matter—and why keeping records (photos, lot numbers, dates) makes it easier to respond when a specific product is flagged.

Should I report a problem?

If you believe you had an adverse reaction, consider reporting it through FDA MedWatch and talk with a healthcare professional. (This page is informational and can’t provide individualized guidance.)

Sources (FDA recall notices):
• RHINO CHOCO VIP 10X (undeclared tadalafil): https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/usa-less-co-recalling-rhino-choco-vip-10x-due-undeclared-tadalafil
• Boner Bears chocolate syrup (undeclared sildenafil): https://www.fda.gov/safety/recalls-market-withdrawals-safety-alerts/lockout-supplements-issues-voluntary-nationwide-recall-boner-bears-chocolate-syrup-due-undeclared