Gold Healing is a small UK brand run out of Norwich, built entirely around gold in various physical states. The headline product is a Colloidal Gold described as 60ppm of ultra-fine 24K gold particles suspended in purified distilled water, and that level of specificity sets the tone for the rest of the catalogue. Alongside the liquid, there is a Monatomic Gold Powder pressed into concentrated white form, ORMUS mineral formulations the company traces back to alchemical tradition, and a skincare line of 24K gold-infused creams and face products. The gold theme runs from things you drink to things you rub on.

Gold products and botanical formulas

Beyond the metal itself, the shelf widens into botanicals. The herbal tinctures include a mushroom blend pulling together Lion's Mane, Reishi, Cordyceps, Chaga and Shiitake, combined with the same colloidal gold that anchors the brand. There are lucid-dream herbs and other plant formulas alongside them. A separate corner of the catalogue covers EMF protection and scalar frequency energy tools, which sit at the more esoteric end of the wellness market and will divide opinion sharply depending on what a shopper already believes about that field. The breadth is wider than what most single-product gold sellers attempt, and it gives Gold Healing the feel of a curated shop rather than a one-line operation built around a single bottle.

Mushroom blends with colloidal gold

None of this is mainstream medicine, and a fair review has to name that plainly. Ormus, monatomic gold and scalar energy products live in a part of alternative health where the science is contested at best and the claims tend to outrun the evidence. Gold Healing leans into responsible framing, calling itself a small-batch operation that emphasises purified ingredients and what it labels "responsible wellness education," and it runs a knowledge hub of articles instead of just a checkout. A buyer curious about these products should still treat the educational material as the seller's own perspective and weigh it accordingly. The articles are a genuine attempt to contextualise an unusual product line, but they are not independent sources.

Alternative health and responsible framing

What Gold Healing does well, on its own terms, is consistency. The 24K gold theme carries cleanly from the colloidal liquid through the powder, the ORMUS, and into the skincare creams, so a customer who trusts the premise gets a coherent line instead of a grab-bag. The purified distilled water base and the stated 60ppm concentration are the sort of concrete figures a careful shopper wants to see before parting with money on something this specialised.

Consistency across the product line

On the practical side, Gold Healing is easy to pin down, which counts for a lot in a category where anonymous sellers are common. The company is registered under number 13776538, with a registered office at 31 Cattle Market Street in Norwich, NR1 3DY. That address is shown openly on the site alongside a company registration number, an email at hello@goldhealing.co.uk, and a live chat function for quicker questions. Secure checkout and fast UK dispatch are part of the pitch, and the social presence spans Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok under the @goldhealinguk handle.

Company registration and contact details

That transparency is meaningful in this category. Plenty of sellers in the gold-water and energy-tool space hide behind a bare landing page and a contact form that goes nowhere, so a named company, a real Norwich address and a disclosed registration number give a shopper somewhere to turn if an order goes wrong. The live chat is a genuine convenience for a product line where people tend to have a lot of questions. On accountability, Gold Healing clears a bar that much of this category fails outright.

Trustpilot reviews and customer service

The outside reputation backs the operational side up. On Trustpilot, Gold Healing holds 244 reviews at 4.6 out of 5, and the company actively invites and responds to customer feedback. The reviews mentioning specific products tend to point at the Colloidal Gold and ORMUS, with praise landing on the ordering process and on how responsive the customer service is. Worth reading carefully: those scores speak to a smooth buying experience and good aftercare, which is what a Trustpilot rating actually measures. They cannot validate the underlying health claims attached to monatomic gold or scalar tools, and a 4.6 is not evidence that ORMUS does what its tradition says it does.

Retail operation versus health claims

So the picture splits in two. As a retail operation, Gold Healing looks well run: identifiable, contactable, and clearly capable of keeping a few hundred customers happy enough to leave high marks. As a source of products, it sits in a fringe corner of wellness where the burden of proof rests on the buyer, and Gold Healing's own articles are not a substitute for that scrutiny. Keeping those two judgements separate is the only honest way to read a shop like this.

Comparing Gold Healing to anonymous sellers

Someone already sold on colloidal and monatomic gold, who wants a UK seller that ships quickly and answers messages, will find Gold Healing a tidier and more accountable option than sourcing the same category through an anonymous marketplace listing, where the seller can vanish and the responsibility for purity is unclear. Gold Healing at least puts a registered company and a Norwich address behind every order. A curious newcomer would do well to read widely outside Gold Healing's own knowledge hub first, then decide whether a 60ppm bottle is worth the spend at all. The published evidence is enough to judge the company; the products themselves demand more independent reading before any money moves.


Business address
Gold Healing
Office, 31 Cattle Market Street ,
Norwich,
NR1 3DY
United Kingdom