
Kratom tinctures
by Jetpackkratom
Jetpackkratom SILVER Liquid Extract is a concentrated liquid kratom preparation that delivers 60mg of mitragynine per millilitre — roughly equivalent to 5g of powdered kratom leaf. Available in 5ml, 10ml, and 30ml dropper bottles, it gives you precise, drop-by-drop control over your intake without scales, capsules, or the bitter taste of raw powder. If you've been measuring kratom on a kitchen scale and choking it down with orange juice, this is the upgrade you didn't know you needed.
Three sizes, same concentration. The difference is how long they last and how portable they are.
| Volume | Mitragynine per bottle | Approximate powder equivalent | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 ml | 300mg | ~25g powder | Trying the format for the first time, or keeping one in your jacket pocket |
| 10 ml | 600mg | ~50g powder | Regular use — fits in any bag, lasts a good while |
| 30 ml | 1,800mg | ~150g powder | Your home bottle — best value per ml if you already know you like it |
Every bottle uses the same 60mg/ml concentration, so switching between sizes doesn't change your dosing. The 5ml is genuinely pocket-sized — about the length of your thumb. The 30ml is the one to keep on the kitchen shelf and decant from if you want both convenience and value.
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Brand | Jetpackkratom |
| Product line | SILVER |
| Format | Liquid extract with dropper |
| Mitragynine concentration | 60mg per 1ml |
| Drops per ml | ~20 drops |
| Mitragynine per drop | ~3mg |
| Powder equivalence | 1ml ≈ 5g powdered kratom leaf |
| Available volumes | 5ml, 10ml, 30ml |
| Ingredients | Mitragynine, polyethylene glycol, ultra-purified water |
| Plant species | Mitragyna speciosa |
If you find you prefer a stronger concentration, Jetpackkratom also makes the GOLD 80mg Extract in capsule form — 80mg of mitragynine per capsule, no measuring required. And if you enjoy the ritual of a warm cup, their Kratom Chai Tea and Ceylon Tea blends are worth a look for a slower, more traditional way to take kratom.
We've sold kratom in every format imaginable since the early 2000s — powder, capsules, resin, enhanced leaf, tea bags. Each has its place. But liquid extract solves the two biggest complaints we hear behind the counter: inconsistent dosing and the taste.
Powder is cheap and flexible, but try measuring 2.3 grams on a windy afternoon at a festival, or in a shared kitchen where you'd rather not explain the green dust on the counter. Capsules fix the taste problem but lock you into fixed increments — you can't take half a capsule. Liquid sits in the sweet spot. Each drop of Jetpackkratom SILVER delivers roughly 3mg of mitragynine, so you can dial in your amount with a precision that powder and capsules simply can't match. Twenty drops equals one full millilitre (60mg mitragynine, the equivalent of about 5g of powder). Want less? Ten drops. Want to experiment cautiously? Five drops. The dropper gives you that control.
The honest limitation: liquid extract costs more gram-for-gram than buying raw powder. You're paying for concentration, convenience, and portability. If you sit at home with a scale and don't mind the taste, powder is the more economical route. But if you want something you can toss in a bag and use discreetly in a coffee shop — the liquid wins every time. The 10ml bottle is about the size of an eye-drops container. Nobody looks twice.
Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) has been used in Southeast Asian regions for centuries. According to the StatPearls clinical resource, kratom is a plant indigenous to Southeast Asia, typically consumed as tea or powder, with physiological effects that vary by dose. The first reports of kratom use for opioid-related purposes date back to 1836, with mitragynine — the primary active alkaloid — first isolated in 1907.
According to a review published in the journal Current Pharmacology Reports (PMC10177737), "evidence emerging from the initial preclinical findings supports the anecdotal reports that kratom can be beneficial in treating pain and mental health conditions." However, this remains an area of active research, not settled science. According to a separate pharmacological review (PMC7203303), "mitragynine appears to block pain signalling through other mechanisms as well, suggesting a multimodal approach" — meaning its activity isn't limited to a single receptor pathway.
On the safety side, a systematic review in Frontiers in Pharmacology (PMC9130800) noted that "cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, neurological, and psychiatric effects associated with kratom use were especially notable" in reported cases. And research on the cytotoxicity of mitragynine (PMC11720435) found dose-dependent effects on human neuronal cell lines, reinforcing that concentration and frequency matter. The takeaway: respect the substance, pay attention to how your body responds, and don't treat daily use as a given.
The texture of this extract is slightly viscous — thicker than water, thinner than syrup. It has a mild bitterness typical of concentrated kratom, but nothing like the full assault of toss-and-wash powder. Dropping it into an espresso or a strong chai makes the flavour essentially disappear. One customer described it as "the kratom I can actually take at work without anyone asking questions," which sums it up nicely.
One thing to watch out for: the dropper cap on the 5ml bottle is small. If your hands run large or you're working with cold fingers, the 10ml bottle is easier to handle. Minor thing, but worth mentioning.
Kratom interacts with liver enzymes that metabolise many common medications. According to pharmacokinetic research (PMC12084173), methanolic kratom extracts inhibit CYP2D6 activity by approximately 90% at 20 micrograms per ml, CYP2C9 by roughly 65%, and CYP3A by about 50%. These are the same enzyme pathways that process antidepressants, blood thinners, and many other prescription drugs. If you take any regular medication, speak with your doctor or pharmacist before using kratom extract. This isn't a soft suggestion — enzyme inhibition at these levels can meaningfully alter how your body handles other substances.
Each millilitre contains 60mg of mitragynine, equivalent to roughly 5g of dried kratom leaf. That's a meaningful dose concentrated into about 20 drops. The liquid format means faster absorption compared to swallowing dry powder, so effects may come on quicker.
SILVER is a liquid extract at 60mg mitragynine per ml, dosed with a dropper. GOLD comes in capsule form at 80mg mitragynine per capsule. SILVER gives you more precise dosing control; GOLD is more convenient if you prefer a fixed dose with zero taste. Different formats, both concentrated.
We'd strongly advise against it. Both kratom and alcohol are central nervous system depressants at higher doses, and combining them increases the risk of excessive sedation, nausea, and respiratory depression. Stick to non-alcoholic beverages — coffee and juice work best.
That depends on your individual amount per use. At 1ml per serving (20 drops, 60mg mitragynine), you get 10 servings. At half a millilitre (10 drops, 30mg), you get 20. The dropper lets you adjust precisely.
It has a characteristic bitter, earthy flavour — less intense than raw powder but still noticeable if taken neat. Adding it to coffee, chai, or citrus juice covers the taste almost completely. We've found espresso is the best carrier.
Regular daily use increases the risk of tolerance and dependence. Research notes that insomnia and habit formation are associated with frequent kratom consumption. Using it occasionally rather than as a daily routine is the more cautious approach. If you notice you need more to feel the same effect, that's your signal to take a break.
Keep it upright in a cool, dark place with the cap sealed. Direct sunlight and heat can degrade mitragynine over time. A kitchen cupboard or bedside drawer works fine. No need to refrigerate, but it won't hurt if you do.
Last updated: April 2026
Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.