Review · Dietary Supplements
15 Day Cleanse
A 'detox cleanse' built on weak science, with no published ingredient panel, stimulant laxatives, and weight-loss marketing it can't back up. The $13 entry is low-stakes, but most buyers should skip it in favor of a single, labeled fiber supplement.
Skeptic read
Avoid4.6/10
A 'detox cleanse' built on weak science, with no published ingredient panel, stimulant laxatives, and weight-loss marketing it can't back up. The $13 entry is low-stakes, but most buyers should skip it in favor of a single, labeled fiber supplement.
- Price checked
- $13
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page does not publish a full Supplement Facts panel, so you can't see exact doses
- Better use case
- People curious about a short, structured gut reset who want a low-cost first try
- Skip if
- You want a fully published, third-party-tested Supplement Facts panel before you buy
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What 15 Day Cleanse is, and how it works
15 Day Cleanse is a short-term capsule kit sold through ClickBank for a $13 one-time price. The idea is simple: a 15-day routine meant to support regularity and help you feel lighter and less bloated by the end. It’s marketed as a gut-and-body “cleanse,” which in plain terms means it aims to help your digestive system clear out and keep things moving.
Here’s the honest framing up front. Your liver and kidneys already do the real detox work for free. What a product like this can reasonably support is regularity and comfort — not some deep purge. Read it as a gentle nudge for your gut over two weeks, paired with sensible eating, and your expectations will line up with what cleanse supplements actually do.
What’s in it (and what the label doesn’t show)
This is where I have to be straight with you. The sales page I reviewed does not publish a full Supplement Facts panel, so I can’t list exact doses for each ingredient. That’s a real gap, and I’m flagging it rather than guessing.
Most 15-day cleanse formulas in this category are built around a familiar short list, and you should expect some mix of these:
- Psyllium husk or other soluble fiber (commonly 3–5 g per day in studies) — adds bulk and supports regularity. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes fiber’s well-established role in normal bowel function.
- Senna or cascara (herbal laxatives) (typically small, single-digit milligram amounts) — stimulate bowel movements. These are for short-term use only; Mayo Clinic cautions against relying on stimulant laxatives long-term.
- Bentonite clay or activated charcoal — marketed to “bind” waste. Evidence for routine cleanse use is thin.
- Probiotic strains (often listed in CFUs) — support a normal gut balance.
Because the doses aren’t published here, treat that list as the category norm, not a confirmed formula for this specific bottle. If exact amounts matter to you — and for anything you swallow, they should — that missing panel is the single biggest reason to hesitate.
Does 15 Day Cleanse really work?
For the modest job of supporting regularity over two weeks, a fiber-and-herbal cleanse can do something real — fiber’s effect on bowel function is well documented by the NIH, and that’s the most defensible thing any product like this can claim. If you’ve been backed up or bloated, you may notice you feel lighter by day 15.
What it won’t do is melt fat. The sales page leans toward weight-loss language, but there’s no published clinical trial on this specific product, and the broader research on “cleanse” supplements for fat loss is weak. Early scale drops are mostly water and waste leaving your system, not fat. So: useful for short-term regularity support, oversold if you read it as a weight-loss cure. No supplement can legally claim that, and I’d be skeptical of any that does.
Side effects — what’s commonly reported
Cleanse products that include fiber and herbal laxatives commonly cause mild, temporary effects, especially in the first few days: bloating, gas, looser stools, mild cramping, and the urge to go more often. These usually ease as your gut adjusts. Drink plenty of water throughout the 15 days — fiber without enough fluid can backfire.
A few people should be more cautious. If you’re pregnant or nursing, have a digestive condition like IBS or IBD, or take prescription medications, talk to your doctor before starting — herbal laxatives can interact with some drugs and aren’t meant for ongoing use. This isn’t medical advice; it’s the same caution I’d give a family member.
Is 15 Day Cleanse a scam or legit?
It’s legit in the ways that matter for trust. It’s a real product that ships, billing runs through ClickBank, and the refund is handled on ClickBank’s side, so you’re not relying on the vendor’s goodwill to get your money back. There’s no recurring charge at the initial checkout — we verified that at catalog import.
The fair criticism isn’t fraud, it’s transparency. The page makes broad cleanse claims and doesn’t show you a full ingredient panel, and there’s an optional larger bundle at checkout that can lift your total well past $13. None of that makes it a scam. It does mean you should buy with eyes open: take the $13 bottle, skip the bundle if you’re unsure, and know the refund is there if it’s not for you.
What it costs and how the refund works
The entry price is $13, one-time, with no recurring billing at the initial checkout. At checkout you may be offered a larger-supply bundle that can push the total to roughly $40–$70; you can decline it and keep just the single bottle, or take the cheaper alternative offer.
Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. You request it through ClickBank with your order ID, and the vendor can’t block it.
Is 15 Day Cleanse worth it?
15 Day Cleanse is a $13 detox-cleanse with a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund — and on the merits, it’s one to skip. The “cleanse/detox” premise is weak science, the sales page hides the doses, the formula likely leans on short-term-only stimulant laxatives, and the weight-loss angle has no support behind it. The low price and refund keep it from being a true scam, but for the same money a plain, fully labeled fiber supplement does the one defensible job — regularity — with none of the guesswork.
How we evaluated this
I read the sales page the way I read a hospice intake chart — slowly, looking for what’s missing as much as what’s there. I noted the price and checkout structure, the refund path, the claims the page makes, and the ingredient detail it leaves out, then weighed all of it against what cleanse supplements can honestly do. No “miracle,” no “secret,” just the receipts.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
15 Day Cleanse earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— Mara Vance · Hospice nurse, retired (RN, 28 years)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Does 15 Day Cleanse have side effects?
- Cleanse and fiber-style products can cause mild, temporary effects like bloating, gas, loose stools, or cramping, especially in the first few days as your gut adjusts. Drink plenty of water. If you're pregnant, nursing, have a digestive condition, or take medications, check with your doctor first.
- Is 15 Day Cleanse a scam?
- No. It's a real product that ships, sold through ClickBank, which handles billing and refunds. The honest knock isn't that it's a scam — it's that the sales page leans on broad claims and doesn't publish a full ingredient panel, so you're buying with less detail than you'd want.
- How much is it with upsells?
- The entry price is $13 one-time. At checkout you may be offered a larger-supply bundle that can push your total to roughly $40-$70. You can decline and keep just the $13 bottle, or take the cheaper alternative offer instead.
- Is 15 Day Cleanse better than a fiber supplement?
- A plain psyllium or fiber supplement is cheaper, well-studied, and fully labeled, and may do the same job for regularity. 15 Day Cleanse offers a simple pre-set 15-day plan some people prefer. If transparency matters most to you, a labeled fiber product is the safer pick.
- Will I lose weight on it?
- No supplement guarantees weight loss, and there's no clinical evidence this specific product causes it. Any short-term change in the scale is usually water and waste, not fat. Lasting results come from diet and activity, which a cleanse can only support around the edges.

