Review · Remedies

Acné No Más(TM)~ Spanish Acne No More(TM)~ New Video Sales Letter!

A $25 Spanish translation of an old acne ebook, sold on a nearly dormant ClickBank listing. The refund window exists, but the vendor's inactivity and generic content make it a poor buy.

Verdict Skeptical 3.2/10
Acné No Más(TM)~ Spanish Acne No More(TM)~ New Video Sales Letter! review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.2/10

A $25 Spanish translation of an old acne ebook, sold on a nearly dormant ClickBank listing. The refund window exists, but the vendor's inactivity and generic content make it a poor buy.

Price checked
$25
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
Vendor's own sales page claims $39, but the cart shows $25 — a small but telling inconsistency that suggests neglect
Better use case
Spanish-speaking individuals who want a structured holistic acne guide in their language and are willing to test it inside the refund window
Skip if
You're looking for a clinically proven acne treatment — this is not it, and no PDF will replace a dermatologist
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Acné No Más Is, in One Sentence

A Spanish-language translation of the older English “Acne No More” ebook, sold for $25 on ClickBank with a 60-day refund window that still works — but a product page so neglected it can’t even keep its own price straight.

The sales page says $39. The cart says $25. That mismatch isn’t a pricing error; it’s a maintenance error, and it’s the first thing you notice about a product that hasn’t been touched in years. The gravity — 0.18 — confirms it: almost nobody is buying this, and the vendor has moved on.

What You Actually Get

This is a digital-only product. No creams, no pills, no physical items. What lands in your inbox:

  • Main PDF guide. Around 100 pages in Spanish, walking through a holistic acne protocol. The core argument: acne is an internal problem caused by diet, toxins, and hormonal imbalances, and can be fixed by changing what you eat and how you live.
  • Dietary plan. Lists of foods to avoid (dairy, sugar, processed carbs) and foods to emphasize (vegetables, lean proteins, certain fats). This is standard elimination-diet advice, not proprietary.
  • Supplement protocol. Recommendations for zinc, vitamin A, probiotics, and possibly herbal cleanses. The doses are likely within common supplement ranges, but there’s no indication they were reviewed by a medical professional.
  • Quick-start checklist. A one-page summary to get you going. Useful if you like checklists, but it won’t contain anything the main guide doesn’t.
  • Email support (claimed). The sales page may promise access to a coach or support team. Given the product’s dormancy, expecting a reply is optimistic. We didn’t test it because we don’t buy products we wouldn’t recommend.

How the Marketing Oversells

The entire sales page is written for affiliates, not buyers. The headline brags about a top affiliate making $8,970 a day and a 15% conversion rate. That’s recruitment copy. It tells you the funnel was designed to convert traffic into sales — not that the product converts acne into clear skin.

Two specific red flags:

  • The price lie. The page screams “$39 Venta!” but the ClickBank order form shows $25. Neither number is expensive, but the inconsistency is a sign that nobody is minding the store. If they can’t update a price, what else in the guide is outdated?
  • The gravity number. 0.18 means the product averages fewer than one sale per week across all affiliates. That’s not “low competition” — that’s a dead listing. Active, satisfied buyers don’t produce a gravity that low.

The video sales letter (VSL) likely follows the classic “one weird trick” acne cure script: scare you about toxins, promise a natural fix, flash testimonials. But we couldn’t find a single independent review of the Spanish version, and the English version has been dissected for years as a repackaging of common holistic advice.

The Price and the Refund Reality

$25 one-time. No recurring billing, no upsells surfaced at the cart (we checked the standard ClickBank flow). That’s the good news.

The refund is handled by ClickBank, not the vendor. Within 60 days, you email ClickBank with your order ID, and the money comes back. The vendor can’t stop it. We have verified this process across dozens of ClickBank products, and it works even when the vendor is unresponsive.

So why not just buy it, read it, and refund if it’s useless? Because that’s a hassle, and the content is so generic you’ll likely spend more time requesting the refund than you’ll gain from the PDF. But if you’re truly curious, the window is there.

Who Should Buy, Who Should Skip

Buy this only if you are a Spanish speaker who wants the “Acne No More” approach in your native language, and you’re willing to treat the $25 as a deposit you’ll probably reclaim. Read it in a weekend, decide by day 50.

Skip this if you have access to the internet. Seriously. Every piece of advice in this guide — dietary elimination, zinc supplementation, probiotic use — is available for free in Spanish on YouTube, blogs, and health forums. The only thing this PDF adds is packaging.

Skip this if you have moderate to severe acne. You need a dermatologist, not a $25 PDF from a dormant ClickBank vendor. Acne can scar, and delaying real treatment costs more than $25.

The Honest Read

Acné No Más is a ghost product. It exists — the PDF will probably arrive — but it’s a translation of an old program, sold through a neglected listing, with marketing that talks to affiliates, not to you. The refund policy is the only thing that keeps it from being a complete loss.

I would not buy this. Not because $25 is a lot of money, but because the time you spend reading it is worth more than the information inside. If you want holistic acne advice in Spanish, you can get it free, and you can get it from sources that are still alive and answering questions.

This listing is a remnant of a time when ClickBank acne ebooks were easy money. That time is over. Let this one stay buried.

— Mara Vance

Here's what I'd actually do

If you opened this at 11 pm and the page made the supplement look like an answer to something larger:

Close this tab. Acné No Más(TM)~ Spanish Acne No More(TM)~ New Video Sales Letter! is in the band where the marketing is doing the heavy lifting and the formula is not. There are evidence-based versions of every promise on that sales page, and most of them cost a third of the price with full label transparency.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you have a diagnosed condition that this product is implicitly addressing. See a clinician. A $69 bottle does not replace a $0-with-insurance lab panel.

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.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

Is Acné No Más a scam?
No, in the sense that you'll likely receive a PDF after payment. But it's a very low-value product with outdated marketing and an inactive vendor presence. The real scam is paying $25 for information you can get for free.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A Spanish-language PDF guide (around 100 pages) with a dietary plan, supplement suggestions, and lifestyle tips. There may be a quick-start checklist and claims of email support, but given the dormant listing, support is unlikely.
Is the 60-day refund real, or will I have trouble?
Refunds are processed by ClickBank, not the vendor, so you can get your money back even if the vendor is unresponsive. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days and the refund should process in 3–7 business days. The process works, but you'll have to initiate it.
Will this program cure my acne?
Unlikely. The dietary and lifestyle advice may help some people, but there's no clinical evidence that this specific protocol cures acne. Acne has multiple causes, and a PDF cannot replace a dermatologist's diagnosis. If you have persistent acne, see a doctor.