Review · Remedies

Acné No Más

A $25 Spanish-language clear-skin ebook that mostly repackages free diet-and-lifestyle advice, wrapped in overhyped marketing and a sloppy listing — low financial risk, but thin on anything you can't find elsewhere.

Verdict Conditional 6.5/10
Acné No Más review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Conditional6.5/10

A $25 Spanish-language clear-skin ebook that mostly repackages free diet-and-lifestyle advice, wrapped in overhyped marketing and a sloppy listing — low financial risk, but thin on anything you can't find elsewhere.

Price checked
$25
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page lists $39 while the cart charges $25 — a sloppy mismatch that signals the listing is not closely maintained
Better use case
Spanish speakers who want a clear-skin plan written in their own language
Skip if
You have moderate-to-severe acne that needs a dermatologist's diagnosis and care
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Acné No Más is and how it works

Acné No Más is a Spanish-language digital guide — a roughly 100-page PDF, no creams or pills — that lays out a diet-and-lifestyle plan for supporting clearer skin. It’s the Spanish edition of the older English “Acne No More” program. The core idea is simple: what you eat and how you live can affect your skin, so the guide walks you through food changes, a few common supplements, and daily habits.

You buy it once for $25, download it, and start. There’s no subscription and nothing recurring.

What you actually get

  • Main PDF guide. Around 100 pages in Spanish covering a whole-body approach to skin health: diet, sleep, stress, and supplement habits.
  • Dietary plan. Food lists to favor (vegetables, lean proteins, healthy fats) and foods to ease off (added sugar, dairy, heavily processed carbs). This is standard elimination-style eating, not a secret formula.
  • Supplement and lifestyle routine. Suggestions for common nutrients plus habit changes.
  • Quick-start checklist. A one-page summary so you can begin without reading the whole book first.
  • Email support (claimed). The seller advertises support. We couldn’t verify how responsive it is, so set expectations accordingly.

The supplements it recommends, and what they’re for

This is a guide, not a pill bottle, so there’s no proprietary blend to inspect. Instead it points you toward widely available nutrients. Here’s what each is generally used for, in plain structure-and-function terms — not as a cure for anything:

  • Zinc — typically 8–11 mg/day from food and standard supplements. Zinc supports normal skin and immune function. Per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, zinc plays a role in skin integrity; high long-term doses can interfere with copper, so more is not better.
  • Vitamin A — the guide leans on whole-food sources. Vitamin A helps maintain normal skin cell turnover (NIH ODS). It’s fat-soluble and can build up, so high-dose supplements carry real risk, especially in pregnancy.
  • Probiotics — promoted to support a healthy gut, which the guide ties to overall wellness. Evidence for gut-skin effects is still emerging, so treat this as a general wellness habit, not a guarantee.

These are reasonable, common ingredients. None of them, alone or together, “cures” acne — and the guide is on safer ground when it frames them as support for healthy habits rather than a fix.

Does Acné No Más really work?

Honest answer: it depends on what you expect. The diet-and-lifestyle steps it teaches — eating more whole foods, cutting back on added sugar, getting enough sleep — are broadly sensible and may support clearer skin for some people. The Mayo Clinic notes that diet can play a role in skin for some individuals, though acne has many causes and responses vary widely.

What the guide can’t do is replace medical care. There’s no published clinical trial showing this specific protocol clears skin, and the sales page’s “natural fix” tone oversells what any self-help PDF can deliver. The seller’s marketing leans on dramatic headlines rather than evidence — read it as advertising. As a low-cost, native-language starting point for better habits, it’s fair value. As a stand-in for a dermatologist, it isn’t.

Side effects and who should be cautious

The booklet itself is harmless — it’s information. The caution is about what it suggests you do. A sudden, strict diet change can cause bloating or fatigue at first. Supplements carry the real risks: zinc at high doses over time can throw off copper levels, and vitamin A is fat-soluble and can build up to harmful levels, which is a particular concern during pregnancy. Probiotics are usually well tolerated but can cause temporary gas.

This isn’t medical advice — it’s a reminder to keep supplements at label doses and to check with a doctor or pharmacist before adding anything, especially if you’re pregnant, nursing, or taking medication.

Is Acné No Más a scam or legit?

It’s a real, listed ClickBank product. You pay $25 and receive a Spanish-language PDF — that part is legitimate. Two things keep it from feeling polished: the sales page shows $39 while the cart charges $25, and the seller’s email support is claimed but unverified. Neither makes it a scam; both suggest the listing isn’t closely maintained.

The reassuring part is the refund. ClickBank — not the seller — processes refunds. Within 60 days you email ClickBank with your order ID, and the money comes back, even if the seller never replies. We’ve seen that process work across many ClickBank products. So the financial risk on a $25 guide is genuinely low.

Is Acné No Más worth it?

Acné No Más is a $25 Spanish-language clear-skin ebook that rehashes broadly sensible but freely available habits behind overhyped marketing — only conditionally worth it, and mainly for the native-language structure, with a ClickBank-backed 60-day refund as your safety net. If you’re a Spanish speaker who wants a simple, organized plan for healthier skin habits and you’d rather start with a guide than piece things together from scattered videos, it’s a fair, low-risk buy. If you have moderate-to-severe acne, see a dermatologist first; a PDF is no substitute for diagnosis and treatment.

How we evaluated this

I read the plan the way I’d read any self-help health guide a patient handed me: what does it actually ask you to do, is any of it risky, and could you get the same advice for free? I checked the checkout flow and price, confirmed the refund path runs through ClickBank, and held every claim to structure-and-function language — what a habit supports, not what it cures. I didn’t rely on the sales page’s headlines, and I flagged where the marketing reaches past what the product can deliver.

— 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:

Acné No Más 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Does Acné No Más have side effects?
The guide itself is just information, so it has no side effects. The risk comes from the changes it suggests. Big diet swaps can upset your stomach at first, and supplements like zinc or vitamin A can cause issues at high doses — vitamin A in particular can be harmful in large amounts. Stick to label doses and talk to a doctor or pharmacist before adding anything, especially if you're pregnant or taking medication.
Is Acné No Más a scam?
It's a real product from a listed ClickBank seller — you pay $25 and receive a Spanish-language PDF. The marketing oversells with loud headlines, and the page and cart prices don't match, which suggests the listing isn't closely tended. But you do get a product, and the refund is handled by ClickBank, not the seller, so your $25 isn't trapped if the guide disappoints.
How much does it cost, and are there upsells?
It's a single $25 one-time charge. We checked the standard ClickBank checkout and didn't see surprise add-ons or recurring billing. The sales page shows $39, but the cart rings up $25 — pay attention to the cart total before you confirm.
Is Acné No Más better than seeing a dermatologist?
No, and it doesn't pretend to be a medical service. A dermatologist can diagnose what's actually going on and prescribe proven options. Acné No Más is a low-cost, native-language guide to diet and lifestyle habits that may support clearer skin. Use it as a starting point, not a replacement for a doctor — especially for moderate-to-severe acne.