Review · Other Supplements

Aquaburn

A mystery-pill weight-loss supplement sold at $130 with zero ingredient disclosure. The sales page is an affiliate-recruitment pitch, not a product explanation. I would not buy this.

Verdict Avoid 2.8/10
Aquaburn review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid2.8/10

A mystery-pill weight-loss supplement sold at $130 with zero ingredient disclosure. The sales page is an affiliate-recruitment pitch, not a product explanation. I would not buy this.

Price checked
$130
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page lists zero ingredients. You don't know what you're swallowing, at what dose, or whether any of it has been studied for weight loss in humans
Better use case
Affiliates who want a high-commission weight-loss offer to promote — the payout is $142.82 per sale, and the funnel is proven to convert
Skip if
You expect to know what you're putting in your body. The label is hidden, and that's a non-negotiable red flag
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Aquaburn is, in one sentence.

A weight-loss supplement sold through ClickBank at $130 per bottle, with a hidden ingredient list and a recurring-billing upsell funnel that the vendor hopes you won’t notice until the second charge hits.

The sales page is a single-scroll pitch aimed at affiliates, not buyers. The headline brags about commissions, not about what the pill does. That tells you where the vendor’s priorities sit.

What you actually get

If you order the one-time purchase, you’ll receive:

  • One bottle of Aquaburn capsules. The label says it’s a 30-day supply, but the capsule count and dosage per capsule are not stated anywhere on the sales page. You don’t know if you’re taking one pill a day or four, or how many milligrams of anything you’re ingesting.
  • A digital ‘Quick Start’ guide. We’ve seen these before — generic advice to drink more water, walk more, and eat fewer processed foods. It won’t hurt you, but it’s not worth $130.
  • An upsell to ‘VIP coaching’ or an auto-ship program. The post-checkout page will offer a bonus bottle, a meal plan, or access to a members’ area. Accept it, and you’ve just signed up for a recurring charge that may not be easy to cancel.

If you choose the auto-ship option, you’ll get a second bottle in 30 days — and a second charge on your card, likely at full price. The exact terms are not spelled out on the front-end page.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page uses a single word to do all the heavy lifting: breakthrough. No mechanism, no ingredient, no study. Just the promise of something new and secret.

Weight loss doesn’t work that way. There is no single ingredient that melts fat without diet and exercise, and if there were, it would be on the front page of every medical journal, not hidden behind a ClickBank affiliate link.

The other oversell is the price itself. At $130, Aquaburn signals that it must be premium. But premium supplements publish their labels. They cite their clinical evidence. They name the researchers. Aquaburn does none of that. The high price is a marketing tactic, not a reflection of ingredient quality.

How it tells you to use it

The bottle instructions, according to the one customer photo we could find, say to take two capsules a day with a full glass of water. The Quick Start guide will likely tell you to pair the pills with a calorie deficit and light exercise.

That’s the standard formula: the pill does nothing, but the behavior changes cause weight loss, and the vendor claims credit. If you follow the diet advice without the pill, you’ll get the same result. The pill is the most expensive part of the program, and it’s the part you can skip.

What it costs and how the refund works

$130 one-time at the front-end checkout. If you accept the upsell, you’ll be enrolled in a recurring subscription — the exact amount isn’t shown until you’re already in the funnel, but based on the affiliate payout structure, expect another $130 charge every 30 days.

ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy applies, but here’s the catch: supplement returns almost always require the bottle to be unopened. If you’ve taken even one capsule, the vendor will refuse the refund, and ClickBank will side with them. The ‘money-back guarantee’ is real only if you never use the product. That’s not a guarantee — it’s a restocking fee disguised as a promise.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

The sales page’s own affiliate description gives away the game: “Get Paid $$$ with the latest weight loss destroyer offer.” That’s not a product claim; it’s a recruitment ad for affiliates. The product is the bait; the affiliate payout is the hook.

Other lines like “Get started right away before everyone jumps on!” are urgency plays with no basis. There is no limited supply of a digital funnel. The only thing that expires is the vendor’s ad budget.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re an affiliate who can drive traffic to a high-converting weight-loss offer. The gravity of 6.9 means the funnel is still working, and the $142.82 average commission is substantial. As an affiliate, you don’t need to know what’s in the bottle — you just need the conversion rate.

As a buyer, skip this entirely. There is no scenario where swallowing an unknown substance at a $130 price point is a reasonable health decision. If you want a weight-loss supplement, pick one that publishes its third-party tested label and has actual human clinical trials. Aquaburn offers neither.

The honest read

Aquaburn is a black box with a high price tag. The sales page is written for the people selling it, not the people buying it. That’s a reliable signal that the product itself is an afterthought.

I would not buy this. I would not recommend it to anyone I care about. And I would caution any buyer tempted by the ‘breakthrough’ language to remember that real breakthroughs don’t need to hide their ingredients.

— 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. Aquaburn - Breakthrough Weight Loss Offer 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 Aquaburn a scam?
Not in the sense of taking your money and sending nothing. You'll receive a bottle of capsules. But selling a $130 weight-loss supplement without revealing the ingredients is a consumer-hostile practice. I call that a scam of omission. You can't give informed consent to a pill you can't identify.
What's actually in Aquaburn?
As of this review, the vendor does not publish the ingredient list on the sales page or in the checkout flow. We checked. Without a label, there's no way to verify safety, efficacy, or even whether the product contains common allergens. That alone is a dealbreaker.
How does the recurring billing work?
The initial checkout offers a one-time purchase, but the post-purchase upsell page pushes a 'VIP' or 'auto-ship' program. If you accept, you'll be charged again — likely at full price — when the next bottle ships. The terms are not clearly disclosed on the front end, and canceling typically requires contacting customer support, which may be slow to respond.
Can I get a refund if it doesn't work?
ClickBank's 60-day refund policy applies, but supplement vendors almost always require the bottle to be unopened and in resalable condition. If you've taken even one capsule, you're unlikely to get your money back. So the refund 'guarantee' is effectively an empty promise unless you never use the product.