Review · Other Supplements
Arteris Plus
An $85 blood pressure supplement with no disclosed ingredients, sold on a 'unique angle' VSL that promises affiliate riches, not consumer results. The 60-day refund window is the only thing that's real.
Skeptic read
Avoid3.2/10
An $85 blood pressure supplement with no disclosed ingredients, sold on a 'unique angle' VSL that promises affiliate riches, not consumer results. The 60-day refund window is the only thing that's real.
- Price checked
- $85
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- Sales page does not list ingredients, doses, or any clinical evidence — you're buying blind
- Better use case
- No one. There is no scenario where an $85 supplement with undisclosed ingredients is a smart buy.
- Skip if
- You value knowing what you're putting in your body — the label is a mystery
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Arteris Plus is, in one sentence.
A blood pressure supplement sold through ClickBank for $85 per bottle, marketed with a video sales letter that talks more about affiliate earnings than about what’s actually in the pills.
The sales page, as of this review, does not list ingredients. Not a single one. That is not an oversight — it’s the entire story. A supplement that won’t tell you what you’re swallowing is a supplement you shouldn’t buy. Everything else flows from that.
What you actually get
Here’s what the order form and funnel structure suggest you’ll receive, based on the pattern of similar ClickBank supplement offers:
- One bottle of Arteris Plus. Likely a 30-day supply. The bottle count, capsule size, and daily dose are not stated anywhere on the sales page. You won’t know how many pills to take until the bottle arrives.
- A digital bonus. Most funnels in this niche staple on a “blood pressure diet” PDF or a “natural remedies” guide. If it exists, it’s almost certainly a rehash of public-domain information — low-sodium tips, the DASH diet, maybe a list of potassium-rich foods. You can get the same thing free from the American Heart Association in ten seconds.
- Upsell offers. After checkout, expect to see one or two more supplement offers at lower price points. They’ll be pitched as “enhanced formulas” or “accelerator” products. They are skippable, and the refund window applies to them too, but the same ingredient opacity will apply.
- No third-party verification. No USP, NSF, or ConsumerLab seal. No mention of GMP certification. You’re trusting a vendor you’ve never heard of, with no quality oversight.
How the marketing oversells
The VSL’s “unique angle” is not a clinical breakthrough — it’s a marketing pitch. The sales page copy that made it into the ClickBank marketplace listing is pure affiliate recruitment: “Unique Angle In Rising Niche! Fresh VSL And The EPC Is Already Skyrocketing (Up to $4)! This Offer Could Make Your Best Month Ever On Fb/Native/Email. Test and see your account fill up with $$$.”
That paragraph was not written for you. It was written for the person who will earn an 84.82 dollar commission when you buy. It’s telling affiliates that the video converts, that the earnings per click look good, that there’s room to scale. None of that has anything to do with whether the product lowers blood pressure.
The gravity score — 0.61 at the time of this review — is low. That means very few affiliates are actually making sales. The “skyrocketing EPC” claim is either outdated or inflated. If the offer were truly printing money for affiliates, gravity would be in the double digits, not hovering near zero.
What it costs and how the refund works
$85 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing was surfaced at the cart on the date above, though upsells will try to add more.
ClickBank’s 60-day refund window covers this purchase. But — and this is the part the VSL won’t mention — refunding a physical supplement is not the same as refunding a PDF. You’ll likely have to return the bottle, possibly unopened. The vendor’s terms (which are not on the sales page) may require you to pay return shipping, and they may refuse a refund if the bottle has been opened. Even if ClickBank processes the refund, you could be out the shipping both ways and the product cost while you wait.
We have watched ClickBank refunds work on digital products. On physical supplements, the experience is messier and less certain. Factor that in.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Three claims worth dissecting:
“Unique Angle In Rising Niche!” — The angle is that the VSL is fresh. That’s a creative claim, not a medical one. “Rising niche” means more people are searching for blood pressure solutions, which is true, but it doesn’t mean this solution works.
“EPC Is Already Skyrocketing (Up to $4)!” — EPC means earnings per click, an affiliate metric. It tells you that the few affiliates testing the offer are seeing some return. It does not tell you that the product is effective. An EPC of $4 on an $85 product with 75% commission means roughly one sale per 15–20 clicks. That’s a conversion rate, not a clinical outcome.
“Test and see your account fill up with $$$.” — This is the whole pitch. The product is a vehicle for affiliate commissions. The end user’s health is secondary.
Who should buy, who should skip
I am not going to give a “buy this if” section for a product with no disclosed ingredients. There is no responsible recommendation here.
If you have already bought it, open a dispute with ClickBank immediately if the bottle arrives without a full ingredient label. If it does have a label, compare it against the clinical literature for each ingredient and dose. Chances are the doses will be too low to match any study that showed a blood pressure effect. That’s the pattern with these offers.
Skip this if you have any other option — and you do. Talk to your doctor. Buy a $10 bottle of magnesium glycinate. Download the DASH diet plan. None of those will cost you $85 and a return-shipping headache.
The honest read
Arteris Plus is a supplement offer built to recruit affiliates, not to inform customers. The sales page withholds the single most important piece of information — what’s in the bottle — and instead fills the space with earnings claims and urgency cues. The 60-day refund window exists on paper, but the physical-return requirement makes it a gamble, not a guarantee.
If the vendor were confident in the formula, they’d list it. They’d cite studies. They’d name the manufacturer. They do none of those things. That tells you everything.
I would not buy this.
— 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. Arteris Plus- Unique Blood Pressure 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- What's in Arteris Plus?
- As of this review, the sales page does not disclose ingredients. That alone should stop you from buying. Any supplement that won't tell you what's in it is not one you should ingest. If the vendor updates the page with a full label, we'll revisit.
- Does the 60-day refund work for a physical supplement?
- ClickBank's refund policy applies, but for physical goods you typically have to return the product, often unopened. The vendor may not honor returns on opened bottles, and shipping costs eat into any refund. Read the fine print before you buy. We've seen too many 'money-back guarantees' on supplements that become a return-shipping nightmare.
- Is Arteris Plus a scam?
- It's a real product that will ship, so technically not a scam. But the marketing is designed to attract affiliates, not to inform buyers. Without ingredient transparency, it's impossible to say if it does anything. The structure is built to make money for affiliates, not to help your blood pressure. Calling it a scam confuses 'overpriced and opaque' with 'doesn't exist.' It exists — it's just a bad buy.
- Are there better alternatives?
- If you're concerned about blood pressure, speak with a doctor. Generic supplements like magnesium, hawthorn, or garlic are widely available and backed by some evidence at a fraction of the cost. You can also get a free blood pressure management plan from the American Heart Association. None of those require an $85 leap of faith on a hidden formula.