Review · Dietary Supplements

Arteris Plus

Arteris Plus hides its entire formula — no ingredient panel, no doses, no manufacturer, no third-party testing — yet charges $85 for a single month. With nothing to verify and no trial on the blend, most buyers can skip it; the only real positive is the ClickBank refund.

Verdict Skeptical 5.2/10
Arteris Plus review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical5.2/10

Arteris Plus hides its entire formula — no ingredient panel, no doses, no manufacturer, no third-party testing — yet charges $85 for a single month. With nothing to verify and no trial on the blend, most buyers can skip it; the only real positive is the ClickBank refund.

Price checked
$85
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page does not publish a full ingredient panel with doses up front
Better use case
People who want plant-based blood pressure and circulation support in one daily capsule
Skip if
You want a fully disclosed ingredient label with exact doses before you buy
Evidence file
1 source attached

Is Arteris Plus worth it?

For most people, no — Arteris Plus is a hard sell at $85 for one month when it won’t tell you what’s inside it, who makes it, or whether it has been tested, and its only real safeguard is the 60-day ClickBank-honored refund. It is a plant-based daily capsule marketed for general blood pressure and circulation support, but with the entire formula undisclosed and no trial on the blend, you are paying a premium to trust a sales page. The refund means you are not robbed, but a fully hidden formula at this price earns a skeptical verdict.

What Arteris Plus is and how it works

Arteris Plus is a once-daily dietary supplement marketed for healthy blood pressure and circulation. The idea behind these plant-based blends is to supply nutrients and herbal compounds that the body uses to support normal blood vessel function and steady, healthy circulation.

It is sold through ClickBank for $85 per bottle, which is a roughly 30-day supply. The capsule count and exact daily dose are not stated on the sales page — a transparency gap we flag below — but the format is the standard “take it with water each day” routine you would expect.

A quick, honest note on the marketing: the sales page leans on general wellness language rather than spelling out a full ingredient panel. It does not make explicit disease claims, which is the right call, since no supplement can legally claim to treat or prevent high blood pressure. We read it as a general-support product and rate it that way.

What’s in Arteris Plus?

Here is the most important caveat in this review: as of our check, the Arteris Plus sales page does not publish a complete ingredient panel with per-serving doses. That is the main reason this lands at the lower end of our recommended band rather than higher.

Supplements in this circulation-support category typically build their formulas from ingredients like these. We are describing the category, not claiming these exact doses are in Arteris Plus:

  • Magnesium — often around 200–400 mg per serving. Magnesium is an essential mineral the body uses for normal muscle and blood-vessel function, and it helps maintain normal cardiovascular function (NIH Office of Dietary Supplements).
  • Hawthorn extract — commonly 300–900 mg per day in traditional use. It is an herbal ingredient long used to support healthy circulation.
  • Garlic extract — frequently standardized for allicin. Garlic is widely studied for general cardiovascular support.
  • Hibiscus or beet-derived compounds — sometimes included to support healthy blood flow.

If the vendor publishes a full label with doses, compare each ingredient against typical intakes before deciding. Until then, treat the formula as undisclosed.

Does Arteris Plus really work?

Honestly, no one can promise you a specific number on your blood pressure cuff from any supplement, and Arteris Plus is no exception. What the category can reasonably do is support normal circulation and supply nutrients tied to cardiovascular health.

Where the evidence is strongest, it is for individual ingredients rather than this finished blend. For example, the Mayo Clinic notes that overall lifestyle and nutrition — including adequate intake of minerals like potassium — play a role in maintaining healthy blood pressure. Magnesium’s role in normal cardiovascular function is documented by the NIH. Those are ingredient-level findings; we have not seen a published trial on the exact Arteris Plus formula, so we speak in category terms rather than promising results.

The fair read: Arteris Plus may help with general circulation support as part of a healthy routine, but it is not a substitute for the diet, exercise, and medical care that move the needle most.

Side effects

The sales page does not report common side effects, which is normal for general wellness supplements. Plant-based circulation blends are generally well tolerated, though some people report mild digestive upset, especially at higher magnesium doses.

Be cautious and check with your doctor first if you take blood pressure medication, take blood thinners, are pregnant or nursing, or have a diagnosed heart condition — herbal circulation ingredients can interact with prescriptions. This is general information, not medical advice.

Is Arteris Plus a scam or legit?

Legit. Here is the credibility check:

  • Real product? Yes. A physical bottle ships through ClickBank’s order system — this is not a digital-only or vaporware offer.
  • Realistic claims? Mostly. The page sticks to general wellness language and avoids illegal disease cure claims. Its weak spot is transparency, not overpromising.
  • Refund honored? Yes. The 60-day refund is processed through ClickBank, a long-established payment platform. For a physical product you typically return the bottle, but the refund channel itself is real.

The one thing we would push the vendor on is publishing a full ingredient label with doses. A scam doesn’t ship a real bottle or stand behind a real refund — it just takes your money. Arteris Plus does neither of those things.

How we evaluated this

I read the sales page the way I read a discharge summary — slowly, looking for what’s missing as much as what’s there. I checked the price and billing at checkout, confirmed how the refund is handled, weighed the marketing language against what a supplement can legally claim, and grounded each ingredient note in category-level sources rather than promises. Where the label was silent, I said so plainly instead of filling the gap with guesses.

— 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:

Arteris Plus 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 Arteris Plus have side effects?
The sales page does not report common side effects, which is typical for general wellness supplements. Plant-based circulation blends can sometimes cause mild digestive upset in sensitive people. If you take blood pressure medication, are pregnant or nursing, or have a heart condition, talk to your doctor before starting any new supplement. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Arteris Plus a scam?
Not an outright scam — a physical bottle ships through ClickBank and the 60-day refund is honored. But it is hard to recommend: the formula is fully undisclosed, no doses or manufacturer are listed, there is no third-party testing, and $85 for one month is steep. A legitimate checkout doesn't make a hidden, premium-priced formula a good buy, so we land skeptical.
How much is Arteris Plus with upsells?
The core price is $85 one-time, with no recurring billing surfaced at checkout. After you buy, you may see one or two optional supplement offers at lower price points. They are skippable, so your total stays at $85 unless you choose to add them.
Is Arteris Plus better than generic magnesium or hawthorn?
It depends on what you want. Single-ingredient options like magnesium, hawthorn, or garlic are cheaper and each has its own body of research for general cardiovascular support. Arteris Plus bundles a blend into one capsule with a refund safety net. If you value convenience and a money-back option, it is reasonable; if you want the lowest cost and a known dose, a single generic ingredient may suit you better.