Review · Hearing

Audifort

Audifort is a heavily marketed liquid hearing blend built on a fully hidden proprietary blend, with no clinical trial on the finished product and a sales page that flirts with fixing hearing loss. The botanicals are plausible but their doses are unverifiable, and the marketing leans on testimonials and bundle urgency. Most buyers can skip it — the 60-day ClickBank refund is the main reason it isn't lower.

Verdict Skeptical 5.6/10
Audifort review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical5.6/10

Audifort is a heavily marketed liquid hearing blend built on a fully hidden proprietary blend, with no clinical trial on the finished product and a sales page that flirts with fixing hearing loss. The botanicals are plausible but their doses are unverifiable, and the marketing leans on testimonials and bundle urgency. Most buyers can skip it — the 60-day ClickBank refund is the main reason it isn't lower.

Price checked
From $49 (single bottle $69)
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
Uses a proprietary blend, so individual ingredient doses are not fully disclosed
Better use case
People who want gentle, daily support for hearing and mental clarity
Skip if
You have diagnosed hearing loss or tinnitus and need real medical care — see an audiologist first
Evidence file
Source hardening needed

What Audifort is and how it works

Audifort is a liquid supplement you take with a dropper, usually once a day. It is built around antioxidant botanicals and plant extracts that the company markets for hearing support and mental clarity. The idea behind blends like this is simple: the tiny structures inside your ear and the nerves that carry sound to your brain are sensitive to everyday oxidative stress, and antioxidants are studied for their role in supporting healthy cells and circulation.

To be clear about what that means and what it does not: Audifort is a wellness supplement. It may help support normal hearing and focus as part of a healthy routine. It is not a medicine, and no supplement can fix diagnosed hearing loss.

What’s inside Audifort

Audifort uses a proprietary blend, which means the label names the ingredients but does not print every individual dose. Below are the kinds of ingredients commonly featured in this formula and what each is generally used for. These are structure/function notes, not promises of a result.

  • Grape seed extract — a plant antioxidant, often used in the 100–300 mg range in studies, included to support healthy circulation and cells.
  • Green tea extract — rich in antioxidant polyphenols; typical extracts supply 250–500 mg, used to promote general antioxidant support.
  • Gymnema sylvestre — a botanical, commonly dosed around 200–400 mg, included to support metabolic balance.
  • Capsicum annuum (cayenne) — a circulation-supporting botanical, usually in small doses.
  • Panax ginseng — an adaptogenic root, often around 200 mg, used to help maintain energy and mental clarity.
  • Maca root — a botanical used to support stamina and overall vitality.

Because the doses sit inside a proprietary blend, you cannot confirm that each one reaches the amounts used in research. That is the single biggest caveat with this product.

Does Audifort really work?

Honestly: the individual ingredients are reasonable choices, but the finished liquid has no published clinical trial of its own. That is normal for this category, so it is not a unique red flag — but it does mean expectations should stay grounded.

Some of the ingredients do have a real evidence base on their own. Antioxidant polyphenols in green tea are well documented by sources like the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements for their antioxidant activity, and ginseng has been studied for cognitive support. The catch is that research uses specific, disclosed doses, and a proprietary blend hides whether Audifort matches them. So the fair statement is this: the ingredients are sensible for general hearing and focus support, the doses are unverified, and you should treat it as a daily wellness habit rather than a treatment.

Side effects and who should be cautious

Audifort is a liquid herbal blend, and the issues people most commonly report with this kind of product are mild — a stomach that doesn’t love it, or a taste they don’t enjoy. Herbal botanicals can interact with prescription medicines, so anyone who is pregnant, nursing, taking medication, or managing a health condition should talk to their own doctor before starting. None of this is medical advice; it is the same caution I would give a family member.

If you have ringing in the ears or noticeable hearing loss, see an audiologist. Those are medical issues, and a supplement is not a substitute for that visit.

Is Audifort a scam or legit?

Legit. It is a real product with a named formula, sold through ClickBank’s third-party checkout, and every order is backed by a 60-day refund that ClickBank honors directly. The claims on the label are structure/function wellness claims, which is appropriate. Where I’d push back is transparency: the proprietary blend hides doses, and the sales video leans harder on customer testimonials and bundle urgency than on the label. That is a marketing-style complaint, not evidence of fraud. Buy it as a sensible wellness supplement, not a miracle.

One note on the sales page: it frames the product around hearing in a way that can read as a promise to fix hearing problems. No supplement can do that, and I won’t repeat it as fact — I’m flagging it so you read the page with clear eyes.

How we evaluated this

I read the ingredient list before I read a word of the sales pitch, checked each botanical against how it is typically dosed and what reputable sources like the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements say about it, and confirmed the refund path actually runs through ClickBank. I don’t hand out a “medically reviewed” badge for that — this is an editorial read by someone who spent 28 years reading labels for a living.

Is Audifort worth it?

For most buyers, Audifort is a skip — a hype-forward liquid blend at about $49–$69 whose only real safety net is the 60-day ClickBank refund. The botanicals are plausible, but the proprietary blend hides every dose, there’s no clinical trial on the finished liquid, and the marketing leans on testimonials and bundle urgency rather than label transparency. If you want general antioxidant support, a single disclosed-dose ingredient costs less and tells you exactly what you’re getting. If you have a hearing problem, see an audiologist instead. The refund is the one thing keeping this from a lower mark.

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:

Audifort 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.

Source links are being attached as each review is re-audited. Until then, treat pages without a source list as editorial analysis that still needs citation hardening.

Frequently asked questions

Does Audifort have side effects?
Audifort is a liquid herbal blend, and the most commonly reported issues with this type of product are mild and digestive — an upset stomach or a taste some people dislike. Anyone who is pregnant, nursing, on prescription medication, or managing a health condition should check with their own doctor before starting, since herbal blends can interact with medicines. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Audifort a scam?
Not in the outright-fraud sense — it's a real product sold through ClickBank's third-party checkout with a 60-day refund. But it earns plenty of skepticism: the proprietary blend hides every dose, there's no trial on the finished liquid, and the marketing leans hard on testimonials and bundle urgency while the sales page flirts with fixing hearing loss. Treat it as a hype-forward wellness supplement, not a cure — and know that most buyers can skip it.
How much does Audifort cost with upsells?
A single bottle runs about $69, dropping to roughly $49 per bottle on the multi-bottle bundle. The checkout offers add-on bottles after your first selection, so a multi-bottle order can total a few hundred dollars up front. You can decline every add-on and still keep the base order, and the 60-day refund applies either way.
Is Audifort better than a standalone antioxidant like grape seed extract?
It depends on what you want. A single-ingredient antioxidant gives you a clear, disclosed dose for less money. Audifort bundles several botanicals into one daily dropper, which is more convenient but hides the individual amounts. If transparency and price matter most, a standalone ingredient wins; if you value an all-in-one liquid routine, Audifort makes sense.
How do I get the 60-day refund if Audifort doesn't work for me?
Refunds are handled by ClickBank, not the seller. Forward your purchase receipt to ClickBank customer support and request a refund within 60 days of purchase. This is contractual through the checkout processor, so it does not depend on what the sales page promises.