Review · Beauty

Axavive

A $108 anti-aging supplement that hides its ingredient label entirely, leans on 'turn back the clock' hype, and switches on a subscription by default. With nothing verifiable to judge and a steep price, most buyers should skip it — the honored refund is the only thing keeping this off the bottom of the scale.

Verdict Avoid 4.6/10
Axavive review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid4.6/10

A $108 anti-aging supplement that hides its ingredient label entirely, leans on 'turn back the clock' hype, and switches on a subscription by default. With nothing verifiable to judge and a steep price, most buyers should skip it — the honored refund is the only thing keeping this off the bottom of the scale.

Price checked
$108
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page does not show a full ingredient list or doses, so you should request the label before buying
Better use case
Shoppers who want a simple, refund-backed way to try anti-aging support
Skip if
You want to read a full ingredient panel before buying any supplement
Evidence file
1 source attached

Is Axavive worth it?

Avoid Axavive: it hides its ingredient label at $108 with a default subscription. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored.

That’s the short version. The longer version below explains what you’re buying, what we could and couldn’t confirm, and why the missing label is the deciding problem.

What Axavive is and how it works

Axavive is an anti-aging supplement sold through ClickBank at $108 a bottle. It’s marketed as a “beauty-from-within” capsule — the category of products that aim to support skin, hair, and the visible signs of aging from the inside rather than as a topical cream.

The honest limitation: the sales page doesn’t publish a full supplement facts panel. That means we can’t verify the exact blend or doses from the public listing. Before you buy, ask the vendor to send you the complete ingredient list so you can read it the way you’d read any label on a shelf.

What’s actually in Axavive?

Axavive’s sales page does not disclose a full ingredient list or per-serving doses, so we won’t guess at specifics or repeat unverified claims as fact. Anti-aging supplements in this category typically lean on ingredients such as:

  • Collagen peptides — commonly dosed around 2.5 to 10 g per day in studies; used to support skin elasticity and hydration.
  • Vitamin C — often 75 to 90 mg daily (the general adult reference intake per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements); a cofactor the body uses in normal collagen formation.
  • Biotin — typically 30 to 100 mcg in a general supplement; marketed to support hair and nails, though the NIH notes most people get enough from food.

We list these as category context only. We have not confirmed that Axavive contains any of them. Request the actual panel and match it against this kind of reference before deciding.

Does Axavive really work?

We can’t make a formula-specific claim because the formula isn’t public. What we can say is calibrated: a beauty-from-within supplement may help support skin and hair when it delivers researched ingredients at researched amounts. Whether Axavive does that depends entirely on a label we haven’t seen.

The sales page implies dramatic anti-aging results — the kind of “turn back the clock” language no supplement can legally promise, and we won’t repeat it as fact. Treat the bold before-and-after framing as marketing, and judge the product on its actual label and on whether your own skin or hair responds within the first 60 days.

Side effects

Without a published ingredient panel, we can’t list specific side effects for Axavive. As a general rule for this category, most beauty-from-within supplements are well tolerated, with occasional reports of mild digestive upset. This isn’t medical advice: if you’re pregnant or nursing, take prescription medication, or manage a health condition, check with your doctor first, and ask the vendor for the label so you can review it against what you already take.

Is Axavive a scam or legit?

It isn’t an outright theft scam — it’s a real, ClickBank-listed product, checkout runs through an established platform, and the 60-day refund is honored. But the marketing has the hallmarks skeptics watch for: no ingredient label or doses anywhere on the sales page, “turn back the clock” anti-aging language no supplement can deliver, a $108 price with nothing verifiable behind it, and a recurring auto-ship switched on by default. Asking $108 for a formula you’re not allowed to see before paying is the opposite of how a transparent product behaves. The refund makes it recoverable, not advisable — for most buyers this is one to skip.

How much does Axavive cost, and how does the refund work?

It’s $108 for the first bottle. Checkout enrolls you in a recurring auto-ship whose interval and amount appear later in the payment flow, so decline it there if you want a single bottle.

The refund is straightforward as a quick fact: 60 days, ClickBank-honored on the initial purchase. To use it, contact ClickBank support with your order ID inside the 60-day period. To stop future shipments, cancel the auto-ship directly with the vendor as well — the two steps are separate.

How we evaluated this

I read the public listing, looked for a supplement facts panel, and checked the refund and billing terms — then judged Axavive on what a careful buyer can actually verify before paying. Where the label wasn’t public, I said so plainly instead of filling the gap with guesses. The practical advice here — get the label, opt out of auto-ship, lean on the refund — is the same advice I’d give a family member shopping this category.

— 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:

Axavive 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 Axavive have side effects?
Because the full ingredient panel isn't published on the sales page, we can't list specific side effects. Most anti-aging supplements are well tolerated, but anyone who is pregnant, nursing, on prescription medication, or managing a health condition should talk to a doctor before starting. Ask the vendor for the supplement facts panel so you can check it against anything you already take.
Is Axavive a scam?
It's a legitimate ClickBank-listed product with a real, honored refund, so it isn't a scam in the take-your-money sense. The fair criticisms are practical: the label isn't shown up front and a subscription is on by default. Request the ingredient list and opt out of auto-ship, and the risk drops considerably.
How much is Axavive with upsells?
The starting price is $108 for one bottle. Checkout enrolls you in a recurring auto-ship whose interval and amount aren't shown until you reach payment, and there may be add-on offers. If you only want one bottle, decline the subscription and any upsells at checkout.
Is Axavive better than a drugstore anti-aging supplement?
A $20 drugstore option usually gives you a printed label you can read before you buy. Axavive's edge is its refund-backed, hands-off format. If label transparency matters most to you, the drugstore pick wins; if an easy refund and one-and-done ordering matter more, Axavive is reasonable.