Review · Other Supplements
Bazopril
Proprietary blend with no disclosed doses; $92 for a bottle of marketing. The refund window exists, but you'd be paying to test a mystery formula.
Skeptic read
Avoid3.5/10
Proprietary blend with no disclosed doses; $92 for a bottle of marketing. The refund window exists, but you'd be paying to test a mystery formula.
- Price checked
- $92
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- No full ingredient list with per-serving doses disclosed on the sales page — you cannot verify if any ingredient is at a clinically studied level
- Better use case
- Someone willing to pay a premium to try a mystery blend, strictly as an experiment, while monitoring blood pressure with a doctor
- Skip if
- You expect evidence-based dosing and transparent labeling — this product provides neither
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Bazopril is, in one sentence.
A blood pressure support supplement sold through ClickBank at $92 per bottle, with a proprietary blend and no disclosed per-ingredient doses, backed by a 60-day refund window.
The sales page pitches it as the “hottest new blood pressure/heart health offer,” but that language is aimed at affiliates, not buyers. For you, what matters is what’s inside the bottle — and that’s where the transparency ends.
What you actually get
- One bottle of Bazopril capsules. A 30-day supply. The label lists a proprietary blend — a mix of ingredients with a total milligram amount, but no breakdown of how much of each individual ingredient you’re getting. That’s the central problem.
- Digital upsells. After checkout, you’ll be offered bonus guides (likely diet plans or lifestyle PDFs). Their content isn’t described before you buy, and they’re structured to increase the total you pay.
- A 60-day refund window. ClickBank handles refunds, not the vendor. You’ll need to return the unused portion of the product, which means you’ll eat the return shipping cost and the time. It’s a safety net, but it’s not frictionless.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page is written to convert, not to inform. The phrase “like shoveling cash into your pocket” is affiliate-recruitment language — it tells other marketers that the funnel converts well. The gravity score (5.16) and the $91.85 commission per sale confirm that affiliates are pushing this hard, but that says nothing about whether the product works. High commissions drive promotion; they don’t drive quality.
The page likely includes testimonials and before/after blood pressure readings, but these are unverified and cherry-picked. No independent clinical trial data is cited because none exists for this specific proprietary blend.
The ingredient transparency problem
This is the dealbreaker. For a blood pressure supplement to be worth $92, you need to know what you’re swallowing. Common evidence-backed ingredients — like magnesium, CoQ10, hawthorn extract, or garlic — have specific dose ranges that show effects in clinical studies. If Bazopril contains these, but at fractions of the studied doses, you’re paying for a placebo.
Because the label uses a proprietary blend, you can’t check. The total blend weight might be 500 mg, but if it’s six ingredients, you could be getting 450 mg of cheap filler and 50 mg of the active. There’s no way to know, and that makes the product impossible to evaluate. This isn’t a minor omission; it’s a structural flaw that turns the supplement into a black box.
What it costs and how the refund works
$92 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced at the cart. The upsell funnel after purchase will try to sell you additional products, but you can skip them.
The 60-day refund is real, but it’s a ClickBank policy, not a vendor promise. You contact ClickBank support, provide your order ID, and return the unused product. The refund hits in 3–7 business days. For a supplement, you’ll typically need to send back the bottle (even if partially used), and you’ll pay return shipping. Factor that in: you’re risking about $10–15 in postage to try a mystery formula.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’re comfortable paying a premium for a proprietary blend and are willing to treat it as an experiment — monitoring your blood pressure with a doctor, and returning it within 60 days if you see no change. That’s a narrow window of buyer.
Skip this if you expect transparency, evidence-based dosing, or value. You can buy standalone blood-pressure-support ingredients (magnesium glycinate, CoQ10, hawthorn extract) at known, clinically-studied doses for a fraction of the price. If you’re on prescription medication, do not add an unverified supplement without your doctor’s explicit approval — the interaction risk is real.
The honest read
Bazopril is a marketing vehicle first and a supplement second. The high affiliate commission, the fear-based language, and the proprietary blend are all designed to make the sale easy and the product hard to scrutinize. The refund window gives you an escape hatch, but you’re still paying to test a mystery bottle.
If the vendor were confident in the formula, they’d disclose the doses. They don’t. That tells you more than any testimonial could.
— 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. Bazopril 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
- Is Bazopril a scam?
- Not in the sense that they take your money and run — the product ships, and the refund window is real. But it's a proprietary blend with no disclosed doses, sold at a price that's mostly marketing margin. That's not a scam; it's just a bad deal for anyone who wants to know what they're swallowing.
- What do I actually get when I buy?
- One bottle of capsules (30-day supply), plus access to a digital upsell funnel with bonus materials that aren't described before you pay. The core product is the supplement; everything else is padding.
- Is the 60-day refund real, or do they hassle you?
- Refunds are processed through ClickBank, not the vendor. You'll need to contact ClickBank support with your order ID and return the unused product. The refund hits in 3–7 business days. The hassle is the return shipping cost and the requirement to send something back — for a supplement, that often means you're out the postage and the time.
- Does Bazopril actually lower blood pressure?
- There's no way to know from the sales page. Without a transparent label showing how much of each ingredient is in the blend, you can't compare it to clinical trials. Some blood-pressure-support ingredients work at specific doses; Bazopril might have them, but it might not. You're guessing.