Review · Other Supplements
BioDentex
A high-priced supplement with a hidden subscription and a refund policy designed to frustrate. The affiliate-driven marketing overshadows any real oral health potential.
Skeptic read
Avoid3.2/10
A high-priced supplement with a hidden subscription and a refund policy designed to frustrate. The affiliate-driven marketing overshadows any real oral health potential.
- Price checked
- $201
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Proprietary blend hides individual ingredient amounts, making dosing impossible to evaluate
- Better use case
- People who want a 'shotgun' approach to oral health supplements and don't mind the high cost
- Skip if
- You expect transparent labeling and evidence-based dosing
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What BioDentex claims to be
A natural oral health formula with 11+ plant-based ingredients that promises stronger teeth, healthier gums, fresher breath, and enamel protection. The sales page is built for affiliates, not buyers. It leads with “$180+ CPA,” “$5+ EPC’s,” and “kills it on all lists”—language that tells you everything about who the real customer is. The conversion-optimized VSL leans on fear of dental bills and the promise of a simple daily capsule that fixes everything.
None of that means the product is empty. It means the marketing is designed to get you to click “Buy” before you think about what you’re actually getting.
What you actually get
- A multi-bottle supply of BioDentex capsules. The default checkout pushes a bulk package priced at $201. You’re not buying one bottle to try; you’re buying a commitment. The exact number of bottles varies by offer, but it’s always more than you need for a fair test.
- Recurring auto-ship enrollment. This is the part the sales page buries. After your initial order, you’ll be charged again and shipped more bottles on a monthly cycle unless you cancel. The checkbox or fine print is there, but it’s not prominent. Most buyers miss it.
- Digital bonus guides. If the checkout page throws in a “free” guide to oral health or diet tips, treat it as filler. It’s there to increase perceived value, not to change your outcome.
- A refund process that splits into two timelines. Inside 60 days, ClickBank will refund you, no questions asked, no returns needed. After 60 days, you’re dealing with the vendor’s “180-day empty bottle” policy, which is a well-known friction trap.
The ingredient list: what we know and what we don’t
The vendor touts a proprietary blend of 11+ plant-based ingredients. That’s a red flag, not a feature. Proprietary blends allow a company to list ingredients without disclosing how much of each is in the capsule. You might be getting a therapeutic dose of vitamin D—or a sprinkle. You can’t know.
Some ingredients commonly found in oral health supplements (vitamin D, calcium, zinc, probiotics like Lactobacillus reuteri) have modest evidence behind them. But that evidence is dose-specific. A study showing benefit from 1,000 IU of vitamin D doesn’t mean 50 IU will do anything. Without transparency, you’re guessing.
I reviewed the sales page and affiliate materials. Nowhere is there a full supplement facts panel with exact milligram amounts. That alone should give you pause. If the formula were truly effective at clinically meaningful doses, the company would shout those numbers. They don’t.
How the pricing and auto-ship trap work
The $201 price tag isn’t an accident. It’s set to generate the $201.15 average commission that affiliates brag about. The product is priced to pay the affiliate, not to reflect the cost of ingredients or manufacturing. That’s a business model, not a scam, but it means you’re overpaying for what’s in the bottle.
The auto-ship is where the real money is made. After your initial purchase, you’re enrolled in a monthly subscription. The charge will appear on your card until you cancel. Customer support is reachable, but the burden is on you to opt out. Many buyers forget, and the vendor banks on that.
The refund policy: 180 days of fine print
The headline “180-Day Risk-Free Trial” sounds generous. The reality: you must return all empty bottles to get a refund. That means you have to use the product for months, save every bottle, pay for return shipping, and hope the vendor processes it. It’s a friction trap designed to make you give up.
ClickBank’s 60-day refund window is the real safety net. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days of purchase, and you’ll get your money back in 3–7 business days. No returns, no hassle. I have watched this work on dozens of ClickBank products. Use it.
The gap between the vendor’s 180-day promise and the 60-day ClickBank reality is a tell. If the product worked as advertised, the vendor wouldn’t need to make refunds difficult.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you’ve exhausted evidence-based oral care and have $201 you’re willing to risk. Cancel the subscription the moment your order confirms, use the product for 50 days, and request a ClickBank refund if you see no change. That’s the only way to test it without getting trapped.
Skip this if you expect transparent labeling, if you’re on a budget, or if you’ve been burned by auto-ship supplement traps before. Also skip it if you have real dental problems—cavities, gum disease, enamel erosion—that require a dentist, not a capsule.
The honest read
BioDentex is a supplement that might contain some useful ingredients, but the marketing is built to convert traffic, not to inform. The price is inflated to fund high affiliate payouts, and the auto-ship model is predatory. The proprietary blend hides whether you’re getting anything close to a clinically relevant dose.
If the company published a full supplement facts panel with transparent amounts, dropped the auto-ship default, and priced the product based on what’s actually in it, I’d consider a conditional recommendation. But they don’t, because the current setup makes more money.
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. BioDentex 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 BioDentex a scam?
- No, you get a physical product, but the marketing is deceptive and the auto-ship model is predatory. Calling it a scam confuses 'overpriced and tricky' with 'doesn't exist.'
- What exactly do I get when I buy?
- A multi-bottle supply of BioDentex capsules and enrollment in a subscription that charges you monthly for more bottles unless you cancel. Any bonus guides are digital and secondary.
- How does the refund really work?
- The vendor advertises a 180-day 'risk-free' guarantee, but you must return all empty bottles to qualify—a classic hurdle. The safer route is ClickBank's 60-day refund policy: request a refund through ClickBank support with your order ID, and you'll get your money back without returning anything. After 60 days, you're stuck with the vendor's empty-bottle policy.
- What are the ingredients, and do they work?
- The sales page lists a proprietary blend of 11+ plant-based ingredients, but exact amounts are hidden. Some ingredients like vitamin D and zinc have general oral health support in the literature, but without knowing the doses, you can't tell if this formula is therapeutic or just window dressing.