Review · Dietary Supplements
ChronoBoost Plus
A pricey $114 liquid that bundles melatonin, magnesium, and common calming botanicals but hides every dose — no Supplement Facts panel, no third-party testing. The ingredients are fine; you just cannot verify any of them are present at amounts that matter, and the separate parts cost a fraction. Most buyers can skip it.
Skeptic read
Skeptical5.8/10
A pricey $114 liquid that bundles melatonin, magnesium, and common calming botanicals but hides every dose — no Supplement Facts panel, no third-party testing. The ingredients are fine; you just cannot verify any of them are present at amounts that matter, and the separate parts cost a fraction. Most buyers can skip it.
- Price checked
- $114
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page does not publish a full Supplement Facts panel, so exact per-ingredient doses are unclear
- Better use case
- Adults who want one nightly product that supports both restful sleep and next-day energy
- Skip if
- You want a full Supplement Facts panel with exact per-ingredient doses before you buy
- Evidence file
- 3 sources attached
What ChronoBoost Plus is, in plain terms
ChronoBoost Plus is a liquid dietary supplement sold through ClickBank as a “2 in 1” sleep and energy formula. You take it as a nightly dropper. The idea is simple: support deeper, calmer sleep at night so you have steadier energy the next day. It is one bottle doing two jobs, which is the main reason people reach for it instead of stacking separate pills.
The product page promises a lot in broad strokes. What it does not do well is print a clean, dose-by-dose Supplement Facts panel. So below, I am working from the ingredients the vendor names plus what those ingredients are generally used for. Where I state a fact about an ingredient, I point you to a neutral source so you can read it yourself.
What is actually in ChronoBoost Plus?
The formula is built around a familiar group of sleep- and calm-support ingredients, plus nutrients tied to everyday energy metabolism. The vendor does not publish exact milligram doses for each one, so treat the amounts below as the typical ranges used in this category, not confirmed label numbers.
- Melatonin — typically 0.5–5 mg in sleep products. It is the hormone your body makes as it gets dark, and it helps signal that it is time to wind down. Per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, melatonin may help support sleep timing, especially for jet lag or a shifted schedule.
- Magnesium — often 100–350 mg. Magnesium supports normal nerve and muscle function and is involved in hundreds of energy-related reactions in the body, according to the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements.
- Ashwagandha — commonly 250–600 mg of extract. A traditional adaptogen used to help the body manage everyday stress and promote a calmer state before bed.
- Chamomile — a classic calming botanical used in teas for generations to help promote relaxation.
- GABA — an amino acid the body uses as a calming signal; included in sleep blends to help promote a settled feeling.
- Passionflower and lemon balm — gentle botanicals long used to help promote relaxation and ease of mind at night.
None of these are exotic, and that is a point in the product’s favor — they are well-studied, widely used, and generally well tolerated. The honest gap is that without printed doses, you cannot confirm any single ingredient is present at the amount research tends to use.
Does ChronoBoost Plus really work?
Here is the calibrated answer. The ingredients ChronoBoost Plus names are the same ones legitimate sleep and calm formulas use, and several have credible support for the jobs they are doing. Melatonin is the most studied: the NIH notes it may help with sleep onset and shifting your internal clock. Magnesium supports normal muscle and nerve function and plays a role in energy metabolism. Chamomile, ashwagandha, lemon balm, and GABA are commonly used to help promote a calm, settled state before sleep.
What I cannot tell you is whether ChronoBoost Plus delivers each one at an effective dose, because the page does not publish the panel. That is the difference between “the right ingredients are here” and “the right ingredients are here in the right amounts.” A supplement supports your sleep routine; it does not treat insomnia or any medical condition, and no honest review would claim otherwise. If your sleep trouble is persistent, that is a conversation for your own clinician, not a bottle.
Side effects to know
Most reported effects with this kind of blend trace back to melatonin: some people feel groggy the next morning, have unusually vivid dreams, or feel foggy if they take it too close to when they need to be alert. Magnesium, at higher amounts, can loosen stools. Adaptogens like ashwagandha are usually well tolerated but can upset some stomachs.
Who should be cautious: anyone who is pregnant or nursing, anyone on prescription medication (especially sedatives or blood-pressure drugs), and shift workers whose sleep timing is already irregular. This is general information, not medical advice — check with your own clinician before adding any new supplement.
Is ChronoBoost Plus a scam or legit?
It reads as legit, with one fair criticism. On the legit side: there is a real, reachable vendor through ClickBank’s marketplace, the product ships, the price is a clear $114 one-time with no surprise rebill at the cart, and there is a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund if it does not work for you. The ingredients are real, named, and commonly used.
The fair criticism is transparency. The sales page leans on big-picture promises and does not print a full dose-by-dose Supplement Facts panel or show a third-party testing seal. That is worth an email to the vendor before you buy if exact doses matter to you. But a thin label is a reason to ask questions, not evidence of fraud. Note too: any sales-page language suggesting a supplement can fix a sleep disorder is structure/function marketing — no supplement can legally treat a disease, and this review does not repeat those promises as fact.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient list before I read the pitch, checked each named ingredient against neutral sources like the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, weighed the price against what the same nutrients cost separately, and confirmed the refund terms. I do not run a lab, and this is not a “medically reviewed” badge — it is a nurse’s read of the label and the offer.
Is ChronoBoost Plus worth it?
ChronoBoost Plus is hard to recommend at $114, even with the 60-day ClickBank refund. The ingredients themselves are reasonable and well-tolerated, but the page does not publish a single dose, shows no third-party testing, and asks a premium price for nutrients — melatonin and magnesium — that you can buy separately, fully labeled, for a fraction of the cost. You are paying for convenience and broad promises, not for any verified formula.
If you genuinely want an all-in-one liquid and the refund safety net outweighs the lack of a label for you, the risk is at least capped. But for most buyers the honest call is SKEPTICAL: without disclosed doses you cannot know whether anything inside is present at an amount that does the job, and the cheaper, transparent separate route wins.
— 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:
ChronoBoost 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
- NIH Office of Dietary Supplements — Melatonin — Background on melatonin and sleep
- NIH Office of Dietary Supplements — Magnesium — Background on magnesium
Frequently asked questions
- Does ChronoBoost Plus have side effects?
- The most commonly reported effects for this kind of formula come from melatonin — morning grogginess, vivid dreams, or feeling foggy if you take it too late. Magnesium can loosen stools at higher amounts. These are typical for the ingredient class, not unique warnings about this brand. If you are pregnant, nursing, taking prescription medication, or managing a health condition, talk to your own clinician before starting.
- Is ChronoBoost Plus a scam?
- It does not read like one. There is a reachable vendor, a real product that ships, a one-time price with no hidden rebill at the cart, and a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund. The main fair criticism is transparency: the page leans on broad promises and does not print a full dose-by-dose Supplement Facts panel. That is a reason to ask questions, not a sign of fraud.
- How much is ChronoBoost Plus with upsells?
- The single bottle is $114 one-time. Like most ClickBank health offers, expect optional multi-bottle bundles at checkout that lower the per-bottle cost. You can decline every add-on and still keep the single bottle.
- Is ChronoBoost Plus better than buying melatonin and magnesium separately?
- Drugstore melatonin and magnesium are cheaper and print exact doses. ChronoBoost Plus charges a premium for convenience — one nightly drop that bundles both jobs plus supporting botanicals. If you value the all-in-one format and the 60-day refund safety net, it can be worth it; if you want the lowest price and full label clarity, the separate route wins.

