Review · Other Supplements

Chronoboost

A $114 supplement with zero disclosed ingredients, zero clinical evidence, and a sales page that speaks only to affiliates. There is no reason to buy what you can't vet.

Verdict Avoid 2.1/10
Chronoboost review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid2.1/10

A $114 supplement with zero disclosed ingredients, zero clinical evidence, and a sales page that speaks only to affiliates. There is no reason to buy what you can't vet.

Price checked
$114
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
No ingredient list anywhere on the sales page, in the affiliate tools, or in the marketplace listing — you are buying a mystery bottle
Better use case
No one — there is no buyer profile for which a mystery supplement at $114 makes sense
Skip if
You value knowing what you swallow — the ingredient list is absent and that's non-negotiable
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Chronoboost is, in one sentence.

A $114 dietary supplement sold through ClickBank that promises to fix sleep and energy in one bottle, with no published ingredient list, no clinical evidence, and a sales page that reads like an affiliate recruitment poster rather than a product description.

The title says “2 in 1 Sleep & Energy Offer,” but the offer is the thing being sold to affiliates — not the thing being explained to you. That distinction matters before any money leaves your account.

What you actually get

Based on the vendor’s marketplace listing and the sales page at chronoboost.net, the deliverables are:

  • One bottle of Chronoboost. Quantity, capsule count, and serving size are all unknown. The sales page does not show a Supplement Facts panel, a label image, or even a bullet list of active ingredients. For a supplement priced at $114, that omission is not an oversight — it’s the entire story.
  • A 60-day ClickBank refund window. This is the only verifiable part of the offer. ClickBank’s standard policy applies to physical goods, meaning you can request a refund within 60 days. However, physical returns are messier than digital ones: the vendor may require the bottle to be unopened, you may pay return shipping, and restocking fees are possible. The sales page does not clarify any of this.
  • Likely post-purchase upsells. The vendor’s commission structure ($114.45 per sale at 75% commission) suggests a front-end price of around $152.70 if the $114 is the customer price. Either way, the cart flow on ClickBank health offers almost always includes additional one-click upsells. You will not see those before the first purchase.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page has exactly one job: to convince affiliates that this offer will convert on Facebook, YouTube, and email. The language — “STOP! Brand new Sleep + Energy offer! Ultra high demand on Fb/Yt and Emailing! Promote Now for Huge Commission Bumps!” — is pure affiliate recruitment. It tells you nothing about the product because it was not written for you.

When a supplement vendor spends its entire sales page talking to marketers instead of customers, one of two things is usually true: either the product is so weak it can’t be sold on its own merits, or the vendor is prioritizing affiliate hype over buyer trust. Either way, the person swallowing the pills is an afterthought.

What it costs and how the refund works

$114 one-time at the front-end checkout, based on the ClickBank marketplace data. No recurring billing is surfaced at the cart, but upsells after purchase are standard for this category and vendor behavior. The 60-day refund policy is a ClickBank platform guarantee, not a vendor promise. For physical goods, the process works like this: you contact ClickBank support with your order ID, they forward the request to the vendor, and the vendor may require you to return the unopened product at your expense. If the vendor disputes the return, ClickBank typically sides with the customer, but the timeline stretches and the shipping costs are yours.

The sales page says nothing about this. It says nothing about anything a buyer would need to know.

The missing ingredient panel is the whole review

There is no way to evaluate Chronoboost as a supplement because there is nothing to evaluate. No ingredient names. No dosages. No mention of whether it contains stimulants, sedatives, or proprietary blends. No indication of third-party testing, GMP certification, or country of manufacture.

For a $114 supplement, that is disqualifying on its own. Even the cheapest drugstore melatonin lists its ingredients. The fact that this vendor chose to launch without a label tells you the product is either not ready for market or not intended to be scrutinized.

If the vendor ever publishes a Supplement Facts panel, we will update this review with a full ingredient analysis. Until then, any recommendation would be fiction.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

“Ultra high demand on Fb/Yt and Emailing” — This is an affiliate claim meaning the vendor believes the ad angles will work. It is not a statement of customer satisfaction or product quality. The gravity of 1.3 (as of catalog import) actually suggests the opposite: very few affiliates are moving this product, and demand is low.

“Promote Now for Huge Commission Bumps!” — Again, affiliate language. The commission bump is a temporary increase in payout for top affiliates. It has nothing to do with the supplement’s effectiveness.

“Brand new Sleep + Energy offer” — “Brand new” means no track record. No long-term safety data. No independent reviews. No word-of-mouth. You are the test case.

Who should buy, who should skip

There is no buyer profile for which this product makes sense in its current form. If the vendor publishes an ingredient panel and the formula is properly dosed with evidence-backed compounds, the review may change. Until then, there is nothing to buy except a promise and a refund window.

If you are an affiliate marketer researching the offer, the only defensible move is to wait until the vendor provides documentation you can actually show a customer. Promoting a mystery supplement is a fast way to burn an audience.

The honest read

Chronoboost is a black box with a $114 price tag and a sales page that forgot the customer exists. The sleep-and-energy combination is a real need, and a well-formulated product could be worth that price if it delivered. This one doesn’t even tell you what’s inside.

The refund window is real, but chasing a physical return on an unopened bottle of unknown contents is not a buying strategy — it’s a chore you pay $114 to create for yourself.

Supplement Skeptic exists to read the paper, not the press release. In this case, there is no paper. There is only a press release written for someone else.

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. Chronoboost - 2 in 1 Sleep & Energy Offer 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.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

What's actually in Chronoboost?
We don't know. The sales page, vendor affiliate tools, and marketplace listing all omit the ingredient panel. Until the vendor publishes a label or a Supplement Facts panel, there is nothing to evaluate. Buying a supplement without an ingredient list is like buying a house without seeing the floor plan — you're gambling.
Is Chronoboost a scam?
Not necessarily a scam — the vendor likely ships a bottle. But selling a $114 supplement with no disclosed ingredients and no clinical evidence puts it in the 'high-risk, no-upside' category. The product might exist, but you have no way to know if it's safe, effective, or even legal in your country until it arrives.
How does the 60-day refund work for a physical bottle?
ClickBank's refund policy covers physical goods, but the vendor may require you to return the unopened product at your own shipping cost. Digital refunds are instant; physical refunds involve a return window, restocking risk, and vendor cooperation. The sales page doesn't mention this nuance at all.
Why is the sales page talking about 'huge commission bumps'?
Because the page you see is designed to recruit affiliates, not to inform buyers. The vendor is telling marketers that the offer converts well on Facebook, YouTube, and email — not telling you why the supplement works. When a product's own sales page doesn't speak to the end user, treat it as a red flag.