Review · Other Supplements
Clave Diabetes Tipo 2
A $19 Spanish-language diabetes guide sold on affiliate-conversion metrics, not clinical evidence. The low front-end price hides recurring upsells, and the 'natural control' claim is medically irresponsible. I would not buy this.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.2/10
A $19 Spanish-language diabetes guide sold on affiliate-conversion metrics, not clinical evidence. The low front-end price hides recurring upsells, and the 'natural control' claim is medically irresponsible. I would not buy this.
- Price checked
- $19
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The affiliate pitch uses conversion rates and EPCs as proof of product quality — these are marketing metrics, not evidence of diabetes control
- Better use case
- Spanish-speaking individuals who want a very basic, possibly outdated, diabetes lifestyle guide and will immediately cancel any recurring charges
- Skip if
- You have diagnosed type 2 diabetes and need reliable, medically sound information — this product is not a substitute for professional care
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Clave Diabetes Tipo 2 is, in one sentence.
A Spanish-language digital guide sold through ClickBank that promises “natural control” of type 2 diabetes, fronted at $19 with three upsells and a recurring billing component the affiliate pitch is proud of but the buyer won’t see coming.
The product page we can access is an affiliate tools page, not a consumer-facing sales page. That alone should tell you something: the vendor is selling to affiliates first, and to end users second. The pitch to affiliates is conversion rates, EPCs, and recurring billing. The pitch to you, the person with diabetes or a loved one with diabetes, is a promise of control that no PDF can keep.
What you actually get
We can’t review the content because it’s behind a paywall and entirely in Spanish. Based on the affiliate description and standard patterns for ClickBook diabetes offers, here’s what you’re likely buying:
- A main digital guide. Probably a PDF, probably between 50 and 100 pages. The title suggests it’s a “key” (clave) to diabetes control, which usually means a collection of diet tips, herbal remedies, and lifestyle advice. There is no preview, no table of contents, no author name publicly available.
- Three upsell offers. The affiliate page brags about three upsells. These could be additional guides, a supplement subscription, or a “VIP” access tier. The recurring billing component is almost certainly attached to one of these upsells.
- Recurring membership. The description says “Excellent Recurring Billing!” This means after the initial purchase, you’ll be charged again — monthly, quarterly, or annually — unless you cancel. The specific amount, frequency, and cancellation process are not disclosed on the affiliate page.
- Access to a members’ area. Implied by the recurring billing model. What’s inside? No way to know without buying.
- Bonus reports. Standard filler. Usually short PDFs on related topics (“10 Superfoods for Diabetes,” “The Hidden Cause of High Blood Sugar”). They add page count, not value.
None of this is verifiable without a purchase, and the vendor has chosen not to provide a sample chapter, author credentials, or a clear list of deliverables. That’s a choice, not an oversight.
How the marketing oversells
The affiliate pitch is a masterclass in selling the sizzle, not the steak:
- “Converting at 5%+ to Diabetes/health Lists With $1.50+ Epcs.” This means the sales page converts 5% of visitors who are already on a diabetes-focused email list. That’s a decent conversion rate for a low-priced offer, but it says nothing about whether the product works. It says the funnel is optimized to separate desperate people from their money.
- “New success in the Spanish market.” The gravity score is 0.92. That’s not success; that’s a product barely moving. Gravity measures how many unique affiliates made a sale in the last 12 weeks. A score under 1 means very few affiliates are selling it, which means very few customers are buying it. The “success” is aspirational, not actual.
- “Promo 90% commission and cash prizes.” This is an affiliate recruitment tactic. The vendor is offering 90% of the sale price to affiliates, plus bonuses for top sellers. That’s how you get affiliates to promote a product with no track record. It also means the vendor is earning only 10% on the front end, so the real profit is in the upsells and recurring billing. You are the product, not the customer.
- “Low Refunds!” This is a selling point to affiliates, not to you. It means the product doesn’t get returned much, which could mean buyers are satisfied — or it could mean the refund process is confusing for Spanish-speaking buyers, or that the recurring charges kick in before the 60-day window closes and people forget to cancel. We don’t know. What we do know is that a low refund rate on a health product with no verifiable efficacy is suspicious, not reassuring.
How it tells you to use it
Without access to the guide, we can only infer. Most diabetes “natural control” PDFs follow a familiar script: eliminate sugar, eat more vegetables, take specific supplements (often cinnamon, berberine, or bitter melon), and monitor your blood sugar. Some include a “detox” phase or a strict diet plan. The advice is usually a mix of reasonable lifestyle suggestions and unproven claims about reversing diabetes without medication.
If the guide tells you to stop taking prescribed medication without consulting a doctor, that’s not a guide — that’s a danger. And we have no way to know if it does, because the vendor hides the content behind a paywall and an affiliate tools page.
What it costs and how the refund works
The front-end price is $19. That’s the number you’ll see at checkout. Then you’ll be offered three upsells. The total cost if you accept all of them is unknown, but similar ClickBank offers often push the total to $100–$200. The recurring billing component adds an ongoing charge — probably $19–$39 per month — that will continue until you cancel.
ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy covers the entire purchase, including upsells and the first recurring charge. To get a refund, email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days. The refund is processed in 3–7 business days. The vendor cannot block it. This is the only safety net you have.
But here’s the catch: if you don’t cancel the recurring billing separately, you’ll keep getting charged even after you refund the initial purchase. ClickBank refunds are per-transaction. You must explicitly cancel the subscription in your ClickBank account or by contacting support. The vendor is counting on you forgetting.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Three claims that should make you pause:
“Natural Control.” Type 2 diabetes is a chronic metabolic disorder. It can be managed, sometimes put into remission, with significant lifestyle changes under medical supervision. It cannot be “controlled” by a PDF, a supplement, or a secret key. If the product could do what it claims, it would be prescribed by doctors, not sold through ClickBank.
“The new success in the Spanish market.” A gravity of 0.92 is not success. It’s a product that a handful of affiliates tested and most abandoned. The vendor is trying to recruit more affiliates by claiming momentum that doesn’t exist.
“Excellent Recurring Billing!” This is the vendor celebrating that they’ll keep charging you month after month. When a vendor brags to affiliates about recurring billing, they’re telling you exactly where the profit comes from. It’s not from the $19 guide. It’s from the monthly charges you’ll forget to cancel.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you are a Spanish-speaking individual who wants a very basic, possibly outdated, diabetes lifestyle guide, and you are prepared to cancel the recurring billing immediately after purchase and read the guide within the 60-day refund window. If it doesn’t meet your needs, refund it.
Skip this if you have diagnosed type 2 diabetes and need reliable, medically sound information. This product is not a substitute for professional care. Skip it if you don’t speak Spanish fluently — auto-translation will garble medical terms and could lead to dangerous misunderstandings. Skip it if you’re uncomfortable with recurring billing that isn’t clearly explained before purchase.
The honest read
Clave Diabetes Tipo 2 is a product built for affiliates, not for diabetics. The pitch to affiliates is conversion rates and recurring billing. The pitch to you is a promise of control that no PDF can keep. The front-end price is low enough to feel like a no-risk purchase, but the recurring charges and upsells inflate the real cost, and the content is hidden behind a paywall with no preview, no author credentials, and no clinical evidence.
The 60-day refund window is real, and that’s the only reason to consider this product at all. If you’re curious, buy it, read it immediately, cancel the recurring billing, and decide within 60 days whether it’s worth keeping. I suspect you’ll refund it.
I would not buy this. The red flags are too numerous, the marketing is too slick, and the product is too invisible. When a vendor hides the product behind an affiliate tools page, they’re telling you who they really care about. It’s not you.
— 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. Clave Diabetes Tipo 2 - Diabetes´s Natural Control. 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 Clave Diabetes Tipo 2 a scam?
- Not in the sense that it takes your money and delivers nothing. The product likely exists as a digital download, and ClickBank's refund system is real. But the marketing is built on affiliate-conversion hype, not clinical credibility. Calling it a scam oversimplifies; calling it a low-value, high-risk purchase is more accurate.
- What do I actually get when I buy?
- We can't confirm the exact deliverables because the sales page is an affiliate tools page, not a product page. Based on the affiliate description, you get a main digital guide, three upsells (likely more PDFs or a supplement offer), and a recurring membership component. The content is entirely in Spanish.
- Is the 60-day refund real?
- Yes. ClickBank processes refunds for all products, including this one. Email support with your order ID within 60 days, and you'll get your money back. This applies to the initial purchase and any upsells. The vendor cannot block it.
- Will this actually help control my diabetes?
- There is zero evidence that a digital guide alone can control type 2 diabetes. The product's own affiliate page offers no clinical data, no author credentials, and no independent reviews. If you have diabetes, your treatment plan should come from a doctor, not a ClickBank PDF.