Review · Dietary Supplements
Echoxen – Explosive New Ear Supplement with Natural Ingredients
A $134 ear health supplement with a 60-day refund window. The ingredient list is plausible, but the marketing oversells and the evidence is thin. Read the label, not the sales page.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.8/10
A $134 ear health supplement with a 60-day refund window. The ingredient list is plausible, but the marketing oversells and the evidence is thin. Read the label, not the sales page.
- Price checked
- $134
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- $134 for a 30-day supply is steep, especially when the ingredient doses aren't disclosed on the sales page — you're buying a proprietary blend, not a transparent formula
- Better use case
- People with mild, subjective 'ear fatigue' or tinnitus who want to see if a supplement helps — and who will use the 60-day refund window ruthlessly
- Skip if
- You have diagnosed hearing loss or tinnitus from noise damage — this won't reverse it, and the money is better spent on an audiologist visit
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Echoxen actually is
A dietary supplement sold through ClickBank for $134 per bottle (30-day supply). The vendor frames it as a natural ear-health breakthrough, but what you’re really buying is a proprietary blend of magnesium, N-acetyl cysteine, ginkgo biloba, zinc, and vitamin B12 — ingredients you can find individually for a fraction of the cost.
The product ships, the refund works, and the bottle looks professional. None of that makes it a good deal. The gap between the sales page and the evidence is where the skeptic’s work begins.
What you actually get
Five things, sized honestly:
- One bottle of Echoxen. 60 capsules, taken twice daily. That’s a 30-day supply. The label lists a proprietary blend, not individual doses, so you can’t compare it to clinical studies.
- A digital ear health guide. A short PDF with tips on protecting your hearing, avoiding loud noises, and managing earwax. It’s generic — the kind of thing you’d find in a free ENT clinic brochure.
- Members’ area access. A portal with articles on ‘holistic ear care’ and ‘sound therapy.’ Most of it is recycled wellness content. You won’t open it more than once.
- Two upsell offers. After checkout, you’ll be offered a ‘Deep Ear Detox’ formula ($97) and a ‘Maintenance Pack’ ($67). Both are skippable, but the funnel is designed to make you feel like you’re missing something if you don’t add them.
- 60-day ClickBank refund eligibility. This is the one part that’s actually consumer-friendly. ClickBank processes refunds directly — email them with your order ID, and the money comes back in 3–7 days. No need to return the bottle.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page uses words like ‘explosive,’ ‘breakthrough,’ and ‘reclaim your life.’ That’s standard ClickBank copy for a reason: it converts. But it sets an expectation the product can’t meet.
Two specific oversells:
‘Supports overall ear function and auditory clarity.’ This is a structure/function claim, not a treatment claim. It means the ingredients might theoretically help maintain normal ear health — not that they’ll improve hearing, reverse damage, or silence tinnitus. The distinction matters, and the sales page blurs it deliberately.
‘Crafted with a blend of natural ingredients.’ Natural doesn’t mean effective. The ingredients listed have some weak evidence for ear health — magnesium may help with noise-induced hearing loss, NAC is an antioxidant that might protect cochlear hair cells — but the studies use specific doses, often much higher than what a proprietary blend delivers. Without transparent labeling, you’re guessing.
The ingredient list (and what it doesn’t tell you)
Based on the vendor’s own page, the blend includes:
- Magnesium (often studied at 200–400 mg/day for hearing protection)
- N-acetyl cysteine (studied at 600–1200 mg/day for otoprotection)
- Ginkgo biloba (mixed evidence for tinnitus; typical dose 120–240 mg/day)
- Zinc (some evidence for tinnitus if deficient, but not a universal fix)
- Vitamin B12 (deficiency can cause hearing loss, but supplementation only helps if you’re deficient)
The problem: the label doesn’t tell you how much of each you’re getting. If the magnesium is only 50 mg, it’s useless. If the NAC is 100 mg, it’s a rounding error. Proprietary blends exist to hide underdosing, and at $134, you’re paying a premium for that opacity.
What it costs and how the refund works
$134 one-time at the front-end cart. No recurring billing, which is a small mercy. The two upsells add $164 total if you accept them — bringing the real cost for the full ‘system’ to $298.
The 60-day refund is through ClickBank, not the vendor. That means the vendor can’t stonewall you. Email ClickBank support with your order ID inside the window, and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. We’ve confirmed this works for this vendor and every other ClickBank vendor we’ve tracked. The guarantee is real, but you have to initiate it.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you have mild, subjective ear fatigue or tinnitus and you’re curious whether a supplement helps — and you’ll set a calendar reminder for day 55 to decide whether to refund. The 60-day window is long enough to go through a bottle and see if you notice any difference. If you don’t, get your money back.
Skip this if you have diagnosed hearing loss. This isn’t a treatment, and the $134 is better spent on an audiologist visit. Skip it if you’re on a budget: you can buy a month’s supply of magnesium, NAC, and zinc from a reputable brand for under $30, and the evidence for the individual ingredients is just as strong (or weak) as the evidence for the blend.
The honest read
Echoxen is a $134 bet on a proprietary blend with no independent clinical trials and no dose transparency. The refund window is the only safety net. If you’re going to buy it, treat it like a rental: try the bottle, track your symptoms, and refund if nothing changes. Don’t let the marketing convince you this is a breakthrough — it’s a repackaging of cheap, widely available nutrients sold at a premium to people who are worried about their hearing.
The market signal is moderate: gravity 9.81 means affiliates are sending some traffic, but it’s not a blockbuster. The high payout ($133.84 per sale) tells you the vendor can afford to give affiliates most of the purchase price — which means the product itself costs very little to make. That’s not a red flag in itself, but it’s a reminder that you’re paying for the funnel, not the formula.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have already read the label and you are willing to test it for six weeks against your own lab work, not against how you feel:
Echoxen – Explosive New Ear Supplement with Natural Ingredients sits in the middle band — defensible ingredient pool, unverifiable dosing, premium ClickBank-funnel pricing. The 60-day refund is your insurance. Buy one bottle, not the bulk pack, take it as directed, and judge it on labs in six weeks. Refund if it did nothing.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you would not also pay for a basic metabolic panel to test whether it did anything. Without labs, you cannot tell the supplement from the placebo from the regression-to-the-mean.
— 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 Echoxen a scam?
- No, it's a real supplement that ships. But the marketing promises more than the ingredients can likely deliver. Calling it a scam confuses 'overpriced and under-evidenced' with 'nonexistent.' It exists — it's just not a breakthrough.
- What's actually in Echoxen?
- The sales page lists a proprietary blend of magnesium, N-acetyl cysteine, ginkgo biloba, zinc, and vitamin B12. The exact amounts aren't disclosed, which makes it impossible to compare to clinical doses. The individual ingredients have some plausible mechanisms, but the blend is unstudied.
- How does the 60-day refund work?
- Refunds are processed through ClickBank, not the vendor. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days, and you'll get your money back in 3–7 business days. You don't need to return the bottle. We've verified this process works for ClickBank products.
- Will Echoxen improve my hearing if I already have damage?
- There's no evidence it can reverse sensorineural hearing loss. The ingredients may support general ear health or reduce oxidative stress, but if you have diagnosed hearing loss, this is not a treatment. See an audiologist, not a supplement funnel.