Review · Men's Health

ED Elixir

A real $29 digital guide whose lifestyle core is sound but unoriginal, wrapped in hype copy and an easy-to-miss monthly upsell — buy only with eyes open, and cancel the trial.

Verdict Conditional 6.7/10
ED Elixir review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Conditional6.7/10

A real $29 digital guide whose lifestyle core is sound but unoriginal, wrapped in hype copy and an easy-to-miss monthly upsell — buy only with eyes open, and cancel the trial.

Price checked
$29
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The 'elixir' is a simple kitchen drink (beetroot, watermelon, ginger, lemon) with no special dosing — treat it as flavored nutrition, not a formula
Better use case
Men who want a structured, low-cost introduction to lifestyle habits that support healthy blood flow
Skip if
You have a medical cause being evaluated — diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hormonal issues — and need a doctor, not a guide
Evidence file
1 source attached

Is ED Elixir worth it?

ED Elixir is a legit but heavily oversold $29 digital guide — buy it only if you specifically want lifestyle curation in one place, and cancel the 14-day members’ trial before it bills $19.95/month; a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund limits the downside. The lifestyle advice is sound but unoriginal, and the “elixir” is just food, so most men who’ve read mainstream men’s health material can skip it.

What ED Elixir is and how it works

ED Elixir is a $29 digital guide for men. It centers on three plain things: a homemade drink, a diet built around plants and fish, and some light exercise. The idea is to support healthy blood flow and overall vascular health through everyday habits — the same kind of advice mainstream heart-health groups give.

It’s sold through ClickBank by the team behind Red Tea Detox and ED Reverser. The front-end product is a PDF plus bonus videos. There’s also an optional members’ area that starts as a 14-day trial and then renews monthly if you don’t cancel.

What you actually get

  • The main ED Elixir guide. Around 60 pages. The useful core: a list of foods that support healthy circulation, a pelvic floor and Kegel routine, and the “elixir” drink recipe. A fair amount of the rest is testimonials and repetition.
  • The 7-Day Erection Boosting Meal Plan. A one-week plan built on the same diet — essentially a Mediterranean-style week. Helpful as a starting template.
  • The Testosterone Trigger videos. Three short videos that restate the guide’s exercise and sleep advice. Basic production, no citations.
  • Private members’ area. The recurring part: a 14-day trial, then $19.95/month. Includes a forum, Q&A calls, and longer versions of the same protocols. Optional — cancel anytime.
  • Quick-start checklist. A one-page PDF summary. The most practical piece because it’s short enough to follow daily.

Named ingredients in the “elixir”

The drink is food, not a formula. There’s no proprietary dosing — you’re blending common ingredients with water. Here’s what’s in it and what each is generally associated with (structure/function only):

  • Beetroot (typical recipe amount: 1 small beet or ~1 cup juice). A natural source of dietary nitrates, which the body can convert to nitric oxide. Nitric oxide supports normal blood-vessel function and circulation.
  • Watermelon (~1 cup). Contains citrulline, an amino acid the body uses in the nitric-oxide pathway that supports healthy blood flow.
  • Ginger (~1 tsp grated). A common culinary root associated with general circulatory support and used here mostly for flavor and warmth.
  • Lemon (juice of half a lemon). Adds vitamin C and flavor; vitamin C plays a role in normal blood-vessel maintenance.

These are reasonable, food-based choices. The honest caveat: blending them does not create a studied, synergistic “elixir.” You’re getting nutrients you could also get from eating these foods.

Does ED Elixir really work?

Partly — and it depends on what you expect. The lifestyle core is genuinely sound. Diet quality, physical activity, and sleep are well-established contributors to vascular health, and erectile function is closely tied to circulation. The National Institutes of Health and Mayo Clinic both describe heart-healthy habits — more plants, regular activity, good sleep — as supportive of healthy blood flow and overall men’s health (see niddk.nih.gov and mayoclinic.org). Beetroot and watermelon are documented dietary sources of nitrate and citrulline, compounds the body uses in the nitric-oxide pathway that supports normal circulation.

Where to stay calibrated: the specific “elixir” blend has not been studied as a product, so treat it as nutritious food rather than a proven intervention. The guide organizes good habits well; it does not contain a unique mechanism beyond those habits.

To be clear about the marketing: the sales page leans on phrases like “Rock-Hard Erections On Demand” and “Raging Bull Sexual Power,” and it implies the drink fixes erectile dysfunction — a claim no supplement or guide can legally make. The testimonials use first names and stock-style photos and aren’t verifiable. Judge the product by its sensible lifestyle content, not by the hype.

Side effects

This is a food-and-movement plan, so most men tolerate it well. A few honest, plain notes:

  • Beetroot can harmlessly tint urine or stool pink or red.
  • Beetroot is high in natural nitrates and ginger can affect bleeding; if you take blood-pressure or blood-thinning medication, talk to your doctor first.
  • The exercises are gentle, but start slow if you’re new to activity.

If you have a health condition or take prescription medication, check with a clinician before starting. This is general information, not medical advice.

Is ED Elixir a scam or legit?

Legit, with caveats. It’s a real product from an established ClickBank seller: you receive the PDF, the bonuses, and the members’ area access, and the 60-day ClickBank refund is platform-honored. The company is real and the deliverables match what’s promised.

The fair criticisms are about value and marketing, not legitimacy: the sales page oversells, the content is solid but not original, and the optional $19.95/month membership is easy to overlook. If you want the one-time guide only, cancel the members’ trial before day 14 through ClickBank. None of that makes it a scam — it makes it an overhyped but functional $29 guide.

How we evaluated this

I read the ingredient list and the actual program before I read a word of the sales page. I compared the drink’s contents to what those foods are known to provide, weighed the lifestyle advice against mainstream guidance, and separated the marketing language from the deliverables. The rating reflects a low-cost, honest-enough product whose substance is sound even when its sales copy isn’t.

— Dr. Rhett Calder

Here's what I'd actually do

If you have read the ingredient panel above, the clinical-trial doses make sense to you, and you understand this is a supplement and not a treatment:

ED Elixir is one of the few in this category I would not actively steer a friend away from. The formula is honest about what it is, and the page does not ask you to take anything on faith you cannot read on the label.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take any prescription that interacts with the active ingredients above. The interactions on this label are real, not precautionary — ask a pharmacist before you start.

Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)

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

Does ED Elixir have side effects?
The plan is food, light exercise, and sleep, so most men tolerate it well. The drink's ingredients (beetroot, watermelon, ginger, lemon) are common foods. Beetroot can turn urine or stool pink, and high-beet or high-ginger intake may matter if you take blood-pressure or blood-thinning medication. Check with your doctor before starting if you have a health condition or take prescriptions. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is ED Elixir a scam?
No. It's a real digital product from a known ClickBank seller (the team behind Red Tea Detox and ED Reverser): you get a PDF guide, bonus videos, and a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund. The marketing is louder than the content, and the lifestyle advice is solid rather than groundbreaking — but the product exists and is delivered as described.
How much does ED Elixir cost with upsells?
It's $29 one-time at checkout. A members' area starts as a 14-day trial and then renews at $19.95/month unless you cancel. If you do not want the recurring charge, cancel the trial through ClickBank's customer service before day 14.
Is ED Elixir better than a generic free lifestyle guide?
It is more organized and beginner-friendly, with a meal plan, checklist, and videos in one place. If you've already read solid lifestyle material on circulation and men's health, you may not find much new here — you're paying $29 for curation, not a breakthrough.