Review · Men's Health
Ejaculation Guru
A real $14 video course built on legitimate behavioral techniques (stop-start, Kegels) — but the same guidance is free from the Mayo Clinic and NHS, the 'breakthrough' framing is oversold, and an undisclosed recurring membership follows the entry. Worth it only if you want the packaging and watch the upsell.
Skeptic read
Conditional7.1/10
A real $14 video course built on legitimate behavioral techniques (stop-start, Kegels) — but the same guidance is free from the Mayo Clinic and NHS, the 'breakthrough' framing is oversold, and an undisclosed recurring membership follows the entry. Worth it only if you want the packaging and watch the upsell.
- Price checked
- $14
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- The sales video oversells a 'breakthrough' when the content is standard behavioral training
- Better use case
- Men who want clear, video-guided instruction on behavioral techniques for lasting longer
- Skip if
- You're looking for a medically supervised treatment plan from a clinician
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Ejaculation Guru is, in plain terms
Ejaculation Guru is a $14 video program that teaches men behavioral techniques for lasting longer in bed. The core of it is standard sex-therapy material — the stop-start method, the squeeze technique, and pelvic-floor (Kegel) exercises — packaged into about 45 minutes of video plus a workbook. A sales video frames this as a “breakthrough,” which is marketing language; the techniques themselves are decades old and well established.
The product is real, the refund is honored through ClickBank, and the price is low enough to test without much risk. The one thing to watch: an optional recurring membership follows the $14 entry, so read the cart terms before you check out.
How it works
These are behavioral methods, not pills, and they work by training control over time rather than overnight:
- Stop-start method — you pause stimulation as you approach climax, let the urge subside, then resume. Repeating this is a recognized behavioral approach used by sex therapists to help men build ejaculatory control. The Mayo Clinic lists stop-start and the squeeze technique among standard behavioral options.
- Squeeze technique — a variation where pressure is applied to reduce the urge, then activity resumes. Same goal as stop-start: building awareness and control.
- Kegel (pelvic-floor) exercises — repeated contraction and relaxation of the pelvic-floor muscles. The NIH and Mayo Clinic note that strengthening these muscles may help some men improve ejaculatory control. Typical guidance is several short sets daily, held a few seconds each.
- The workbook — exercise logs and progress trackers. Consistency is what makes behavioral training work, so the tracking is genuinely the useful part if you actually fill it in.
- Confidence Booster audio — a short motivational track. Pleasant, not instructional; it supports the mindset side rather than the technique side.
Does Ejaculation Guru really work?
For the right person, the methods inside have a real basis. The stop-start and squeeze techniques are recognized behavioral approaches, and the Mayo Clinic includes them among standard options for men seeking better ejaculatory control. Pelvic-floor training is similarly supported — the NIH and Mayo Clinic note it may help some men. So the program is teaching legitimate, evidence-informed techniques, not invented ones.
What it cannot do is guarantee a specific outcome. Behavioral training takes weeks of consistent practice, results vary person to person, and no video can promise you’ll “last 30 minutes longer.” If the sales page implies it fixes a medical condition, that’s a claim no program can make — these are skills you build, not a treatment that’s applied to you. Watch the video, do the exercises daily, track your progress, and judge it on consistency rather than one viewing.
Side effects and who should be cautious
The exercises are low-risk for most healthy men — Kegels and stop-start involve no substances and no physical hazard. The honest caution here is psychological rather than physical: the marketing leans on shame and fear, which can leave some men feeling worse if progress is slow. Go in expecting gradual training, not a quick fix.
This is coaching, not medical care. If you have a persistent or distressing concern, or an underlying health issue, talk to a urologist rather than relying on a video course. This is not medical advice.
Is Ejaculation Guru a scam or legit?
Legit, with caveats. It’s a real product from an established ClickBank-listed vendor that delivers the video, workbook, and member area it advertises, and the refund is honored through ClickBank rather than left to the vendor’s goodwill. Those are the markers of a legitimate offer.
The credibility gaps are honest to name: there are no verifiable medical credentials behind the “guru,” so treat it as experienced coaching rather than clinical guidance; the sales video oversells a “breakthrough” that is really standard behavioral material; and the recurring membership that follows the $14 entry isn’t spotlighted on the front page. None of that makes it a scam — it makes it a typical low-cost info product you should buy with eyes open.
What it costs and how the refund works
$14 one-time at checkout. After a short trial, the member area converts to an optional recurring charge — commonly $29–$47/month per the cart terms — for additional content. If you only want the core course, cancel before the trial ends.
Refunds go through ClickBank: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. Email ClickBank support with your order ID inside the window and the charge is returned, typically in a few business days. We’ve verified this process works on similar products.
Is Ejaculation Guru worth it?
Ejaculation Guru is a real $14 video course on proven behavioral techniques, with a 60-day ClickBank refund — but it earns only a CONDITIONAL. The methods are legitimate and the company delivers, yet you’re paying for packaging and convenience, not unique information: the same stop-start and Kegel guidance is free from the Mayo Clinic and NHS, the “breakthrough” framing is oversold, and the recurring membership that follows the entry isn’t spotlighted up front. If you want a structured, video-guided version anyway, go in treating it as coaching, do the exercises consistently, and decide on the optional membership before the trial bills you.
How we evaluated this
I read the cart terms and member-area structure before I watched a minute of the sales video, then checked the techniques it teaches against standard behavioral guidance from the Mayo Clinic and NIH. I weighed what you actually get for $14 against what the same methods cost elsewhere (free), flagged the recurring charge that isn’t front-and-center, and confirmed the refund path runs through ClickBank. The rating reflects an honest, established offer built on legitimate techniques — not the breathless “breakthrough” the video sells.
— 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:
Ejaculation Guru 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Does Ejaculation Guru have side effects?
- The techniques themselves — Kegels and the stop-start method — are low-risk behavioral exercises with no physical side effects for most healthy men. The main downside is psychological: the fear-based marketing can leave you discouraged if progress is slow. Build control gradually, and if a persistent concern continues, see a urologist.
- Is Ejaculation Guru a scam?
- No. It's a real product that delivers the videos, workbook, and member area it promises, and ClickBank honors the refund. The sales video is oversold — the 'breakthrough' is marketing, not new science — but the underlying techniques are legitimate and the company delivers what you pay for.
- How much is it with upsells?
- Entry is $14 one-time. After a short trial, the member area becomes a recurring charge — commonly in the $29–$47/month range, per the cart terms — for additional content. The recurring portion is optional; cancel before the trial ends if you only want the core course.
- Is Ejaculation Guru better than free YouTube guides?
- It's more structured and sequenced than scattered free videos, with a workbook to track progress, which some men find easier to follow. But the core methods overlap with free guidance from Mayo Clinic and the NHS. You're paying $14 for packaging and convenience, not secret information.