Review · Mental Health
Ennora
A cheap, honestly delivered $5 binaural-beat bundle — but the evidence is thin and mixed, and the 'proven' brain-enhancement, astral-projection and God-consciousness claims run far ahead of the research. Worth a punt only if you treat it as a relaxation aid, not the transformation the sales page sells.
Skeptic read
Conditional6.6/10
A cheap, honestly delivered $5 binaural-beat bundle — but the evidence is thin and mixed, and the 'proven' brain-enhancement, astral-projection and God-consciousness claims run far ahead of the research. Worth a punt only if you treat it as a relaxation aid, not the transformation the sales page sells.
- Price checked
- $5
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- Binaural beats have limited, mixed evidence beyond mild relaxation; the sales page calls them 'proven,' which overstates the research
- Better use case
- Curious meditators who want a cheap, low-commitment introduction to binaural beats across several themes
- Skip if
- You want rigorous clinical proof — binaural beats are not a proven brain-enhancement technology, and these sessions promise more than the data support
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Ennora is, in one sentence.
A $5 bundle of six binaural-beat audio programs, delivered as downloadable MP3s through ClickBank, that you can start playing the same night you buy them.
The vendor pitches it as “proven meditation programs” that transform lives. The actual product is a tidy set of binaural-beat tracks — similar to ones you can find free on YouTube. Lead with what you get: six sessions, instant access, $5, and a refund path if it’s not for you.
What you actually get
Six audio programs, each a single MP3 session running roughly 20–40 minutes. A short PDF with each one tells you to use headphones and listen somewhere quiet.
The six programs:
- Deep Meditation — a theta-wave binaural beat with a soft synth pad, meant to help you settle and sit still.
- Astral Projection — a similar theta/delta mix with different ambience, named to suggest an out-of-body theme. There’s no evidence binaural beats induce astral projection.
- Brain Enhancement — beta/gamma frequencies marketed for focus. Research on binaural beats and cognition is mixed; most studies show small, inconsistent effects on attention, not “enhancement.”
- Perfect Sleep — a delta-wave track with rain sounds. This is the most plausible use case; delta-range beats may modestly support sleep onset, much like a white-noise app.
- Lucid Dreaming — a theta/gamma mix; there’s no evidence that listening while awake trains lucid dreaming.
- God Consciousness — the most heavily marketed track, a binaural beat with choral-like pads. You may feel relaxed; treat the spiritual framing as branding, not a promise.
All files are digital. You get download links immediately. There’s no app, no guided narration, and no ongoing support — you’re buying six audio files.
Does Ennora really work?
Honest answer: as a relaxation aid, it can help some people wind down; as a “brain enhancement” or consciousness tool, the claims run ahead of the evidence.
Binaural beats play slightly different frequencies in each ear, creating a perceived “beat” that’s said to nudge brainwave activity. The theory is plausible, but the data are modest. The NIH’s complementary-health center notes that relaxation techniques can support stress relief while cautioning that evidence for many specific claims is limited (NCCIH). Reviews of binaural beats themselves report small, inconsistent effects on mood and attention and no reliable cognitive boost — so think of these tracks as a relaxation tool, not a proven performance upgrade.
The sales page uses the word “proven” repeatedly without citing trials. That’s marketing language, and it’s fair to discount it. What’s real is the relaxation-response category these sessions sit in, which many people find genuinely useful.
Side effects
There’s nothing to swallow, so there are no supplement-style side effects. Binaural beats are generally well tolerated. The most common complaint is simply that some people find steady pulsing tones distracting or mildly unpleasant. As a precaution, anyone with a seizure disorder should check with a clinician before using audio-entrainment tracks, and you shouldn’t listen while driving. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Ennora a scam or legit?
Legit. There’s a real ClickBank listing, a real download delivered after payment, and a refund that ClickBank processes directly rather than leaving it to the vendor. The claims on the sales page are inflated — “proven” and the spiritual transformation language go beyond what any audio file can deliver — but inflated marketing isn’t the same as fraud. You get the six files you paid for, the price is honest at $5, and the money-back path works the way ClickBank’s does on every vendor we’ve tracked.
What it costs and how the refund works
$5 one-time, with no recurring billing surfaced at the cart. Quick fact for the record — Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored: you email ClickBank with your order ID and the $5 returns to your card in a few business days.
How we evaluated this
I did this the way I read any cheap digital bundle: I listened to the tracks before I read the sales copy, checked what the binaural-beats research actually says against what the page claims, and confirmed the checkout price and that no upsell ambushed the $5 cart. No “medically reviewed” badge here — just a nurse’s habit of matching the promise to the product.
Is Ennora worth it?
Ennora is a real $5 download of six binaural-beat sessions with a 60-day ClickBank refund — but it earns only a conditional nod, because the evidence is thin and the “proven” brain-power and spiritual claims overreach badly. For the price of a coffee, it’s a low-risk way to see whether the format does anything for you. Just go in expecting a relaxation aid — not brain enhancement, astral projection, or a spiritual awakening — and you’ll get fair value.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
Ennora earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— 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
- Does Ennora have side effects?
- There's nothing to ingest, so there are no supplement-style side effects. Binaural beats are generally well tolerated. A small number of people find pulsing tones distracting or mildly uncomfortable, and anyone with a seizure disorder should check with their doctor before using audio-entrainment tracks. This is general information, not medical advice.
- Is Ennora a scam?
- No. You receive downloadable audio files right after purchase, and the ClickBank refund window is honored. Calling it a scam confuses 'modest product' with 'no product.' It's a real download from a real ClickBank listing — just don't expect the dramatic transformations the sales page implies.
- How much is it with upsells?
- The front-end price is $5 one-time, and no upsells surfaced at the $5 checkout on the date we reviewed. The vendor's pages reference other products, so you may be offered more later, but you can buy the bundle for $5 and stop there.
- Do binaural beats really work for meditation, lucid dreaming, or astral projection?
- The evidence is thin. Some studies suggest binaural beats may slightly influence mood or attention, but claims about inducing specific altered states (astral projection, 'God consciousness') are not supported by peer-reviewed research. Most effects are likely a relaxation or placebo response.
- Is Ennora better than a free meditation app?
- For pure audio quality, not really — free apps like MyNoise and Insight Timer offer comparable or better tracks. Ennora's edge is a small, curated bundle you own outright for $5, with a 60-day ClickBank refund if it isn't for you.