Review · Men's Health
ErecPrime
A heavily marketed men's-performance blend with hidden proprietary doses, no trial on the formula, and a weak-evidence headline herb (Tribulus) — at $106 a month, most buyers can skip it. The honest selling point is the working 60-day refund, not the formula.
Skeptic read
Skeptical5.4/10
A heavily marketed men's-performance blend with hidden proprietary doses, no trial on the formula, and a weak-evidence headline herb (Tribulus) — at $106 a month, most buyers can skip it. The honest selling point is the working 60-day refund, not the formula.
- Price checked
- $106
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Proprietary blend hides individual ingredient doses, so you can't verify they match studied amounts
- Better use case
- Men who want to test a libido and energy support supplement with a money-back safety net
- Skip if
- You need medical care for erectile dysfunction — this is a supplement, not a substitute for a doctor or prescription medication
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
Is ErecPrime worth it?
ErecPrime is an overpriced, opaquely dosed men’s support supplement that’s hard to recommend at $106 a month, though the 60-day ClickBank refund means trying it isn’t a financial trap. The formula leans on a weak-evidence headline herb and a proprietary blend that hides every dose, so you can’t confirm the ingredients match the amounts used in research. It ships, the refund works, and it isn’t a scam — but the formula itself doesn’t earn the price, so read on before you decide.
What ErecPrime is and how it works
ErecPrime is a men’s-health capsule sold through ClickBank for $106 a bottle. It’s marketed to support erectile function, testosterone, and stamina using a blend of herbal extracts and a mineral. The idea behind formulas like this is straightforward: a few ingredients may support healthy circulation, and one (zinc) plays a real role in testosterone production when your levels are low.
The sales page is a classic men’s-health pitch — big promises, a short ingredient list, and a hard push toward the six-bottle “best value” bundle. The honest way to read it is to ignore the hype and look at the panel.
What you actually get
- One bottle of ErecPrime. 60 capsules, a 30-day supply at two capsules daily. The label lists a proprietary blend — total milligrams shown, individual amounts hidden.
- Bonus PDFs. Usually a male-performance guide and a nutrition guide. Light extras, not the main event.
- Free shipping on multi-bottle orders. The single bottle is $106; three- and six-bottle packs lower the per-unit cost and drop the shipping fee.
- Customer support email. A standard support address for order and refund questions.
Named ingredients — dose and what each is for
The label names four ingredients. Here’s what each is for, read through a clinician’s lens.
Tribulus Terrestris is the long-running “testosterone” herb in these formulas. The honest read: in healthy men, the evidence that it raises testosterone is weak — a 2005 review in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology found no significant effect on serum testosterone. It may nudge libido in some people. Typical studied range is 250–750 mg daily, but the proprietary blend doesn’t disclose the amount here.
Epimedium (horny goat weed) contains icariin, which shows mild PDE5-inhibiting activity in the lab — the same general pathway as prescription performance drugs, but far weaker. Small human studies used standardized extracts; without the icariin content disclosed, you can’t confirm ErecPrime matches them.
Hawthorn is traditionally used to support circulation and heart health. It’s a reasonable “supportive” ingredient on a circulation-themed label, though nothing ties it directly to erectile function.
Zinc is the ingredient with the clearest basis: when you’re zinc-deficient, supplementing can help support healthy testosterone and sperm quality. The usual useful range is 10–30 mg daily (per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements). Deficiency is uncommon in men who eat meat, and the blend doesn’t disclose the dose here.
Does ErecPrime really work?
Partly, with honest limits. Zinc has a clear structure/function role for men who are low (NIH Office of Dietary Supplements), and Epimedium’s icariin has shown mild PDE5 activity in lab research (PubMed) — so the formula isn’t built on nothing. What’s missing is a trial on this exact blend and the individual doses, both of which the proprietary blend hides.
The fair conclusion: ErecPrime may help support libido, energy, and circulation for some men, and a placebo-plus-support effect is real for subjective measures like confidence and drive. But it’s a support supplement, not a treatment. No supplement can legally claim to treat or cure erectile dysfunction, and for persistent ED the right first step is a doctor, because the underlying cause can be cardiovascular.
Side effects
ErecPrime uses ingredients that most healthy men tolerate well. The most commonly reported issues are mild: Epimedium can cause occasional stomach upset, dizziness, or a faster heartbeat in sensitive users, and high-dose zinc over time can cause nausea or copper imbalance. Hawthorn may interact with blood-pressure and heart medications.
This isn’t medical advice, but the cautious group is clear: if you take prescription drugs (especially for heart or blood pressure), have a heart condition, or are managing another health issue, check with your doctor before starting.
Is ErecPrime a scam or legit?
Legit, with caveats. It’s a real product from an established ClickBank vendor, it ships after payment, and the 60-day refund is honored through ClickBank rather than the seller — so you’re not relying on the vendor’s goodwill to get your money back. The marketing leans hard on hype and the proprietary blend hides the doses, which is why this earns a measured rating rather than a glowing one. But a shipped product with a working, third-party-honored refund is the opposite of a scam.
What it costs and how the refund works
$106 for a single 30-day bottle. The cart offers a three-bottle pack around $177 (about $59 each) and a six-bottle pack around $294 (about $49 each), both with free shipping. The tiered pricing is designed to make the single bottle look expensive — go in knowing that.
There’s an optional recurring-billing upsell presented after the main purchase. Watch for an “auto-delivery” or “VIP savings” checkbox and uncheck it if you only want one order. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored — email ClickBank support with your order ID and the money returns in a few business days. You can return empty bottles, which means you can try the full first bottle and still get your money back.
How we evaluated this
I read the Supplement Facts panel before I read a word of the sales copy, compared each named ingredient’s likely dose against the ranges used in published research, and checked whether the refund is actually honored by a third party. Where I state a factual claim about an ingredient, I ground it in an authoritative source (NIH, PubMed) rather than the vendor’s page. No “medically reviewed” badge — just a retired internist reading the label the way he’d read a chart.
The honest read
ErecPrime is a $106 men’s support supplement with a couple of plausible ingredients, an overselling sales page, and a refund that genuinely works. The doses are hidden, so set expectations accordingly: this may help support libido and energy, but it isn’t a fix for clinical ED. If you want to try it, the 60-day window makes that a low-risk experiment — take it for a few weeks, track how you feel, and use the refund if nothing changes.
— 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:
ErecPrime 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 ErecPrime have side effects?
- ErecPrime uses commonly sold ingredients, and most healthy men tolerate them well. Epimedium can occasionally cause stomach upset or a racing heartbeat in sensitive people, and Hawthorn may interact with blood-pressure or heart medications. If you take prescription drugs or have a heart condition, talk to your doctor before starting.
- What ingredients are in ErecPrime?
- The label names Tribulus Terrestris, Epimedium (horny goat weed), Hawthorn, and Zinc. The amounts sit inside a proprietary blend, so the total milligrams are shown but individual doses are not — meaning you can't confirm they match the doses used in studies.
- Is ErecPrime a scam?
- No. It's a real product that ships after payment, sold by an established ClickBank vendor, and the 60-day refund is honored through ClickBank. The marketing oversells, and the dosing isn't transparent, but a shipped product with a working refund is the opposite of a scam.
- How much is ErecPrime with upsells?
- One bottle is $106. The cart offers a three-bottle pack near $177 (about $59 each) and a six-bottle pack near $294 (about $49 each), both with free shipping. There may also be an optional auto-delivery upsell — uncheck it if you only want a one-time order.
- Does ErecPrime really work for performance?
- Some ingredients have a plausible, if modest, basis: Zinc supports testosterone when you're deficient, and Epimedium's icariin shows mild PDE5 activity in lab work. But there's no trial on this exact formula, and the proprietary blend hides the doses. Treat it as a support supplement, not a guaranteed fix. For persistent erectile problems, see a doctor.