Review · Remedies
Eye Floaters No More ~ NEW Niche with High Conversions
A $25 PDF that repackages free internet advice on floaters with no clinical backing. I would not buy this, and I'd see an ophthalmologist first.
Skeptic read
Avoid3.2/10
A $25 PDF that repackages free internet advice on floaters with no clinical backing. I would not buy this, and I'd see an ophthalmologist first.
- Price checked
- $25
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No clinical evidence that any natural remedy eliminates vitreous floaters — the scientific consensus is that they're harmless and usually not treatable without surgery
- Better use case
- People who have already had a thorough eye exam and been told their floaters are harmless, and who want a one-stop collection of natural approaches to try
- Skip if
- You have sudden onset floaters, flashes, or any vision loss — see an ophthalmologist immediately, do not buy a PDF
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Eye Floaters No More is, in one sentence.
A digital guide sold on ClickBank that promises to eliminate eye floaters naturally, priced at $25, backed by a 60-day refund window, and marketed almost entirely with affiliate-conversion metrics rather than medical evidence.
The sales page is a masterclass in affiliate recruitment — it leads with a claimed 1:20–1:30 conversion rate and top affiliate earnings of $1000’s daily. What it doesn’t lead with is how the method actually works, who created it, or what clinical proof supports it. That silence is the first red flag.
What you actually get
The vendor does not publish a table of contents or sample pages, so the exact deliverables are unknown until you buy. Based on the product category and similar ClickBank remedies, you likely receive:
- A main PDF guide. Probably 50–80 pages covering eye exercises, dietary changes, and supplement recommendations. The most common supplements promoted for floaters — bromelain, lutein, hyaluronic acid — are likely included.
- A quick-start checklist. A one-page summary to get you going without reading the whole guide.
- A supplement guide. A list of pills and dosages, possibly with affiliate links to supplement retailers.
- Eye exercise illustrations. Simple diagrams showing eye-rolling and focus-shifting routines.
- Lifetime updates. A promise that if the guide is ever revised, you’ll get the new version. These promises rarely materialize, and the vendor has no incentive to update a product that keeps selling.
There are no physical products, no coaching, no community access. It’s a PDF and maybe a few bonus PDFs.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page is not written for you, the floater sufferer. It’s written for affiliates. The headline is “Eye Floaters No More With New Copy ~ 1:20 - 1:30 Constant Conversion Rate! ( Screenshot Proof in Affiliate Area ) — Top Affiliate Earns $1000’s Daily.” That is a pitch to people who will sell the product, not to people who will use it.
This is a classic ClickBank vendor strategy: build a product in a niche with high search volume and emotional pain, then recruit affiliates by bragging about conversion rates and earnings. The product itself is secondary. The fact that the vendor leads with these metrics tells you they care more about selling than about solving your eye floaters.
There is no mention of a medical author, no credentials, no clinical references. The sales page may include testimonials, but ClickBank testimonials are notoriously unverifiable. The entire conversion funnel is built on the hope that you’ll click, see “natural cure for floaters,” and buy before you think too hard about the lack of evidence.
What it costs and how the refund works
$25, one-time. No recurring billing appears at checkout. The upsell page may offer a second product for an additional fee — that’s standard ClickBank behavior, but the base price is $25.
The refund is handled by ClickBank, not the vendor. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days and you get your money back. The vendor cannot slow-walk or deny the refund. So you can buy the guide, read it cover to cover in an afternoon, and if you find it useless, get a full refund. The only thing you lose is the time you spent reading.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Three claims on the sales page to be skeptical of:
“1:20 - 1:30 Constant Conversion Rate!” This means 1 in 20 to 1 in 30 people who visit the sales page buy. That’s a conversion-rate metric for affiliates, not a measure of how well the product works. A high conversion rate on a cheap product in a desperate niche is not surprising — it says more about human hope than about product quality.
“Top Affiliate Earns $1000’s Daily.” This is an earnings claim for affiliates, not users. It tells you the funnel is profitable for marketers. It tells you nothing about whether the guide actually reduces floaters.
“Screenshot Proof in Affiliate Area.” The vendor is so focused on proving affiliate earnings that they post screenshots in the affiliate back office. A product that worked would post before-and-after photos of floaters disappearing, not screenshots of ClickBank commission stats.
The real risk you’re taking
Eye floaters are usually harmless, but they can also be a symptom of a retinal tear or detachment — conditions that require immediate medical attention to prevent permanent vision loss. The American Academy of Ophthalmology recommends a dilated eye exam for anyone with new floaters, especially if accompanied by flashes of light or a curtain-like shadow.
If you buy this guide and start doing eye exercises and popping bromelain instead of seeing an ophthalmologist, you are gambling with your eyesight. The guide almost certainly includes a disclaimer telling you to see a doctor, but disclaimers don’t stop people from delaying care. The real risk is not the $25 — it’s the false reassurance that you can fix this yourself.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you have already had a thorough eye exam, your ophthalmologist has confirmed your floaters are benign, and you want a single document that compiles every natural approach the internet has to offer. Read it inside the 60-day window, and refund it if it’s just a rehash of free blog posts.
Skip this if you have new floaters, flashes, or any vision change — get to an eye doctor now. Skip this if you’re looking for a proven medical treatment; this guide cannot eliminate floaters, and the scientific literature does not support any natural cure. Skip this if you’re not willing to pay $25 for information you could assemble yourself from free sources in an afternoon.
The honest read
Eye Floaters No More is a product built to sell, not to solve. The marketing is all about affiliate conversion rates and earnings, not about clinical outcomes. The sales page does not disclose what’s inside the guide, who wrote it, or what evidence supports it. The $25 price and the 60-day refund window make it a low-risk purchase financially, but the medical risk of delaying proper care is real.
I would not buy this. I would spend the $25 on a copay to see an ophthalmologist, or I would read the free information on the American Academy of Ophthalmology website and accept that most floaters are a harmless annoyance that the brain eventually learns to ignore. If the floaters are severe enough to affect quality of life, the only proven treatments are vitrectomy and laser vitreolysis — not a PDF.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you opened this at 11 pm and the page made the supplement look like an answer to something larger:
Close this tab. Eye Floaters No More ~ NEW Niche with High Conversions is in the band where the marketing is doing the heavy lifting and the formula is not. There are evidence-based versions of every promise on that sales page, and most of them cost a third of the price with full label transparency.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you have a diagnosed condition that this product is implicitly addressing. See a clinician. A $69 bottle does not replace a $0-with-insurance lab panel.
— 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 there any scientific proof that this method works?
- No. The American Academy of Ophthalmology states that most floaters are benign and do not require treatment. Some small studies suggest bromelain may reduce floaters, but the evidence is weak and not reproducible. No natural method has been shown to eliminate floaters in a clinically meaningful way.
- What do I actually get when I buy?
- A PDF guide, likely with a few bonus checklists. The exact page count and contents are not disclosed on the sales page — you're buying blind. Based on similar products, expect diet advice, supplement recommendations, and eye exercises.
- Is the 60-day refund real?
- Yes. ClickBank handles refunds, not the vendor. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days and you'll get your $25 back. The vendor cannot stop it.
- Should I see an eye doctor first?
- Yes. If you have new floaters, flashes of light, or a shadow in your peripheral vision, you need a dilated eye exam immediately to rule out retinal detachment. This product is not a substitute for medical care, and using it as one is dangerous.