Review · Men's Health

FLUXACTIVE - Unique 14-in-1 MEGA PROSTATE Offer

A $116 prostate supplement sold with affiliate-recruitment language instead of an ingredient label. No verifiable formula, no clinical dosing, and a sales page that talks to marketers, not men with prostates.

Verdict Skeptical 3.8/10
FLUXACTIVE - Unique 14-in-1 MEGA PROSTATE Offer review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.8/10

A $116 prostate supplement sold with affiliate-recruitment language instead of an ingredient label. No verifiable formula, no clinical dosing, and a sales page that talks to marketers, not men with prostates.

Price checked
$116
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
$116 for a single bottle is 3–5× the price of comparable prostate supplements with transparent labels
Better use case
No one. You can't make an informed decision when the label is hidden. If you're desperate and the 60-day refund is your safety net, at least you can get your money back.
Skip if
You want to know what you're swallowing and how much of it is in each capsule
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Fluxactive is, in one sentence.

A prostate supplement sold on ClickBank for $116 a bottle, with a sales page that reads like an affiliate recruitment email and an ingredient label you can’t see until after you pay.

The product’s own marketplace description is: “1 in 2 men suffer from prostate problems. Imagine the profits! Ready to pull up to 6 figures/day already? Contact us at [email protected] for swipes + commission bumps!” That’s not a health claim. That’s a pitch to marketers. And when a supplement vendor leads with affiliate bait instead of clinical rationale, you’re not the customer — you’re the conversion event.

What you actually get

At minimum, one bottle of Fluxactive capsules. The bottle size isn’t stated on the sales page, but standard ClickBank supplement offers ship a 30-day supply. You might also get a few bonus PDFs — common in this funnel — but the vendor doesn’t disclose them upfront, so assume nothing.

The real deliverable is the 60-day ClickBank refund window. That’s your only leverage. Buy it, open the bottle, read the label, and if the doses aren’t clinical (or the ingredient list looks like a kitchen-sink blend), refund it.

How the marketing oversells

The name “14-in-1 MEGA PROSTATE” is the first oversell. Prostate health isn’t a game of ingredient stacking; it’s about getting a few key compounds at doses shown to work. Saw palmetto at 320mg. Beta-sitosterol at 60–130mg. Pygeum at 100mg. When a product crams 14 things into one capsule, the math almost never works — you’re getting sprinkles of each, not therapeutic doses.

The second oversell is the profit language. The vendor isn’t trying to convince you the product works; they’re trying to convince affiliates it will convert. The gravity of 5.7 tells you how that’s going: barely anyone is selling it successfully. If the product actually delivered results, affiliates would be all over it and gravity would be 10× higher.

What it costs and how the refund works

$116 one-time, no recurring billing. That’s 3–5× the price of transparent, clinically-dosed prostate supplements you can buy on Amazon or iHerb. For comparison, a quality saw palmetto supplement with a visible label runs $20–$30 a month.

Refunds go through ClickBank, not the vendor. Email support with your order ID inside 60 days and the money comes back in under a week. The vendor can’t block it. That refund policy is the only reason to even consider this product — it turns a blind purchase into a risk-free peek at the label.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

“Imagine the profits!” — This is the vendor selling you to affiliates, not selling the product to you. When a supplement’s primary marketing message is how much money affiliates can make, the product is secondary.

“14-in-1 MEGA PROSTATE” — The word “mega” in supplement marketing almost always signals underdosing. It’s a cheap way to make a formula look comprehensive while avoiding the expense of clinical doses.

“Ready to pull up to 6 figures/day already?” — Fantasy math. No affiliate is doing six figures a day with a gravity 5.7 offer. If they were, gravity would be in the hundreds.

Who should buy, who should skip

There’s no buyer we can confidently recommend this to. The label is hidden, the price is inflated, and the marketing is aimed at affiliates, not patients. If you’re determined to try it, the refund window makes it cost you nothing but time. But you could also just buy a transparent prostate supplement for $25 and skip the whole refund dance.

Skip this if you have any prostate supplement already. The odds that Fluxactive contains something unique or dosed better than what you’re taking are near zero. Skip it if you expect a supplement company to tell you what’s in the bottle before you pay. That’s not a high bar, and Fluxactive fails it.

The honest read

Fluxactive is an affiliate-marketing vehicle wearing a prostate-health costume. The vendor’s own words — “Imagine the profits!” — tell you where their attention is. The hidden label tells you they don’t want you comparing doses. The $116 price tells you they’re padding affiliate commissions (the payout is $115.98, meaning the vendor keeps almost nothing — a classic recruiting tactic).

There might be real ingredients inside. There might even be a few at reasonable doses. But you shouldn’t have to pay $116 to find out, and you shouldn’t trust a company that won’t show you the label until after the sale. The 60-day refund is the only honest part of this offer, and it’s provided by ClickBank, not the vendor.

If you’re worried about your prostate, see a urologist. If you want a supplement, buy one with a published label and clinical dosing. Fluxactive is a bet you don’t need to place.

— Rhett Calder

Here's what I'd actually do

If the sales VSL got you to reach for your card before the ingredient panel got you to ask any questions:

Close this tab. FLUXACTIVE - Unique 14-in-1 MEGA PROSTATE Offer 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 are using it to skip the conversation with your primary-care doctor. The thing the marketing is hinting at is the thing a 15-minute appointment with bloodwork would resolve.

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

What's actually in Fluxactive?
We don't know. The sales page doesn't list ingredients, and the vendor's website requires a purchase to see the label. That's not normal for a legitimate supplement. Reputable prostate formulas list saw palmetto, beta-sitosterol, pygeum, etc., with exact milligrams. Fluxactive hides behind '14-in-1' — a phrase that usually means a bunch of underdosed powders in a proprietary blend.
Is Fluxactive a scam?
Not in the 'you'll never get anything' sense. ClickBank ensures delivery and the 60-day refund works. But the product is marketed with affiliate-recruitment copy ('Imagine the profits!'), not consumer health information. That's a strong signal the vendor cares more about affiliates pushing it than men benefiting from it. Call it a hustle, not a scam.
How does the 60-day refund work?
Buy through ClickBank, try it, and if you're unsatisfied, email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days. The refund processes in 3–7 business days, no vendor hassle. You can literally empty the bottle and still get your money back. That's the only reason to even consider this product.
Why is the gravity so low if it's a 'MEGA' offer?
Gravity measures how many unique affiliates earned a commission in the last 12 weeks. A 5.7 means very few are successfully selling it. Top-tier health supplements typically run at 20–100+. The low number suggests either poor conversion, high refund rates, or an offer that's not resonating. Affiliates vote with their traffic, and they're not voting for Fluxactive.