Review · Other Supplements

GlycoMute

A $138 blood sugar pill with zero ingredient transparency. The 60-day refund window is real, but without knowing what's in the bottle, you're gambling, not supplementing.

Verdict Skeptical 2.8/10
GlycoMute review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical2.8/10

A $138 blood sugar pill with zero ingredient transparency. The 60-day refund window is real, but without knowing what's in the bottle, you're gambling, not supplementing.

Price checked
$138
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
No ingredient list, supplement facts panel, or dosage info anywhere on the sales page — you're buying completely blind.
Better use case
Someone willing to risk $138 on a blind supplement purchase with the intention of using the refund window if unsatisfied — and who accepts the return shipping cost if opened bottles aren't accepted.
Skip if
You expect to know what you're swallowing — ingredient transparency is non-negotiable.
Evidence file
1 source attached

What GlycoMute is, in one sentence.

A $138 blood sugar supplement sold through ClickBank with no disclosed ingredient list, no clinical evidence, and a sales page written for affiliates instead of customers.

The product page is a recruitment tool for marketers — it talks about payouts, CPAs, and conversion angles. It says almost nothing about what’s actually in the bottle. That’s not just a red flag; it’s the whole flag factory.

What you actually get

You get a bottle of capsules. How many? The sales page doesn’t say. What’s in them? The sales page doesn’t say. Any bonus materials? Probably — most ClickBank supplement funnels throw in a PDF guide or a “free” bottle if you buy multiples, but none of that is detailed on the front-end page.

Here’s what we can confirm as of the date above:

  • One bottle of GlycoMute. Quantity unknown. Serving size unknown. Ingredients unknown.
  • A receipt with your order number. This is your only tool for getting a refund. Save it.
  • Access to upsells. After checkout, you’ll likely be offered additional products — common on ClickBank supplement funnels. These are optional, but they’ll push the total well above $138 if you accept.
  • Standard ClickBank 60-day refund eligibility. This is real, but it comes with a catch: the vendor’s return policy on opened supplements may require you to ship the product back at your own expense, and they may not accept returns if the bottle’s been opened. The sales page doesn’t clarify.

How the marketing oversells

The entire sales page is an affiliate pitch. It uses phrases like “Highest Payouts,” “165+ CPAs,” and “Powerful new angle that mesmerizes and fascinates.” Those are not benefits for the person swallowing the pills. They’re benefits for the person selling the pills.

When a supplement’s marketing is completely divorced from the actual product — no ingredients, no mechanism, no evidence — the entire value proposition becomes the commission check, not the health outcome. That’s a structural sign that the buyer’s experience is secondary.

A couple of specific claims to flag:

  • “Media buyers get 165+ CPAs.” This is an affiliate metric, meaning the cost per acquisition for advertisers. It says nothing about whether the product works. It says the funnel is cheap enough to run traffic profitably.
  • “Promote it now before the competition.” This is urgency aimed at affiliates, not buyers. It’s designed to recruit marketers, not to inform customers.

The product is called “Advanced Blood Sugar Support,” but there’s no mention of any specific ingredient that would support blood sugar — no berberine, no chromium, no cinnamon, no banaba leaf. Nothing. The sales page expects you to trust the label on the bottle without ever seeing it.

What it costs and how the refund works

$138 one-time at the front-end checkout. There’s no recurring billing, no hidden continuity program, and no auto-ship traps that we could trigger during a test cart visit. That’s a genuine positive.

The refund is handled by ClickBank, not the vendor. If you request a refund within 60 days, ClickBank will process it — usually within a week. But here’s the fine print that matters for supplements: ClickBank’s policy allows vendors to set their own return rules for physical products. Many supplement vendors require you to return the product, even if opened, and they may deduct a restocking fee or reject the return if the seal is broken. The GlycoMute sales page doesn’t disclose any return policy. That means you’re buying with the assumption that you can get your money back, but the actual path to a refund might involve shipping a half-empty bottle back at your cost and hoping the vendor honors it.

If you’re considering this product, the only safe way to approach the refund is to assume you’ll need to return an unopened bottle. If you open it and it doesn’t work, you might be stuck with a $138 paperweight.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you have $138 you’re willing to lose on a mystery bottle, and you’re comfortable navigating a potentially murky return process. That’s a very narrow buyer profile.

Skip this if you value knowing what you put in your body. There are dozens of blood sugar supplements on the market that list every ingredient with clinical doses, have third-party testing, and cost less than $138. There’s no reason to gamble on a product that hides its formula when transparent alternatives exist.

Skip this if you’re managing diabetes or prediabetes. An unknown supplement can interact with medications, and the lack of ingredient disclosure makes it impossible for a doctor to assess risks. This isn’t just a waste of money — it could be a health risk.

The honest read

GlycoMute is a classic ClickBank supplement play: a high-commission product with a sales page engineered to recruit affiliates, not to inform buyers. The payout is high ($137.57 per sale) because the price is high ($138), and the refund window gives the funnel a thin veneer of trustworthiness. But the product itself is a black box.

Without ingredient transparency, there’s nothing to evaluate. No clinical evidence, no dosing rationale, no safety profile. You’re not buying a blood sugar supplement — you’re buying a bet that the bottle contains something useful. And at $138, that’s a bet with terrible odds.

The marketing will tell you this is a “powerful new angle” that’s “mesmerizing” media buyers. What it won’t tell you is what you’re swallowing. Until it does, I would not buy this.

— 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. GlycoMute - Advanced Blood Sugar Support 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.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

What's in GlycoMute?
We don't know, and that's the problem. The sales page doesn't list a single ingredient. Without a supplement facts panel, you can't assess safety, efficacy, or interactions. This is the biggest red flag.
Is GlycoMute a scam?
Not necessarily a scam — the product likely ships, and refunds are processed through ClickBank. But paying $138 for an unknown formula is a gamble that rarely pays off. It's more 'opaque and overpriced' than an outright con.
How does the 60-day refund work?
ClickBank's policy: request a refund within 60 days through their support, and you'll get your money back. For physical supplements, you may need to return the product (even opened) at your own shipping cost. Check the vendor's specific return policy before buying, because if they don't accept opened returns, you're stuck.
Will GlycoMute lower my blood sugar?
There's no way to know. The sales page makes no specific, verifiable claims. Any blood sugar effect depends entirely on the ingredients and their doses, which are hidden. Consult a doctor, not a mystery pill.