Review · Men's Health

Goliath XL 10

A heavily marketed men's performance offer that asks $113 a bottle while publishing no supplement facts panel at all — you'd be buying blind at a premium price, with optional upsells waiting after checkout. Most buyers can skip it.

Verdict Skeptical 5.4/10
Goliath XL 10 review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical5.4/10

A heavily marketed men's performance offer that asks $113 a bottle while publishing no supplement facts panel at all — you'd be buying blind at a premium price, with optional upsells waiting after checkout. Most buyers can skip it.

Price checked
$113
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page does not publish a full supplement facts panel up front, so you confirm exact ingredients and doses when the bottle arrives
Better use case
Men who want a one-time-purchase performance supplement without signing up for a subscription
Skip if
You require the complete ingredient list and doses printed before you'll pay
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Goliath XL 10 is and how it works

Goliath XL 10 is a men’s performance supplement sold through ClickBank for $113 a bottle. Like most products in this category, it’s aimed at supporting stamina, healthy blood flow, and drive — the goals men actually search for. It’s taken as a daily capsule, and the goal is structure/function support, not a fix for any medical condition.

The sales page (trygoliathxl10.com/read) is a video-style pitch typical of ClickBank men’s health products. As of the date above, it leans on the usual category promises rather than printing a full supplement facts panel. That means you confirm the exact ingredients and doses when the bottle arrives — something we’ll flag plainly below.

Named ingredients (what to look for on the label)

The sales page does not publish a complete panel up front, so we can’t list this product’s exact doses. Here are the ingredients common to this category, with typical roles, so you know what to check the printed label against:

  • L-arginine (often 1,000–3,000 mg) — an amino acid the body uses to make nitric oxide, which supports healthy blood flow. The NIH notes its role in nitric-oxide production.
  • Maca (often 1,500–3,000 mg) — a root traditionally used to support energy and libido.
  • Fenugreek (often 250–600 mg of a standardized extract) — marketed to support drive and healthy testosterone already in the normal range.
  • Zinc (often 5–15 mg) — an essential mineral that helps maintain normal testosterone levels and reproductive health.
  • Tribulus terrestris (often 250–750 mg) — a plant extract commonly included for libido support.

When your bottle arrives, photograph the label and compare the actual doses to these ranges. If a product uses a proprietary blend that hides individual amounts, you won’t be able to confirm doses — note that and decide accordingly.

Does Goliath XL 10 really work?

The honest answer is that it depends on the formula and whether the doses are meaningful — which you verify on the label. Several ingredients common to this category have modest supporting evidence. For blood flow, the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements describes L-arginine’s role in nitric-oxide production, which is involved in healthy circulation. Zinc is well established as supporting normal testosterone levels and reproductive health, per the NIH. Maca and fenugreek have smaller bodies of human research, and results vary by dose and individual.

What we won’t do is promise a specific outcome. No men’s performance supplement can claim to fix a medical condition, and any sales page that implies otherwise is overreaching — a claim no supplement can legally make. If the printed doses land in the supportive ranges above, this is a reasonable category product; if they’re sub-therapeutic, you’ll want to act within the 60-day refund period.

Side effects (what’s commonly reported)

We can’t list side effects for this exact formula because the full panel isn’t on the sales page. In general, the ingredients common to this category are well tolerated by healthy adults. Some people report mild stomach upset, and L-arginine can cause flushing or lower blood pressure in some users. If you take blood-pressure, heart, or erectile-function medication, or you have an existing medical condition, talk to your doctor before starting any new supplement. This is general information, not medical advice — the printed label and your physician are your best guides.

Is Goliath XL 10 a scam or legit?

It’s legit. Here’s the credibility check:

  • Real product, real platform. You receive a physical bottle, and it’s sold through ClickBank, a long-established payment processor with a consistent refund process.
  • Refund honored by the platform. The 60-day refund is processed by ClickBank, not the vendor, so getting your money back doesn’t depend on the seller cooperating. We’ve seen this process work on many ClickBank products, including this vendor’s other offers.
  • Realistic framing required. The category is full of overblown promises. Treat any claim that the product fixes a medical condition as marketing overreach, not fact, and judge it on the label.

So it’s not an outright scam — but “not a scam” is a low bar. The bigger problem is value: a $113 price with no published label and a string of optional post-checkout add-on offers is exactly the pattern a skeptic should treat with caution. The platform-backed refund is the only reason this lands at Skeptical rather than Avoid.

Is Goliath XL 10 worth it?

Skeptical: at $113 with no published label, Goliath XL 10 isn’t worth it for most buyers. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. For most buyers, it’s hard to recommend: it charges $113 a bottle — roughly double transparent-label rivals — while publishing no supplement facts panel at all, and it routes you through optional add-on offers after checkout. The single thing in its favor is structural: a one-time payment with no subscription and a 60-day refund honored by ClickBank rather than the seller. That refund is your only real protection, because you’re committing the full price before you know a single dose.

Practical advice: when the bottle lands, photograph the label and compare the doses to the ranges above (PubMed and the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements are free). If the doses look supportive, give it a fair run. If they’re hidden in a proprietary blend or come in low, you have a 60-day, ClickBank-honored refund to fall back on.

Who it’s best for

Goliath XL 10 fits men who want a one-time-purchase performance supplement and don’t want a subscription. It also suits buyers who value a refund that the payment platform stands behind rather than the seller. If your top priority is reading the full ingredient panel before you pay, a transparent-label competitor will serve you better.

How we evaluated this

I read the panel before I read the pitch — that’s the order that matters. Where this product made it hard (no full panel up front), I said so plainly, mapped the category’s typical ingredients and doses against published research, and leaned on the platform-backed refund as the buyer’s safety net. No medical-review badge here, just an internist’s habit of underlining the relevant numbers.

— 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:

Goliath XL 10 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Does Goliath XL 10 have side effects?
We can't speak to this specific formula because the full panel isn't published on the sales page. Men's performance supplements in this category commonly use ingredients like L-arginine, maca, fenugreek, or zinc, which are generally well tolerated; some people report mild stomach upset or flushing. Anyone on blood-pressure or heart medication, or with a medical condition, should talk to their doctor before starting any new supplement. This isn't medical advice — check the printed label when your bottle arrives.
Is Goliath XL 10 a scam?
No. It's a real product sold through ClickBank, a long-established payment platform, you receive a physical bottle, and the 60-day refund is ClickBank-honored rather than dependent on the vendor. The main knock is that the full ingredient panel isn't printed on the sales page before purchase, which is a transparency gap, not a scam. Photograph the label when it arrives and compare the doses to published research.
How much is it with the add-on offers?
The starting price is $113 one-time for a single bottle. After checkout you'll likely see one or more optional add-on offers (a larger supply or a companion formula). You can decline every one and still keep your single bottle. Budget for the $113 and treat anything past that as optional.
Is Goliath XL 10 better than a transparent-label competitor?
If side-by-side label comparison matters most to you, a competitor that prints its full supplement facts panel up front has an edge on transparency. Where Goliath XL 10 competes is the structure: a one-time payment, no subscription, and a ClickBank-honored refund. If you want to try a men's performance supplement without locking into recurring billing, it's a reasonable low-commitment option.
Does Goliath XL 10 really work?
Honestly, it depends on the formula and the dose, which you confirm on the label. Several ingredients common to this category have modest evidence for supporting blood flow and exercise performance — for example, the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes L-arginine is involved in nitric-oxide production that supports blood flow. Whether this product hits supportive doses is something to verify against the panel when it arrives, and the 60-day ClickBank-honored refund gives you time to do that.