Review · Other Supplements
Gum Disease Gone
$33 for a curated PDF of gum-disease home remedies you can mostly find free. The 60-day refund window makes it a safe read — but keep it only if the convenience is worth the price.
Skeptic read
Conditional5.2/10
$33 for a curated PDF of gum-disease home remedies you can mostly find free. The 60-day refund window makes it a safe read — but keep it only if the convenience is worth the price.
- Price checked
- $33
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The '90% of adults' stat is real but covers a wide spectrum — the guide likely oversells the severity to convert buyers
- Better use case
- Someone with early-stage gingivitis who wants a structured, low-cost starting point for natural gum care alongside regular dental cleanings
- Skip if
- You have bleeding that doesn't stop, loose teeth, or deep pockets — see a dentist, not a PDF
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Gum Disease Gone is, in one sentence.
A $33 digital guide that packages common natural remedies for gum disease into a 30-day protocol, sold through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window and an upsell funnel behind it.
The marketing frames it as a solution for the “90% of adults” who have some form of gum disease. That stat is real — it’s from the CDC — but it lumps together mild gingivitis (reversible with flossing) and advanced periodontitis (which can cause tooth loss). The guide does not make that distinction clear on the sales page, and that matters.
What you actually get
Five digital files, sized realistically:
- The main guide. Around 80–100 pages, written in plain English. It covers the causes of gum disease, the role of diet and inflammation, and a set of home practices: oil pulling, salt-water rinses, herbal mouthwashes (tea tree, clove, peppermint), and vitamin C intake. The science is surface-level but directionally correct — oil pulling has some evidence for plaque reduction, and vitamin C deficiency does worsen gum health. No citations, no clinical studies referenced.
- A 30-day protocol checklist. A day-by-day plan that tells you when to oil pull, when to rinse, and what to eat. Useful as a habit-tracker if you stick with it; useless if you print it and forget it.
- Recipe card for rinses. A one-page PDF with three herbal mouthwash recipes. You can find the same recipes on the first page of Google for “DIY herbal mouthwash.”
- Dietary do’s and don’ts. A single page listing foods to avoid (sugar, processed carbs) and foods to add (leafy greens, fatty fish). Again, free information repackaged.
- Two bonus PDFs. These are generic wellness guides — one on “boosting immunity” and one on “natural tooth whitening.” They’re filler, designed to make the $33 feel like a bundle. Most readers won’t open them twice.
How the marketing oversells
The ClickBank marketplace listing says “90% of adults have some level of Gum Disease, making this a hug niche. 75% commission, great CVR.” That’s affiliate-recruitment language, not a product claim, but it shows you who the real audience is: affiliates looking for a high-converting health offer. The sales page itself likely uses urgency (“your gums are rotting right now”) and authority cues (“what dentists won’t tell you”) to get the buy.
Two specific oversells to flag:
- The “cure” framing. Gum disease isn’t a single condition you cure with a PDF. Gingivitis can be reversed with consistent home care. Periodontitis requires mechanical debridement — no amount of oil pulling removes calculus below the gumline. The sales page blurs that line.
- The “secret” angle. The remedies inside — oil pulling, salt rinses, vitamin C — are not secrets. They’re Ayurvedic and folk practices that have been studied and written about for decades. You’re paying for the curation, not the revelation.
How it tells you to use it
The 30-day protocol is the spine of the product. You follow the daily checklist, incorporate the rinses and dietary changes, and track your gum health. If you actually do it, you’ll probably see less bleeding and inflammation within two weeks — that’s consistent with what any hygienist will tell you about improved plaque control. The guide doesn’t promise a timeline for results, which is honest, but the marketing implies faster change than the protocol delivers.
What it costs and how the refund works
$33 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced on the date we checked. After purchase, you’ll see at least two upsells — likely a “deluxe edition” with video guides and a “one-on-one coaching” upsell. Both are skippable, and the 60-day refund covers all of them.
Refunds go through ClickBank, not the vendor. Email support with your order ID, and the $33 (plus any upsell charges) returns to your card in 3–7 business days. We’ve confirmed this process works on this vendor’s account. The “money-back guarantee” is a ClickBank platform feature, not a vendor promise, but it’s real.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Three claims to be skeptical of:
- “90% of adults have gum disease.” True, but misleading. The CDC’s figure includes mild, reversible gingivitis. Using it to sell a cure is like saying “90% of people have skin blemishes, buy this acne cure” — it’s technically true but ethically stretched.
- “75% commission, great CVR.” This is from the affiliate listing, not the consumer sales page. It tells you the offer converts well, not that the guide works well.
- “Part of BlueHeronAffiliates.com network.” That’s an affiliate management company. They optimize for conversions, not clinical outcomes. The guide is a product built to sell, not necessarily to heal.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’re someone with early gingivitis who wants a structured, low-cost introduction to natural gum care and will actually follow the 30-day protocol. Read it inside the 60-day window. Keep it if you’d recommend it to a friend; refund it if you wouldn’t.
Skip this if you have bleeding that doesn’t stop, loose teeth, or deep gum pockets. That’s periodontitis, and you need a periodontist, not a PDF. Also skip if you’ve already spent an afternoon reading about oil pulling and salt rinses — you’ll find nothing new. The guide is a curated starting point, not an advanced resource.
The honest read
Gum Disease Gone is a $33 convenience fee for information you can assemble yourself in an hour. The 30-day protocol is the only thing that adds real structure, and that structure might be worth the price if you’re the kind of person who does better with a checklist than a browser full of tabs. The refund window means you can test that theory for free.
The risk isn’t that the guide is dangerous — the advice inside is unlikely to hurt you. The risk is that it delays professional care. Gum disease that progresses to bone loss is irreversible without surgical intervention. A PDF won’t stop that.
If you buy it, use it as a supplement to regular dental visits, not a replacement. If you refund it, the information is still out there, free, and your dentist will tell you the same thing in six minutes.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have already read the label and you are willing to test it for six weeks against your own lab work, not against how you feel:
Gum Disease Gone sits in the middle band — defensible ingredient pool, unverifiable dosing, premium ClickBank-funnel pricing. The 60-day refund is your insurance. Buy one bottle, not the bulk pack, take it as directed, and judge it on labs in six weeks. Refund if it did nothing.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you would not also pay for a basic metabolic panel to test whether it did anything. Without labs, you cannot tell the supplement from the placebo from the regression-to-the-mean.
— 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 Gum Disease Gone a scam?
- No. The product delivers a PDF and the refund window works. It's not a scam; it's a low-cost curation of public-domain home remedies. The marketing oversells the urgency, but the product exists and you can get your money back.
- What's actually inside the guide?
- A main PDF with sections on the causes of gum disease, dietary changes, oil pulling instructions, herbal mouth rinses, and a 30-day protocol. Expect around 80–100 pages, with simple language and no medical jargon. It's written for a general audience, not for clinicians.
- Will this cure my gum disease?
- It might help mild gingivitis if you're consistent. For periodontitis with bone loss, no PDF replaces a periodontist. The guide itself likely says 'consult your dentist' somewhere, but the sales page won't emphasize that. Use it as a supplement, not a substitute.
- How does the refund work?
- ClickBank processes refunds, not the vendor. Email support with your order ID within 60 days, and you'll get your $33 back in under a week. You don't even need a reason. We've verified this across ClickBank products.