Review · Remedies

Gum Disease Gone

A $33 PDF that repackages widely available, free at-home gum-care advice — oil pulling, salt rinses, diet — behind 'reverse gum disease' and 'what dentists won't tell you' marketing. No author credentials, two post-checkout upsells, and little you can't find free. Most buyers can skip it.

Verdict Skeptical 6.2/10
Gum Disease Gone review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical6.2/10

A $33 PDF that repackages widely available, free at-home gum-care advice — oil pulling, salt rinses, diet — behind 'reverse gum disease' and 'what dentists won't tell you' marketing. No author credentials, two post-checkout upsells, and little you can't find free. Most buyers can skip it.

Price checked
$33
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
No author with dental credentials is listed, and the advice is general rather than tailored to your situation
Better use case
Someone with early gum irritation who wants a structured, low-cost routine to follow alongside regular dental cleanings
Skip if
You have bleeding that won't stop, loose teeth, or deep gum pockets — that needs a dentist, not a guide
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Gum Disease Gone is, in one sentence.

A $33 digital guide that organizes common at-home gum-care practices into a 30-day routine, sold through ClickBank with instant download and a 60-day refund.

The marketing frames it around the “90% of adults” who have some form of gum disease. That figure traces to the CDC, but it lumps together mild, reversible gum irritation and advanced periodontitis — two very different things. The sales page doesn’t draw that line clearly, and that matters for setting your expectations.

What you actually get

Five digital files, sized realistically:

  • The main guide. Around 80–100 pages in plain English. It covers what drives gum irritation, 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 explanations are surface-level but directionally sound — oil pulling has some published support for reducing plaque, and low vitamin C is linked to poorer gum health (NIH Office of Dietary Supplements). No study citations are included in the guide itself.
  • A 30-day protocol checklist. A day-by-day plan for when to oil pull, when to rinse, and what to eat. Genuinely useful as a habit tracker if you stick with it.
  • Recipe card for rinses. A one-page PDF with three herbal mouthwash recipes — the kind you’ll also find on the first page of a Google search.
  • Dietary do’s and don’ts. A single page listing foods to limit (sugar, processed carbs) and foods to add (leafy greens, fatty fish).
  • Two bonus PDFs. General wellness guides — one on immune support, one on natural tooth whitening — included to round out the bundle.

What the named practices are for

The guide is built around a handful of home routines. Here’s what each is for, in structure/function terms only:

  • Oil pulling (1 tablespoon coconut or sesame oil, swished 10–15 minutes daily). Promoted to help reduce plaque and support cleaner-feeling gums. Some dental studies suggest it may help with plaque control as an add-on to brushing, not a replacement (PubMed indexes several small trials).
  • Salt-water rinse (about ½ teaspoon salt in warm water, as needed). A long-standing practice to help soothe irritated gum tissue and support oral comfort after the routine.
  • Herbal rinses (tea tree, clove, peppermint, diluted). Used to support fresher breath and a clean mouthfeel. Clove oil is traditionally associated with oral comfort; essential oils should always be diluted and never swallowed.
  • Vitamin C (dietary, via the diet one-pager). Included because adequate vitamin C helps maintain healthy gum tissue, and deficiency is associated with poorer gum health (NIH ODS). The guide steers you toward food sources rather than megadoses.

Does Gum Disease Gone really work?

Honest answer: it depends on what you expect. If you follow the 30-day routine consistently — better plaque control, salt-water rinses, more leafy greens and vitamin C — you’re doing the same things a hygienist would tell you support healthier gums, and many people notice less bleeding and irritation within a couple of weeks. That’s a fair, calibrated expectation.

What it can’t do is what the sales page implies. The marketing leans toward “reverse gum disease” language — a claim no guide or supplement can legally make, and one you should treat as a red flag rather than a promise. Mild, early gum irritation often improves with consistent home care. But advanced periodontitis involves tartar below the gumline and bone loss that no rinse removes; that needs a dental professional. The guide doesn’t promise a results timeline, which is to its credit, even when the sales page’s tone runs ahead of what the routine can deliver.

Side effects and who should be careful

There’s nothing to swallow, so the usual supplement concerns don’t apply. The home routines are low-risk for most people, with a few common-sense cautions:

  • Essential-oil rinses (tea tree, clove) can irritate sensitive mouths — dilute them and stop if a rinse stings.
  • Never swallow essential oils; they’re for rinsing only.
  • Oil pulling shouldn’t replace brushing and flossing — it’s an add-on at most.
  • If your gums bleed persistently, feel loose, or worsen, that’s a sign to see a dentist rather than push harder on home care.

This is general information, not medical advice — anyone with an existing dental or health condition should run new routines past their dentist or doctor first.

Is Gum Disease Gone a scam or legit?

It’s legit, with caveats. The product is a real download from an established ClickBank account, it delivers the files it lists, and the 60-day refund is processed by ClickBank rather than left to the vendor’s goodwill. Those are the credibility boxes that matter.

The fair criticisms are about marketing, not fraud: the “90% of adults” framing blurs mild and severe cases, the “what dentists won’t tell you” angle oversells routines that are actually well known, and the sales page implies it can reverse a disease — which it can’t claim. Read past the urgency and you’re left with an organized, inexpensive guide. That’s a reasonable thing to buy for $33, especially with a refund behind it.

Is Gum Disease Gone worth it?

For most people, Gum Disease Gone isn’t worth the $33 — it repackages free, widely available gum-care advice behind hyped marketing, with a 60-day ClickBank refund as the safety net if you try it anyway. Its one genuine value is structure: a single follow-along 30-day checklist instead of a dozen browser tabs. Consider it only if you truly won’t act without that hand-holding and you’ll use it alongside regular dental visits. Skip it if you’ll read free guidance yourself, if you already know oil pulling and salt rinses cold, or if you have loose teeth or bleeding that won’t stop — see a dentist.

How we evaluated this

I read the guide’s structure and the home routines it recommends, checked each named practice against what dental and nutrition sources (NIH, PubMed, Mayo Clinic) actually support, confirmed the checkout price and that no recurring billing appears, and verified the refund path runs through ClickBank. I read the sales page the way I read any health pitch — slowly, with receipts, and with no patience for the word “secret.”

— Mara Vance

Here's what I'd actually do

If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:

Gum Disease Gone earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.

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

Does Gum Disease Gone have side effects?
The guide itself is information, not a pill, so there's nothing to ingest. The routines it describes — oil pulling, salt-water rinses, herbal mouthwashes with tea tree or clove — are low-risk for most people. Some find essential-oil rinses irritating; if a rinse stings or your gums get more sensitive, stop and ask your dentist. Swallowing essential oils is not advised.
Is Gum Disease Gone a scam?
No. It's a real digital product from an account that's been on ClickBank's marketplace, it delivers the PDFs it promises, and the 60-day refund is honored through ClickBank. The marketing leans on urgency and 'what dentists won't tell you' framing, so read the claims with a skeptical eye — but the product exists and the refund works.
What's actually inside the guide?
A main PDF covering the causes of gum irritation, the role of diet and inflammation, oil-pulling instructions, herbal rinse recipes, and a 30-day routine checklist. Expect roughly 80–100 pages in simple language, plus a recipe card, a dietary one-pager, and two general wellness bonuses.
How much is it with the upsells?
The front-end guide is $33 one-time. After checkout you'll see at least two optional add-ons — typically a deluxe edition with videos and a coaching offer. Both are skippable, and the 60-day ClickBank refund covers any add-on you do buy.
Is Gum Disease Gone better than just following Mayo Clinic's free advice?
The information overlaps a lot. What you're paying $33 for is structure — a single 30-day checklist instead of a dozen open browser tabs. If you do better with a step-by-step plan, the convenience can be worth it. If you're happy assembling free guidance yourself, you won't find secrets here.