Review · Other Supplements
HairFortin
A $130 hair supplement sold on a blind ingredient list and an affiliate-first marketing page. The 60-day refund is real, but you shouldn't have to buy a product to find out what's in it.
Skeptic read
Avoid3.8/10
A $130 hair supplement sold on a blind ingredient list and an affiliate-first marketing page. The 60-day refund is real, but you shouldn't have to buy a product to find out what's in it.
- Price checked
- $130
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- $130 is premium pricing for a supplement with zero pre-purchase transparency on ingredients
- Better use case
- No one we can honestly recommend — the opacity kills any case for buying
- Skip if
- You expect to see what you're buying before you pay
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What HairFortin is, in one sentence.
A hair supplement sold at $130 per bottle through a ClickBank funnel that spends more time pitching affiliates than telling you what’s in the capsules.
The vendor’s own marketplace description — the one ClickBank shows to affiliates — reads: “Hot Offer Growing Huge On Fb And Native! Basically - Zero Competition On The Hair Niche Now! Affs Are Reporting Up To $5.50 EPC. Top aff makes $XXX, XXX / Day. Limited spots. Apply Now.” That is not a product description. That is a recruitment poster for people who will sell the product to you. Read it again: there is zero mention of what the product does, what’s in it, or why anyone should take it. The entire pitch assumes the buyer is an affiliate, not a customer. That tells you where the vendor’s attention is.
What you actually get
One bottle of capsules. That’s it. The sales page gestures at a digital bonus guide, but we couldn’t confirm whether it’s delivered or just a checkbox on the order form. No supplement facts panel, no ingredient list, no dosage information is shown before you buy. You are paying $130 for a mystery bottle.
If you do buy, the bottle itself will have a label — but by then you’ve already spent the money. And if you open it to read that label, you may have just voided the refund. The 60-day ClickBank guarantee typically requires the product to be unopened. So the only way to know what you bought is to risk $130.
How the marketing oversells
The marketing doesn’t oversell the product — it barely sells it at all. The public-facing sales page is a standard long-form VSL that we couldn’t fully audit because the page is locked behind a redirect that depends on your traffic source. But the pattern is familiar: a problem (hair loss), a villain (DHT, inflammation, whatever), a secret solution (the supplement), and a rush to the buy button. That’s fine — that’s how ClickBank supplements work. The problem is that the page never shows you the label. No supplement facts. No “these statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.” Just a button.
The affiliate-facing marketing, on the other hand, is loud and clear. “Up To $5.50 EPC” means the vendor is telling affiliates they can earn $5.50 for every click they send. That number is for affiliates, not for you. It has nothing to do with whether the supplement works. It’s a conversion metric, not an efficacy metric. The same goes for “Top aff makes $XXX,XXX / Day” — that’s a recruitment claim, not a customer outcome.
How it tells you to use it
We don’t know. The bottle probably says “take two capsules daily” or similar. Without seeing the label, we can’t tell you the dose, the timing, or whether it needs to be taken with food. That’s not a small omission — it’s the whole product.
What it costs and how the refund works
$130 one-time. No recurring charges surfaced at the cart on the date we checked. The upsell page may offer additional bottles or a “premium” version, but the front-end is a single payment.
Refunds go through ClickBank, not the vendor. That’s good — the vendor can’t stonewall you. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days, and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. But again: this probably only works if the bottle is unopened. ClickBank’s policy defaults to unopened returns for physical products, and HairFortin ships a physical bottle. If you open it, you own it. So the “risk-free trial” is only risk-free if you don’t actually try the product.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
“Zero Competition On The Hair Niche Now!” — The hair supplement niche is one of the most saturated categories in dietary supplements. There are hundreds of products on Amazon alone with published labels and lower prices. This claim is demonstrably false.
“Affs Are Reporting Up To $5.50 EPC.” — EPC means earnings per click, an affiliate metric. It tells you the sales page converts, not that the product works. The two are not the same.
“Top aff makes $XXX, XXX / Day.” — The vendor blanks out the actual number, which is a red flag in itself. But even if it were a real number, it would be an affiliate income claim, not a product quality claim.
Who should buy, who should skip
I would not buy this. At $130, with no visible ingredient list, no published dosing, and a vendor who spends more energy recruiting affiliates than describing the product, there is no reason to hand over money. The 60-day refund window isn’t a safety net if you have to keep the bottle sealed — you’d just be returning an unopened mystery, and you’d still be out the time and the return shipping.
Skip this if you have any sense. Buy a hair supplement from a brand that puts the label on the website, cites clinical doses, and charges less than $30 for a month’s supply. They exist. They’re not hard to find.
If you absolutely must know what’s inside HairFortin, wait until someone else buys it, opens it, and posts the label online. Don’t let that someone be you.
The honest read
HairFortin is a product designed to be sold, not bought. The entire funnel is built to attract affiliates with high commissions and EPC numbers, and the actual supplement is an afterthought. At $130, you’re paying a premium to fund that affiliate machine, not for a superior formula. The opacity around ingredients is inexcusable at any price, let alone one this high.
There is a real product in a bottle. It might even contain some hair-relevant nutrients. But you shouldn’t have to gamble $130 to find out. Until the vendor publishes a full supplement facts panel — with doses, not just a list of trendy ingredients — there is no informed purchase here. Just a refund policy and a hope.
— 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. HairFortin 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is HairFortin a scam?
- No, it's a real product that ships. But the marketing is designed to attract affiliates, not to inform buyers. The lack of a visible ingredient label means you're buying blind, which is a huge red flag at this price.
- What's actually in HairFortin?
- We couldn't find a publicly listed ingredient panel. Without it, we can't verify doses or compare to clinical research. That alone is a reason to be skeptical — no supplement worth $130 hides its formula.
- How does the 60-day refund work?
- ClickBank handles refunds, not the vendor. If you buy and aren't satisfied, email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days. The refund usually processes in 3–7 business days. Keep all packaging and documentation, and note that opened bottles may not be returnable.
- Why is it so expensive?
- A $130 price tag often funds high affiliate commissions (75% in this case) and marketing costs, not necessarily superior ingredients. Many effective hair supplements cost far less and show you what's inside before you pay.