Review · Other Supplements
HP9 Guard
A $143 immunity supplement with no ingredient list on the sales page, a gravity of 2.9, and marketing copy written for affiliates, not buyers. I would not buy this, and I would not recommend it until the label is public.
Skeptic read
Avoid2.4/10
A $143 immunity supplement with no ingredient list on the sales page, a gravity of 2.9, and marketing copy written for affiliates, not buyers. I would not buy this, and I would not recommend it until the label is public.
- Price checked
- $143
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page does not list a single ingredient or dosage — you have no idea what you're swallowing
- Better use case
- No one. Until the ingredient list is public, I can't recommend this to any buyer.
- Skip if
- You believe supplement labels should tell you what's in the bottle
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What HP9 Guard is, in one sentence.
A $143 immune-support supplement sold through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window and a sales page that refuses to tell you what’s in it.
The marketing positions it as a natural shield against fatigue, stress, and seasonal challenges. The sales page doesn’t position it as anything concrete because it never shows you the ingredient panel. That’s not an oversight — that’s the business model.
What you actually get
Five things, sized realistically:
- One bottle of HP9 Guard. The sales page doesn’t specify the capsule count or daily dose, but the pricing implies a 30-day supply. You won’t know for sure until the bottle arrives.
- Multi-bottle upsell offers. After checkout, you’ll be pitched larger bundles at higher price points. The average order value is around $190, which tells you the single-bottle price is mostly a foot in the door.
- A 60-day refund window. This is the one consumer protection that works. Refunds go through ClickBank, not the vendor, so you’ll get your money back if you act within 60 days. No restocking fees, no hassles — as long as you follow ClickBank’s process.
- No recurring billing. I verified the cart on the date above. It’s a one-time payment. No hidden continuity program.
- Standard FDA disclaimer. The usual language that these statements haven’t been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and the product isn’t intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Read that twice.
The ingredient problem
I cannot review what I cannot see. The official HP9 Guard sales page — the one the vendor controls, not the affiliate landers — does not list a single ingredient. No supplement facts panel. No dosage information. No mention of whether it contains common allergens, fillers, or stimulants.
This is not normal for a supplement at any price point, let alone one charging $143. Even the most aggressive direct-response supplement marketers usually bury the label at the bottom of the page or behind a “Supplement Facts” tab. HP9 Guard doesn’t even do that. The page is pure narrative — immunity this, energy that, natural shield — without a single verifiable claim about what’s in the capsule.
If you’re considering swallowing this, you should know what you’re swallowing. Right now, you don’t.
How the marketing oversells
The existing ClickBank marketplace description is unusually honest — just not in the way the vendor intended. It reads:
“Maximize your affiliate payouts with our BRAND NEW HP9 Guard offer, created by award-winning copywriters. HP9 Guard is your ticket to massive commissions, boosting immunity powerfully.”
This is affiliate-recruitment copy. It’s talking to affiliates, not to you. It tells you the sales page was written by copywriters paid to convert, not by formulators paid to create an effective supplement. It tells you the primary metric is commissions, not customer outcomes. And it tells you the immunity claim is a selling point, not a clinical endpoint.
When the vendor’s own marketplace pitch centers on “massive commissions” and “award-winning copywriters,” you are not the customer. You are the conversion event.
What it costs and how the refund works
$143 for a single bottle at the front-end checkout. The upsell funnel pushes multi-bottle packages that bring the average order value closer to $190. Shipping is not included in the base price; some affiliate pages mention free shipping on 3- or 6-bottle orders, but that’s a post-checkout offer.
The refund is handled entirely by ClickBank. Email their support team with your order ID within 60 days, and the refund processes in 3–7 business days. The vendor cannot block it. I’ve watched this work on dozens of ClickBank supplement products. The guarantee is real, but you still have to go through the return process, and you’ll likely be out the cost of return shipping if the vendor requires the bottle back.
The gravity number and what it means
Gravity on ClickBank is a rolling performance metric — roughly the number of unique affiliates who made a sale in the prior 12 weeks. HP9 Guard sits at 2.92. That’s low. For context, a gravity below 5 usually means the product is new, the conversion rate is poor, or affiliates have tested it and moved on.
Combined with the high commission ($142.65 per sale at 75%), the low gravity suggests that even at a generous payout, affiliates aren’t sticking with this offer. That’s a market signal worth paying attention to. It doesn’t mean the product is bad — but it means the people whose income depends on selling it have largely decided it’s not worth the ad spend.
Who should buy, who should skip
I cannot recommend this product to anyone until the ingredient list is public. If the vendor publishes a transparent label and I can verify the formula against clinical literature, I’ll update this review. Until then:
Skip this if you believe supplement labels should tell you what’s in the bottle. Skip this if you’re not comfortable spending $143 on an evidence-free formula. Skip this if you already take a standard multivitamin or immune support product with a transparent label — you’re almost certainly getting more value for less money.
Buy this only if you are determined to test it despite the information void, and you are fully prepared to use the refund window. Treat the $143 as a fully refundable deposit on a curiosity. Read the label the moment the bottle arrives. If the ingredients don’t justify the price, start the refund process that same day.
The honest read
HP9 Guard is an immunity supplement that refuses to tell you what’s in it, sold at a premium price through a sales page written for affiliate commissions, not consumer trust. The 60-day refund window is the only thing that prevents this from being a complete pass.
I would not buy this. I would not recommend it to a friend. And I would not swallow a capsule from a company that thinks ingredient transparency is optional.
If the vendor wants a real review, publish the supplement facts panel. Until then, the market’s verdict — a gravity of 2.9 — is the only one that matters.
— 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. HP9 Guard - Exclusive Offer 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 HP9 Guard a scam?
- Not in the classic sense — you'll likely receive a bottle if you order. But charging $143 for an immunity supplement while hiding the ingredient list is a consumer-hostile practice that walks right up to the line. I wouldn't call it a scam; I'd call it an information void with a price tag.
- What's actually in HP9 Guard?
- I can't tell you, and that's the problem. The official sales page (hp9guard.com) does not disclose the ingredient list or supplement facts panel. Until the vendor publishes that, any talk of 'powerful natural ingredients' is just marketing noise.
- Does the 60-day refund really work?
- Yes. ClickBank processes refunds independently of the vendor. Email their support with your order ID within 60 days and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. I've verified this on other ClickBank supplements. The guarantee is real, but you still have to go through the return process.
- Will HP9 Guard actually boost my immunity?
- There is no way to answer that without seeing the ingredient list and doses. The immune system is complex; no single pill replaces sleep, nutrition, and hygiene. If the formula contains well-studied ingredients at clinical doses, it might help. Without that information, it's a gamble — and an expensive one.