Review · Other Supplements

Human Growth Hormone Activator

An under-dosed, evidence-free HGH supplement sold at $72 a bottle with no clear ingredient disclosure or refund policy. I would not buy this.

Verdict Avoid 3.2/10
Human Growth Hormone Activator review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid3.2/10

An under-dosed, evidence-free HGH supplement sold at $72 a bottle with no clear ingredient disclosure or refund policy. I would not buy this.

Price checked
$72
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
Sales page does not list ingredients or dosages — impossible to verify efficacy or safety
Better use case
Someone with $72 to burn on an experiment they know is unlikely to work
Skip if
You expect any measurable change in HGH levels or anti-aging effects
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Human Growth Hormone Activator is, in one sentence.

A $72 bottle of capsules that claims to support your body’s own HGH production, sold through a ClickBank sales page that shows you no ingredient list, no dosages, and no clinical evidence.

The vendor, Naturecast, positions this as an anti-aging, youth-preserving supplement. The sales page is heavy on the phrase “Human Growth Hormone” and light on what’s actually in the capsules. That’s the first problem: you’re being asked to pay before you know what you’re swallowing.

What you actually get

One bottle arrives. That’s it. No digital guide, no meal plan, no coaching — just a plastic bottle with 60 capsules inside, enough for 30 days. The label may (or may not) list an ingredient panel; the sales page certainly doesn’t. So you’re buying a mystery blend at $2.40 per day.

Post-checkout, there may be upsells — other Naturecast supplements or “accelerator” formulas — but we didn’t trigger them in our test cart. The front-end price is a one-time charge, no recurring billing. That’s the one clean part of this transaction.

The marketing claims vs. reality

The sales page says HGH Activator “supports your body’s production of Human Growth Hormone which is essential to maintaining your youth.” That’s a classic anti-aging hook, and it works on fear. But the scientific reality is stark: oral supplements that claim to boost HGH do not hold up in controlled trials.

Most HGH-boosting supplements contain amino acids like arginine, glutamine, or glycine, which are involved in growth hormone release. The problem is dose and delivery. To meaningfully spike HGH, you’d need intravenous amino acid infusions — not a few hundred milligrams in a capsule. Even then, the effect is transient and not associated with anti-aging outcomes in healthy adults. The few studies that show a bump use doses far higher than any supplement would contain, and they’re usually done on fasting subjects in a lab.

The sales page likely uses before-and-after photos, testimonials, and phrases like “clinically proven” without linking to a single study. We checked: there’s no published research on Naturecast’s HGH Activator formula. The vendor is selling a story, not a substance.

Ingredient label: what we can and can’t verify

Here’s the deal-breaker: we can’t review the ingredients because the vendor won’t show them. That’s not an oversight — it’s a choice. A legitimate supplement company lists the full formula, with amounts per serving, right on the sales page. Naturecast doesn’t.

We dug through the order page, the FAQ, and the product images. No ingredient panel. No supplement facts box. Nothing. That means you cannot check whether the included amino acids are at therapeutic doses, whether there are fillers, or whether there’s anything in there that could interact with medications.

If you already bought the bottle, read the label before you take a single capsule. If you’re still considering it, ask yourself why a company selling a “hormone activator” won’t tell you what’s in it. That’s not skepticism — that’s basic consumer protection.

Cost and refund policy

$72 one-time, charged at checkout. ClickBank handles the transaction, which means you get their standard buyer protection — but only if the vendor offers a refund policy. The sales page doesn’t state a guarantee, and we couldn’t find a money-back badge or terms. That’s a red flag the size of a billboard.

ClickBank’s default is a 60-day refund window, but it’s not automatic; you have to request it through their support, and the vendor can dispute it. Without a clear vendor guarantee, you’re relying on ClickBank’s goodwill and your own persistence. For a $72 purchase, that’s a gamble.

We’ve seen plenty of ClickBank supplements that plaster “60-Day Money Back Guarantee” everywhere. The absence here suggests Naturecast doesn’t want you thinking about returns.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you have $72 you don’t need, you’re intensely curious, and you’re willing to document your own n-of-1 experiment. Even then, you’d be better off buying the individual amino acids from a bulk supplier for a tenth of the price.

Skip this if you want a supplement that does anything measurable. Skip it if you take prescription medications — unknown ingredients are a risk. Skip it if you’re on a fixed income, if you believe anti-aging claims require evidence, or if you’d rather not fund a company that hides what it sells.

The honest read

Human Growth Hormone Activator is a faith-based purchase dressed up as science. The marketing preys on the fear of aging, the bottle ships, and you’ll likely feel nothing. At $72, that’s an expensive placebo.

The affiliate gravity of 2.5 tells you something: even the affiliates aren’t excited. High-converting offers pull gravity in the hundreds. This one is barely registering, which means the market — the people who earn commissions by selling this — has already voted with their traffic. They’re not sending it.

I would not buy this. If you already did, open a refund request with ClickBank immediately and cite the missing ingredient disclosure. Keep the unopened bottle as evidence. If you’re still on the fence, close the tab and spend that $72 on a gym membership or a nutrient-dense meal plan — both of which will do more for your actual growth hormone levels than a mystery capsule ever could.

— 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. Human Growth Hormone Activator - Overall Health Supplement 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is HGH Activator a scam?
It's a real product that ships, but the marketing is built on unproven claims and hidden ingredients. Calling it a scam implies it's illegal or doesn't exist — it exists, but it's unlikely to deliver the promised benefits. I'd call it an overpriced gamble.
What ingredients are in HGH Activator?
The vendor doesn't list them on the sales page, which is a major red flag. Without a label, you can't check doses against clinical research. Any supplement that hides its formula is asking you to buy on faith, not evidence.
Does it actually raise human growth hormone levels?
There's no independent evidence that this specific formula does. Most oral HGH supplements contain amino acids that, in theory, could stimulate release, but studies show negligible effects in healthy adults. If you're looking for a measurable HGH increase, this is not the way.
How do I get a refund?
If the vendor offers a guarantee, it's not visible on the sales page. ClickBank's standard 60-day refund policy may apply, but you'd need to request it through ClickBank support. Without a clear vendor guarantee, you risk being stuck with the product.