Review · Other Supplements

iGenics

A $140 vision supplement with 12 ingredients but no publicly available label. The 60-day refund gives you a trial, but you're paying for hope, not proof.

Verdict Skeptical 4.2/10
iGenics review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical4.2/10

A $140 vision supplement with 12 ingredients but no publicly available label. The 60-day refund gives you a trial, but you're paying for hope, not proof.

Price checked
$140
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
No publicly available label to verify ingredient doses — you can't check if it's underdosed
Better use case
Buyers willing to use the 60-day refund window as a trial budget — you can test it and only keep it if you notice a real difference
Skip if
You take any prescription medications and haven't checked the ingredient list (once available) against potential interactions with a pharmacist
Evidence file
1 source attached

What iGenics is, in one sentence.

A $140 vision supplement sold through ClickBank, claiming 12 premium ingredients, backed by a 60-day refund window, and marketed heavily to the 55+ crowd with copy written by an ‘8-figure copy expert.’

The product exists — you’ll get a bottle. But whether that bottle contains anything worth $140 is the real question, and right now, it’s one you can’t answer before you buy.

What you actually get

Five things, realistically:

  • One bottle. Likely a 30-day supply, though the sales page doesn’t specify. You’ll need to check the label when it arrives.
  • A proprietary blend. The ingredient list is almost certainly hidden behind a blend, so you won’t know how much lutein, zeaxanthin, or anything else is actually in there. That’s a red flag in any supplement, but especially one at this price.
  • A 60-day refund guarantee. This is the one solid thing about the offer. ClickBank processes refunds, not the vendor, so you won’t get hassled. If you try it and don’t see any benefit, you get your money back — as long as you remember to ask.
  • Any digital bonuses. Some ClickBank supplements bundle e-books or guides. The checkout page may offer them; they’re usually filler.
  • Hope. And that’s what you’re really buying — the hope that this pill will do what the marketing says. At $140, that’s an expensive hope.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page leans hard on fear and authority. You’ll see phrases like ‘12 premium vision ingredients’ and ‘written by an 8-figure copy expert.’ The copy expert’s job is to get you to click ‘buy,’ not to formulate an effective supplement. The two skills have nothing to do with each other.

The conversion rate claims (1.5–3.5% with supplement buyers 55+) tell you the funnel works for affiliates. They don’t tell you the product works for your eyes.

The marketing also avoids specifics. No clinical doses are mentioned. No studies are cited for the actual formula. That’s by design — if they told you the amounts, you could compare them to the AREDS2 study and see if they’re underdosed. Without that, you’re gambling.

What it costs and how the refund works

$140 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing that we could surface, but always confirm at the cart. The upsell page after checkout may offer additional products; those are optional and covered by the same refund policy.

Refunds are ClickBank’s domain. Email their support with your order ID within 60 days, and the money comes back in 3–7 business days. We’ve seen this work on dozens of ClickBank supplements. The vendor can’t block it. The only catch is you have to remember to do it, and you might be out the cost of return shipping if they ask for the bottle back (unlikely, but possible).

The ingredient problem

Here’s the core issue: vision supplements can work, but only if they deliver the right nutrients at the right doses. The AREDS2 formula, for example, uses 10 mg lutein, 2 mg zeaxanthin, 500 mg vitamin C, 400 IU vitamin E, 25 mg zinc, and 2 mg copper. That specific combination, at those specific doses, slowed the progression of age-related macular degeneration in a major clinical trial.

iGenics claims 12 ingredients. That’s more than AREDS2, but more isn’t better. Some ingredients might be underdosed to fit everything in one capsule. Others might be window dressing. Without a label, you can’t know.

If the company were confident in their formula, they’d publish the full Supplement Facts panel on the sales page. The fact that they don’t is a tell.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re willing to treat $140 as a fully refundable experiment. Order it, open the bottle, read the label carefully, compare the doses to published research (or ask your pharmacist to do it), and decide in the first week whether to keep it or refund it. If you set a calendar reminder for day 50, you can get your money back and only lose a few dollars in return shipping.

Skip this if you take any prescription medications, especially blood thinners or diabetes drugs, and haven’t checked the ingredient list with a professional. Vitamin E, bilberry, and other common vision ingredients can interact with meds.

Skip it if you want proven results without the guesswork. A bottle of AREDS2-based eye vitamins from a reputable brand costs $15–$25 a month and has the clinical data behind it. iGenics is almost five times that price and comes with no data at all.

The honest read

iGenics is a marketing-heavy supplement in a category where good science exists but is often ignored in favor of profit margins. The refund policy is your only safety net, and it’s a real one. But the product itself is a black box until you open it.

If the label shows doses that match or exceed the AREDS2 formula, and the extra ingredients are genuinely useful (like astaxanthin or bilberry at meaningful levels), then $140 might be justifiable for the convenience. If it’s a proprietary blend with tiny amounts, you’re paying for the copywriter’s mortgage, not your eyes.

I would not buy this without seeing the label first. And since the vendor won’t show it to you before you pay, I’d skip it entirely and buy a transparently labeled AREDS2 formula from a brand that submits to third-party testing. That way, you know what you’re getting, and you’ll have about $115 left over.

— 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:

iGenics - Hot New Vision Offer 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is iGenics a scam?
Not in the sense that they take your money and run. They deliver a bottle, and the ClickBank refund is honored. But whether the bottle contains enough of the right ingredients to actually help your vision is a different question — and one you can't answer without a label that shows doses, not just a list of ingredients.
What are the ingredients in iGenics?
The marketing says '12 premium vision ingredients,' but as of this review, no full label with amounts is publicly posted. Typical vision supplements include lutein, zeaxanthin, bilberry, vitamin A, zinc, and others. Without seeing the label, we can't tell if iGenics uses clinically effective doses or just sprinkles them in for label appeal.
How does the 60-day refund work?
You buy through ClickBank, try the product for up to 60 days, and if you're not satisfied, contact ClickBank support with your order ID. They'll refund your purchase price, usually within a week. The vendor doesn't handle refunds directly, so there's no hassle. Just be sure to keep your order receipt.
Will iGenics really improve my vision?
That depends on what's causing your vision issues. For age-related macular degeneration, the AREDS2 formula (with specific doses of lutein, zeaxanthin, vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc, and copper) has strong evidence. iGenics may or may not match those doses. If you have cataracts or other conditions, supplements have limited evidence. The best move is to get an eye exam first, then ask your doctor if a supplement is appropriate.