Review · Other Supplements
Ignitra
A $182 weight-loss supplement sold via ClickBank with a 60-day refund window. The marketing promises metabolic magic, but the price is 3–5× what the same ingredients cost as standalone supplements, and the proprietary blend likely hides underdosed actives.
Skeptic read
Conditional4.5/10
A $182 weight-loss supplement sold via ClickBank with a 60-day refund window. The marketing promises metabolic magic, but the price is 3–5× what the same ingredients cost as standalone supplements, and the proprietary blend likely hides underdosed actives.
- Price checked
- $182
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- At $182 for a 30-day supply, you're paying roughly 3–5× what you'd pay for the likely active ingredients (green tea extract, caffeine, cayenne) as standalone, labeled supplements
- Better use case
- Buyers who want a one-month experiment with a full refund safety net and are willing to track their weight, energy, and side effects honestly
- Skip if
- You take prescription medications, especially blood pressure meds, antidepressants, or blood thinners — the stimulant blend could interact, and the label won't tell you the caffeine dose
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Ignitra is, in one sentence.
A $182 bottle of weight-loss capsules sold through a ClickBank funnel, backed by a 60-day refund window, with the real profit center hiding in the recurring upsells after checkout.
The front-end product is a 30-day supply of a proprietary blend — the kind where you can’t see how much green tea extract or caffeine is actually in each pill. That matters because the clinical research on these ingredients shows effects only at specific doses, and if the blend skimps, you’re paying $182 for a caffeine pill with a fancy label.
What you actually get
You get one bottle of Ignitra capsules. The sales page might toss in a digital guide or a “free” bonus bottle, but the core deliverable is the bottle. After you buy, the funnel will offer you at least one upsell — usually a “detox” or “accelerator” — that enrolls you in a subscription. That’s where the $181.82 commission comes from: not just the front-end sale, but the recurring revenue that follows.
If you only buy the initial bottle and refuse all upsells, you’ll pay $182 once. If you click “yes” to anything after the checkout, you’ll likely see another charge in 30 days. The vendor’s affiliate page brags about “$180+ CPA” — that means the average customer ends up spending more than the front-end price, either through upsells or rebills.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page for Ignitra uses the standard weight-loss-supplement playbook: before-and-after photos, “metabolic reset” language, and urgency triggers like “limited stock.” The copy is optimized to convert cold traffic from Facebook and native ads, which means it’s designed to bypass your skepticism, not answer it.
The headline numbers — “$5+ EPCs,” “Monster WL offer,” “Split tested and optimized to scale” — are affiliate recruitment language. They tell other marketers that this offer converts well. They tell you nothing about whether the product works. When a vendor leads with affiliate metrics instead of ingredient transparency, it’s a signal that the marketing, not the formulation, is the priority.
Inside the bottle: the label problem
We haven’t benched Ignitra in the lab — that means no independent assay, no purity test, no dose verification. But we can talk about the category. Almost every ClickBank weight-loss supplement uses a proprietary blend. A proprietary blend lists the total milligrams of a mixture — say, “Metabolic Ignition Complex 750 mg” — and then names the ingredients inside without telling you how much of each.
Why that matters: green tea extract shows a modest effect on metabolism at doses of 400–500 mg of EGCG per day. Caffeine works at 100–200 mg. Cayenne pepper extract might help at 10–30 mg of capsaicin. If the blend is 750 mg total and contains five ingredients, you could be getting 50 mg of green tea extract, which is useless. You can’t know because the label doesn’t tell you.
That’s the real risk: not that the ingredients are fake, but that they’re underdosed. And at $182, you’re paying premium prices for doses that might not reach the clinical threshold.
What it costs and how the refund works
$182 for the initial bottle, one-time, no auto-ship — unless you accept an upsell. After the purchase, you’ll see offers that likely include a recurring subscription. Read every checkbox carefully; pre-checked “I agree to monthly delivery” boxes are common in this market.
The 60-day refund is real because ClickBank processes it, not the vendor. You email ClickBank with your order ID, and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. You might have to return the bottle (even if empty) and cover return shipping. That’s about $5–10. Still, you can try the product for nearly two months and get most of your money back if it does nothing.
The catch: the refund only applies to the initial purchase. If you get charged for a recurring upsell, that’s a separate transaction, and you’ll have to fight that refund separately — and the vendor, not ClickBank, controls it.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
“Monster WL offer NEW 2025!” — This is an affiliate recruitment headline. It means the offer is new and converting well for affiliates. It does not mean the product is new, innovative, or effective.
“$180+ CPA and direct tracking available!” — CPA is cost per acquisition, an advertiser metric. It tells you that the average customer is worth $180 to the vendor. That money comes from the customer’s pocket, either through the initial sale or the upsells.
“Split tested and optimized to scale on FB/Native/Email/YT traffic.” — This means the sales page has been tweaked to maximize conversions across ad platforms. It’s a statement about the funnel, not the supplement.
When a supplement vendor spends more time talking about their affiliate program than their ingredient doses, treat that as a red flag.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’re willing to treat it as a 60-day experiment with a built-in refund. Track your weight, energy, and any side effects. If you don’t notice anything by day 50, request the refund. You’ll lose the return shipping cost, but that’s a cheap lesson.
Skip this if you take any prescription medication — the stimulant blend could interact, and you won’t know the caffeine dose because of the proprietary blend. Talk to a pharmacist before you even consider it.
Skip this if you’re on a budget. For $40, you can buy a month’s supply of green tea extract (standardized to 50% EGCG), caffeine pills, and cayenne capsules — all with transparent labels. You’ll know exactly what you’re taking, and you’ll save $140.
The honest read
Ignitra is a marketing funnel first and a supplement second. The 60-day refund makes it low-risk to try, but the price is inflated to pay affiliates, not to source premium ingredients. The proprietary blend hides the doses, which means you’re gambling on whether the formulator put enough actives in the pill to matter.
I would not buy this at $182. The value isn’t there. You can replicate the likely active ingredients for a fraction of the cost, with known doses, and skip the recurring-upsell headache. If you do buy, use the refund window aggressively. Set a reminder on day 55. If you don’t feel a clear, measurable difference by then — not just a caffeine buzz, but actual, sustained weight-loss support — get your money back.
The market signal is loud: this offer converts. That tells you it sells. It doesn’t tell you it works.
— 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:
Ignitra 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is Ignitra a scam?
- No. A bottle arrives, and the 60-day ClickBank refund is honored. But 'scam' isn't the right word — 'overpriced for what you get' is. You're paying for the funnel, not the ingredients.
- What's actually in Ignitra?
- Without seeing the full label, we can't say for sure. Based on the marketing and category, expect a blend of green tea extract, caffeine, cayenne pepper, and possibly chromium or garcinia. The problem is the proprietary blend — the label lists total milligrams for the blend, not per ingredient, so you can't compare to clinical doses.
- How does the refund work?
- You have 60 days from purchase to request a refund through ClickBank. You'll need your order ID. The process takes 3–7 business days. The catch: you may have to return the bottle (even if empty) and pay return shipping, which can eat $5–10. Still, it's a real safety net.
- Will Ignitra help me lose weight?
- Possibly — if it contains enough of the right ingredients. But you can get the same ingredients, at known doses, for $30–50 a month from any reputable supplement brand. The weight loss, if any, would come from the caffeine and green tea extract, not from a proprietary 'Ignitra' magic.
