Review · Dietary Supplements
InsuLeaf – Explosive Blood Sugar Offer | Huge Commissions | Scales!
A $162 blood sugar supplement with a 60-day refund, but the sales page hides the label, the price is steep for what's likely standard ingredients, and the marketing leans on fear, not facts.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.8/10
A $162 blood sugar supplement with a 60-day refund, but the sales page hides the label, the price is steep for what's likely standard ingredients, and the marketing leans on fear, not facts.
- Price checked
- $162
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page does not disclose the exact dose of any ingredient — you can't verify if it's clinically effective or just pixie dust
- Better use case
- Someone who wants a single-pill blood sugar blend and is willing to test it inside the refund window, fully aware they might return it
- Skip if
- You're on diabetes medication — adding an unlabeled supplement without your doctor's input is dangerous
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What InsuLeaf is, in one sentence.
A $162 blood sugar supplement sold through a fear-driven VSL, with a 60-day refund and an ingredient list that looks fine on paper but hides the one thing that matters: the dose.
The sales page pitches it as an “explosive” offer for affiliates, not a transparent product for buyers. The actual formula is a standard blend of berberine, cinnamon bark, bitter melon, and a few other botanicals you can find in any health store. The question isn’t whether the ingredients could work — it’s whether there’s enough of them in each capsule to do anything.
What you actually get
Three things, realistically:
- 3 bottles of InsuLeaf capsules. The checkout implies a 90-day supply, but the exact count isn’t confirmed until you enter payment info. Based on the official site’s $49/bottle price, $162 buys you three bottles — a $15 markup for going through the ClickBank funnel.
- Possibly a digital bonus guide. Some upsell pages dangle a “free” blood sugar diet plan, but it’s not guaranteed in the base order. Don’t count on it.
- A 60-day refund window. ClickBank will process a refund if you ask within 60 days, but the vendor may require you to return unopened bottles at your own shipping cost. “Risk-free” has an asterisk.
How the marketing oversells
The VSL is built to convert cold traffic, not to inform. It hits every fear button: sudden energy crashes, uncontrollable cravings, the threat of insulin injections. Then it offers InsuLeaf as the fix. Blood sugar support doesn’t work like that — it’s a slow, dietary and lifestyle process. A supplement can help on the margins, but it won’t reverse years of poor glucose control in a week.
The phrase “explosive blood sugar offer” is affiliate code for “this converts well.” It tells you nothing about the product’s efficacy. The sales page also leans on “clinically researched” ingredients without citing a single study or showing you the label. That’s a tell.
What it costs and how the refund works
$162 one-time, no recurring billing. The cart doesn’t surface a subscription, which is good. But $162 is steep for a three-month supply of a supplement you can’t vet before buying.
The 60-day refund is processed by ClickBank, not the vendor. That means you won’t get the runaround from customer support — if you email ClickBank with your order ID inside the window, they’ll refund the purchase price. However, the vendor’s terms often state you must return any unopened product. Shipping that back can cost $5–$15, so your “full refund” is actually a partial one. And if you’ve opened a bottle, you may be stuck with it.
The ingredient problem
The sales page lists berberine, cinnamon bark, bitter melon, Gymnema sylvestre, alpha-lipoic acid, and chromium. All of these have some evidence for blood sugar management. But none of the doses are disclosed.
Here’s why that matters:
- Berberine is typically effective at 500 mg taken two to three times daily. That’s 1,000–1,500 mg per day. A two-capsule serving would need 500 mg per capsule just to hit the low end. Most commercial blends use 100–200 mg per capsule — subclinical.
- Cinnamon bark (Cinnamomum cassia) studies use 1–6 grams daily. That’s 1,000–6,000 mg. You’d need multiple large capsules to get there.
- Alpha-lipoic acid works at 600–1,200 mg daily. Again, a two-capsule serving would require 300–600 mg per capsule.
Without a label, you have to assume the doses are low. Because if they were high, the vendor would brag about it. The silence is the message.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you’re prepared to treat it as a 60-day trial that you’ll likely return. If you want to test a pre-mixed formula and don’t mind the hassle of a possible return, the refund window gives you an out. But you’re gambling $162 plus return shipping on a product that may be underdosed.
Skip this if you’re on diabetes medication — adding an unlabeled supplement without your doctor’s input is reckless. Skip it if you’re comfortable buying berberine, cinnamon, and ALA separately; you’ll get clinically meaningful doses for half the price. And skip it if the VSL’s urgency made you feel like you need this right now. That’s the marketing working, not a medical recommendation.
The honest read
InsuLeaf is a commodity supplement sold at a premium through a high-converting affiliate funnel. The ingredient list is fine; the missing doses are not. The 60-day refund is the only real safety net, and even that has friction.
If the label were transparent and the doses matched the research, this could be a $30/month supplement worth considering. At $54/bottle with no label, it’s a pass.
I would not buy this.
— 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. InsuLeaf – Explosive Blood Sugar Offer | Huge Commissions | Scales! 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 InsuLeaf a scam?
- No, it's a real supplement you'll receive. But it's overpriced, the label is hidden until delivery, and the marketing is designed to scare you into buying. A scam implies you get nothing — you'll get bottles. Whether they do anything is another question.
- What do I actually get when I buy?
- Most likely 3 bottles (90-day supply) of InsuLeaf capsules. The checkout page may offer upsells for more bottles or digital guides, but the base $162 is for a multi-bottle package. The exact count isn't clear until you enter your credit card.
- Does the 60-day refund really work?
- Yes, ClickBank processes refunds within 60 days, but the vendor may require you to return unopened bottles. Shipping costs are on you. So 'risk-free' really means 'you can get most of your money back if you jump through hoops.'
- Will InsuLeaf actually lower my blood sugar?
- Maybe, if the doses hit clinical thresholds. Berberine and cinnamon can help, but without knowing the amounts, you're gambling. Don't expect dramatic changes — and never replace prescribed medication without your doctor's okay.