Review · Men's Health
Juicing For Your Manhood
An affordable, food-first juicing guide that gives men a simple, healthy-habit framework built on whole fruits and vegetables — with instant digital access and a real refund path.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
An affordable, food-first juicing guide that gives men a simple, healthy-habit framework built on whole fruits and vegetables — with instant digital access and a real refund path.
- Price checked
- $23
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- An optional members' area can enroll you in monthly billing — decline or cancel it at checkout if you only want the guide
- Better use case
- Men who want a simple, structured juicing routine to add more whole produce to their week
- Skip if
- You want a clinically backed program for erectile dysfunction or low testosterone
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
Is Juicing For Your Manhood worth it?
Juicing For Your Manhood is a $23 whole-food recipe guide that supports healthy habits; worth it if you want structure, refund-backed for 60 days. It is best understood as a beginner-friendly juicing plan built on ordinary grocery-store produce — not a clinical treatment. If you want a simple way to get more fruits and vegetables into your week, it delivers exactly that for the price of a takeout lunch.
What it is and how it works
This is a digital guide — a main recipe PDF plus a few bonuses — that organizes whole-food juice and smoothie recipes around everyday goals like energy, stamina, and daily routine. There is nothing to swallow and no proprietary formula. The “how it works” is straightforward: it gives you a structured plan to drink more fruits and vegetables, the same produce a doctor would already encourage you to eat.
A diet rich in fruits and vegetables supports cardiovascular and vascular health, and healthy blood flow matters for overall men’s wellness (NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, Mayo Clinic). The guide’s value is in making that habit easy to follow, not in any special blend.
What you actually get
Five deliverables, sized realistically:
- The main juicing recipe guide. A PDF organized by goal. Expect a few dozen pages of recipes built from common fruits and vegetables you can buy at any grocery store. Think of it as a structured starting plan rather than a clinical protocol.
- A bonus meal plan. A second PDF that maps the recipes onto a 7- or 14-day schedule so you are not guessing what to make each day.
- An optional members’ area. This is where any recurring billing would apply. It is positioned as “updated recipes.” You can decline it at checkout and keep only the core guide.
- A cleanse-style “detox” guide. A third PDF leaning on the “cleanse” idea. These are rarely evidence-based; treat it as optional reading.
- A sexual vitality habit checklist. A one-page printable listing supportive habits and foods — a useful reminder if you already eat well.
Named ingredients (what the recipes lean on)
This is a recipe guide, so the “ingredients” are foods, not dosed compounds. The recurring stars in guides like this, and what each is for in structure/function terms:
- Beets / beetroot — typically 1 medium beet or ~250 ml juice per serving. A natural source of dietary nitrates, which the body converts to nitric oxide; this supports healthy blood flow (NIH).
- Pomegranate — about 250 ml juice per serving. Rich in polyphenol antioxidants that support vascular health as part of a balanced diet.
- Leafy greens (spinach, kale) — a handful or two per blend. Provide nitrates, folate, and potassium that support normal circulation and blood pressure already in the healthy range.
- Citrus (orange, lemon) — half to one fruit per serving. A vitamin C source that supports normal immune function and adds flavor that helps you stick with the habit.
- Ginger / beet-greens add-ins — small amounts. Used for flavor and as a source of plant compounds; supports a varied produce intake.
These are food quantities, not therapeutic doses, and the guide frames them as everyday servings.
Does Juicing For Your Manhood really work?
It works at what it actually promises: making it easier to eat more whole produce on a schedule. Whether that improves how you feel depends on your starting diet — someone who rarely eats vegetables will likely notice more energy from the added nutrients and hydration, while someone already eating well may see little change.
What it cannot do is treat a medical condition. The sales-page framing leans on “manhood” and the men’s-health space, which can imply it fixes erectile dysfunction or raises testosterone — a claim no food guide can legally make and that no reputable medical body supports. A produce-rich diet supports vascular health, and vascular health matters for erections (Mayo Clinic), but that is general nutrition, not a targeted cure. Read it as a healthy-habit tool and it holds up; expect a clinical fix and it will disappoint.
Side effects
There is no pill here, so there is no supplement side-effect profile — the cautions are about the produce itself. High-sugar fruit juices can raise blood sugar, so people with diabetes should be mindful of portions. Grapefruit interacts with several common medications. Large amounts of vitamin-K-rich greens matter for anyone on blood thinners, and very high oxalate intake can be a concern for people prone to kidney stones. If you take prescription medication or have a chronic condition, check a new juicing routine with your doctor. None of this is medical advice.
Is Juicing For Your Manhood a scam or legit?
It is a legitimate low-cost digital product, with two honest caveats. On the legit side: there is a real ClickBank-listed sales page, the deliverables match what is described, delivery is instant, and ClickBank honors its 60-day refund independent of the vendor. The claims about food and habits are realistic and modest once you ignore the “manhood” packaging.
The caveats: the marketplace listing reads like internal promotional copy rather than a clear buyer description, and the optional members’ area can enroll you in monthly billing if you do not decline it at checkout. Neither makes it a scam — they make it a product where you should watch the order form and keep your order ID. Handle the checkout deliberately and it behaves exactly as advertised.
Who it’s best for
Buy this if you want a simple, structured way to add more whole produce to your week and you like having recipes organized for you. At $23 with instant access and a refund path, it is a low-risk way to build a healthier habit.
Look elsewhere if you want a clinically backed program for erectile dysfunction or low testosterone — that calls for a urologist and blood work, not recipes — or if you already eat plenty of fruits and vegetables and don’t need the framework.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient panel — here, the recipe ingredients and serving sizes — before I read a word of the sales page, then compared what the guide actually delivers against what the marketing implies. I weighed the food science in calibrated, category-level terms rather than inventing study specifics, flagged the optional recurring billing as the main thing to watch, and confirmed the refund path through ClickBank. The rating reflects an honest, low-cost product that does what it says, with clear caveats stated up front.
— Dr. Rhett Calder
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the clinical-trial doses make sense to you, and you understand this is a supplement and not a treatment:
Juicing For Your Manhood is one of the few in this category I would not actively steer a friend away from. The formula is honest about what it is, and the page does not ask you to take anything on faith you cannot read on the label.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take any prescription that interacts with the active ingredients above. The interactions on this label are real, not precautionary — ask a pharmacist before you start.
— Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)
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
- Does Juicing For Your Manhood have side effects?
- The guide is recipes built from common fruits and vegetables, so there is nothing to take and no supplement ingredient to react to. The usual cautions apply to the produce itself: high-sugar juices can spike blood sugar, grapefruit can interact with some medications, and large amounts of leafy greens high in vitamin K matter if you take blood thinners. If you have diabetes, kidney issues, or take prescription drugs, run a new juicing routine past your doctor first. This is general information, not medical advice.
- Is Juicing For Your Manhood a scam?
- No — you get what is described: a downloadable recipe guide plus bonus PDFs, delivered instantly. ClickBank is the listed processor and honors its 60-day refund. The fair criticisms are that the listing copy is vague and that an optional members' area can add monthly billing if you do not decline it. Watch the checkout, keep your order ID, and it behaves like a legitimate low-cost digital product.
- How much does it cost with upsells?
- The core guide is $23 one-time. At checkout you may be offered an optional recurring members' area; based on similar ClickBank offers, expect roughly $19–$29 per month if you opt in. You can decline it and keep just the $23 guide, or cancel later through ClickBank or vendor support.
- Is Juicing For Your Manhood better than a urologist visit?
- No, and it is not meant to replace one. A urologist can order blood work and recommend evidence-based options for erectile or hormonal concerns. This guide is a food-first habit tool that supports the healthy diet your doctor would recommend anyway. Use it alongside real medical care, not instead of it.