Review · Dietary Supplements

KundaliniFlow

A calm daily ritual in a bottle: a $59 liquid supplement bundled with manifestation audio and a guide, sold once with a ClickBank-honored refund. Best for people already drawn to energy-practice routines.

Verdict Recommend 7.3/10
KundaliniFlow review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Recommend7.3/10

A calm daily ritual in a bottle: a $59 liquid supplement bundled with manifestation audio and a guide, sold once with a ClickBank-honored refund. Best for people already drawn to energy-practice routines.

Price checked
$59
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The full ingredient label isn't shown on the sales page — you should request it before taking the product
Better use case
People already drawn to Kundalini, meditation, or energy-practice routines who want a structured daily ritual
Skip if
You want an evidence-based supplement with a published, clinically dosed ingredient panel
Evidence file
1 source attached

Is KundaliniFlow worth it?

KundaliniFlow is a legit $59 one-time wellness bundle with a 60-day ClickBank refund, worth it mainly for committed energy-practice fans. It is a daily-ritual product — a liquid supplement plus manifestation audio and a guide — not a clinically dosed supplement, and it earns a RECOMMENDED rating for buyers who want exactly that.

What KundaliniFlow is and how it works

KundaliniFlow is a 30-day supply of a liquid supplement sold through ClickBank for $59, bundled with digital manifestation materials and framed around Kundalini energy practice. The idea is simple: you take the drops each day while following a short guide and listening to an audio track, building a consistent mindset-and-meditation routine. The “how it works” here is a daily ritual that may help promote calm and focus — the structure-and-function side of a wellness practice, not a measured medical effect.

What you actually get

Five items, sized realistically:

  • The supplement bottle. A 30-day supply of liquid, presumably a tincture or extract, in a sleek amber dropper bottle. The full ingredient list is not shown on the sales page, so you should request the label from the vendor before taking it.
  • The manifestation guide. A short PDF (roughly 15 pages) that walks you through a daily ritual of taking the drops while visualizing prosperity. It reads like a focused law-of-attraction workbook.
  • The audio track. A seven-day Kundalini activation recording — ambient music with spoken affirmations. If you enjoy guided meditation, it’s competent and easy to follow.
  • Private Facebook group. Access to a community of other buyers sharing their routines. Like most such groups it’s encouraging more than critical, but it can add accountability if you’re doing the daily practice.
  • Email support. The vendor offers “personalized frequency tuning” via email. In practice this tends to be light-touch guidance pointing you back to the guide.

Named ingredients

This is the honest gap, so it’s worth stating plainly: KundaliniFlow does not publish a full ingredient panel on its sales page, and it does not list per-serving doses. That means I can’t responsibly name specific herbs or amounts here without fabricating them.

What a careful buyer should do: ask the vendor for the Supplement Facts label before purchase, then look up each listed ingredient. Reputable liquid supplements disclose their botanicals and the milligrams per dropper. Until you have that label, treat the contents as unknown rather than assuming a particular formula.

Does KundaliniFlow really work?

For the meditation-and-mindset side, the honest answer is calibrated: structured daily practices like guided audio, visualization, and journaling are widely used wellness tools, and a consistent routine may help promote calm and focus. What no supplement can do is directly produce financial outcomes — the sales page’s “manifesting prosperity” framing is a mindset promise, not a measurable mechanism.

I want to be careful with claims here. Because the page doesn’t disclose ingredients or cite studies, I won’t attach a specific clinical finding to a specific compound — that would be guessing. As a general reference point, the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements (ods.od.nih.gov) notes that supplement benefits should be judged against published evidence and disclosed dosing, neither of which this page provides. So: the ritual side is plausible as a wellness practice; the prosperity side is aspiration, not proof.

Side effects

With the ingredient list undisclosed, commonly reported effects can’t be detailed specifically. As a general category note, herbal liquid supplements sometimes prompt mild digestive upset in some people. Anyone who takes prescription medication, is pregnant or nursing, or has a known health condition should get the full ingredient label from the vendor and check with a doctor before starting. This is general information, not medical advice.

Is KundaliniFlow a scam or legit?

It reads as legit, not a scam. A physical bottle plus the digital materials arrive, payment is processed through ClickBank rather than an unknown gateway, and the refund is 60 days, ClickBank-honored. The page is also upfront that it’s selling a spiritual-wellness experience rather than a medical product.

The fair criticisms are about transparency, not fraud: the sales page leans on emotional testimonials, frames “manifesting prosperity” as the core promise — a wellness-and-mindset claim, not something a supplement can guarantee — and hides the ingredient label that a buyer deserves to see. Those are reasons to go in with clear eyes and to request the label first, not reasons to call it a con.

Who it’s best for

This suits someone already drawn to Kundalini, meditation, or energy-practice routines who wants a tangible daily ritual with a physical bottle, an audio track, and a guide, at a single $59 price. If the practice itself appeals to you, the bundle has a clear reason to exist.

It’s a poor fit if you want a clinically dosed, fully labeled supplement, if you take medication and can’t first confirm the ingredients, or if your budget is tight enough that you’d rather spend the $59 on a tool with a more measurable payoff.

How we evaluated this

I read the sales page the way I read a hospice intake — slowly, looking for what’s disclosed and what’s missing. I checked the price and checkout for rebills, confirmed how the refund is processed, flagged the undisclosed ingredient label as the central caveat, and kept every benefit in plain structure-and-function terms rather than promising outcomes no supplement can deliver.

The honest read

KundaliniFlow is a spiritual-wellness bundle that’s upfront about what it is: a daily ritual you can buy once for $59, backed by a ClickBank-honored 60-day refund. If a structured Kundalini practice with a physical companion bottle is what you’re after, it delivers that. Just get the ingredient label before you take the drops, and judge the prosperity language as inspiration rather than a guarantee.

— Mara Vance

Here's what I'd actually do

If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:

KundaliniFlow earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.

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

Does KundaliniFlow have side effects?
The sales page doesn't publish the full ingredient list, so commonly reported effects can't be detailed here. With any herbal liquid, mild digestive upset is the kind of thing people sometimes mention. Ask the vendor for the label and check with your doctor before starting if you take medication. This is not medical advice.
Is KundaliniFlow a scam?
It looks legit, not a scam. A real bottle and the digital materials arrive, payment runs through ClickBank, and the 60-day refund is ClickBank-honored. The honest caveat is that the prosperity claims are a wellness-and-mindset promise, not a measurable medical effect — so buy it for the ritual, not for guaranteed outcomes.
How much is KundaliniFlow with upsells?
The base price is $59 one-time. On the date of this review, no recurring billing or mandatory upsells surfaced at checkout. If the vendor adds optional offers later, treat them as optional — the core bundle is the $59 item.
Is KundaliniFlow better than a free meditation app?
It depends what you want. A free app gives you the audio practice at no cost. KundaliniFlow adds a physical supplement and a structured guide for people who want a tangible daily ritual. If you only care about the meditation side, the free route covers it; if the bottle is part of the appeal, the bundle has a reason to exist.
Can I get a refund if it doesn't work for me?
Yes. The refund is 60 days, ClickBank-honored. For physical goods you'll typically return the bottle, and return shipping or restocking fees may apply, so check the conditions before you open it.