Review · Other Supplements

KundaliniFlow

A $59 spiritual supplement with no disclosed ingredients or clinical backing. The refund policy is ClickBank's 60-day, but physical returns are a headache. I would not buy this.

Verdict Skeptical 3.2/10
KundaliniFlow review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.2/10

A $59 spiritual supplement with no disclosed ingredients or clinical backing. The refund policy is ClickBank's 60-day, but physical returns are a headache. I would not buy this.

Price checked
$59
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
No ingredient list anywhere on the sales page — you have no idea what you're ingesting
Better use case
Someone deeply immersed in Kundalini or energy-healing culture who treats this as a spiritual tool, not a supplement
Skip if
You're looking for an evidence-based supplement — this has no published ingredient list, let alone clinical support
Evidence file
1 source attached

What KundaliniFlow is, in one sentence.

A 30-day supply of a liquid supplement sold through ClickBank for $59, bundled with digital manifestation materials and wrapped in the language of Kundalini energy and prosperity. The sales page tells you it will make you prosper; the bottle doesn’t tell you what’s inside.

What you actually get

Five items, sized realistically:

  • The supplement bottle. A 30-day supply of liquid, presumably a tincture or extract. The sales page shows a sleek amber bottle with a dropper, but nowhere does it list the ingredients. Not in the VSL, not in the order form, not in the fine print. That’s a hard stop for anyone who reads labels before swallowing.
  • The manifestation guide. A short PDF (roughly 15 pages) that walks you through a daily ritual of taking the drops while visualizing prosperity. It’s the kind of content you’d find in a $5 Kindle book on the law of attraction.
  • The audio track. A seven-day Kundalini activation recording. The sample on the sales page is ambient music with spoken affirmations. If you’re into guided meditation, it’s competent; if you’re not, it’s a seven-minute loop that won’t change your bank balance.
  • Private Facebook group. Access to a community of other buyers sharing testimonials. These groups tend to be echo chambers where skepticism isn’t welcome, but they can provide a sense of accountability if you’re doing the daily practice.
  • Email support. The vendor promises “personalized frequency tuning” via email. In practice, this usually means an autoreply with a PDF attachment you already have.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page is a 12-minute VSL that cycles through stock footage of people meditating, bank statements with large balances, and testimonials from people who “manifested” raises and windfalls. It works on emotion, not evidence.

Two specific oversells to flag:

The “high AOV offer” language in the affiliate-facing description (which you can still find cached) tells you the vendor is recruiting affiliates, not end users. That phrase means “high average order value” — it’s a metric for marketers, not a promise of quality.

The prosperity claim is untestable. If you don’t get richer, the vendor can always say you didn’t “align your energy” correctly. That’s a classic unfalsifiable promise, and it’s the engine that drives refunds down.

What it costs and how the refund works

$59 one-time at checkout. No upsells or recurring billing surfaced on the date of this review. The price is in line with other spiritual supplement offers on ClickBank, but high for a month’s supply of an unlabeled liquid.

ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy applies in theory, but physical goods are a different animal. You’ll need to return the unopened bottle within 60 days at your own shipping cost. If the bottle is opened, the refund is at the vendor’s discretion — and the vendor’s discretion is rarely generous. The sales page doesn’t mention any of this; it just says “money-back guarantee” and links to ClickBank’s generic policy. That’s a gap you should notice.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

Three claims to be skeptical of:

“Designed for PD Lists & Cold traffic.” — This is affiliate-lingo for “the sales page converts well when sent to people who’ve never heard of the product.” It’s a conversion metric, not a product metric.

“Many PD affiliates have tested, it’s your turn now.” — Again, a call to affiliates. When a vendor spends more energy recruiting sellers than explaining what’s in the bottle, you’re the product being sold to the affiliate, not the other way around.

“Combines manifestation & healing energies of the universe.” — This is the entire value proposition, and it’s not falsifiable. You can’t measure “healing energies” in a lab, so you can’t prove it doesn’t work. That’s the point.

The ingredient problem — and why it matters

Dietary supplements are supposed to list their ingredients on the label, and reputable vendors make that label visible on the sales page. KundaliniFlow doesn’t. That means you don’t know if you’re taking a harmless herbal extract, a potent stimulant, or something that interacts with your blood pressure medication. The risk is real: supplements without disclosure have been found to contain undeclared pharmaceuticals, heavy metals, or allergens. I’m not saying this one does — I’m saying you can’t know, and that’s unacceptable at $59.

If the product were purely digital, the risk would be financial. Because it’s a liquid you’re supposed to ingest, the risk is physical. That’s the line that moves this from “overpriced but harmless” to “I would not buy this.”

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re a committed Kundalini practitioner who treats it as a ritual object, not a supplement. Keep the bottle sealed, use the digital materials for 59 days, and return it unopened for a refund if you don’t feel any shift. That’s the only scenario where the $59 risk is zero.

Skip this if you’re looking for a supplement with measurable effects. Skip it if you take any medication. Skip it if you think $59 is a lot to spend on a bottle of mystery liquid and a PDF you could have written yourself.

The honest read

KundaliniFlow is a prosperity-gospel product dressed in New Age clothing. The sales page is effective at making you feel like the missing piece is a frequency you can drink. The bottle you receive may or may not contain anything bioactive. The digital extras are the kind of thing you’d get free with a newsletter signup on any spiritual blog.

If you want to try it, do it inside the refund window with the bottle sealed. If you want to manifest prosperity, start with a budget, not a tincture.

— 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. KundaliniFlow- Manifesting Energy that makes you prosper 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is KundaliniFlow a scam?
Not in the sense that you get nothing. A bottle arrives. The problem is the bottle's contents are a mystery, and the prosperity claims are untethered from reality. You're paying $59 for a spiritual experience, not a supplement with measurable effects.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A 30-day supply of a liquid supplement (no ingredient list), a digital manifestation guide, an audio track, Facebook group access, and email support. Everything is physical + digital, no subscription.
Can I return it if it doesn't work?
Technically, ClickBank offers a 60-day refund window on all products. For physical goods, you'll need to return the unopened bottle at your expense, and restocking fees may apply. If you've opened it, the refund is unlikely. The vendor's own return policy isn't stated on the sales page.
Will this actually help me manifest prosperity?
There is no scientific mechanism by which a liquid supplement could directly cause financial prosperity. If the ritual of taking it and listening to the audio shifts your mindset, that's a placebo effect — which can be real, but you can get the same from a $10 journal and a free meditation app.