Review · Other Supplements

Metanail Complex

A $105 anti-fungal kit with no public ingredient list, marketed through affiliate hype. The 60-day refund window is your only safety net.

Verdict Skeptical 4.5/10
Metanail Complex review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical4.5/10

A $105 anti-fungal kit with no public ingredient list, marketed through affiliate hype. The 60-day refund window is your only safety net.

Price checked
$105
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
No ingredient list, supplement facts panel, or dosage information is publicly available before purchase.
Better use case
Buyers who've tried drugstore topical treatments without success and are willing to risk $105 on a combined approach.
Skip if
You expect to see an ingredient list before buying.
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Metanail Complex is, in one sentence.

A $105 anti-fungal kit — a topical dropper and an oral supplement — sold through ClickBank with no publicly available ingredient list and no clinical evidence that it works.

The sales page pitches it as a “hot NEW anti-fungal dropper and supplement offer” with “unique angles, multiple leads, unmatched EPCs.” That language is for affiliates, not for you. It tells you the offer is converting well for the people selling it. It tells you nothing about whether the product will clear your nail fungus.

What you actually get

The exact contents are murky because the vendor doesn’t post a full list. Based on the sales page and typical nail-fungus offers in this category, you’re likely to receive:

  • One bottle of topical solution with a dropper. You apply this directly to the affected nails. No ingredient list means we can’t tell whether it contains anything with proven antifungal activity — like undecylenic acid, tea tree oil, or clotrimazole — or just a base of alcohol and fragrance.
  • One bottle of oral supplement capsules. Probably a 30-day supply, though the sales page doesn’t specify. Again, no supplement facts panel. Without that, you don’t know the dose of any active compound, and you can’t check it against clinical literature.
  • A digital usage guide (if the offer includes one). Some similar products bundle a PDF with application instructions and diet tips. Not confirmed.
  • A 60-day ClickBank refund window. This is the only concrete safety net. More on that below.
  • No recurring billing. The checkout is one-time, so you won’t get surprise charges later.

If you buy, you’ll get physical bottles shipped to you. That’s a plus over digital-only scams. But the contents remain a black box until you open the package.

The ingredient problem

This is the review’s core. Without a published ingredient list, there is no way to assess whether Metanail Complex contains anything that might work.

Nail fungus (onychomycosis) is a hard infection to treat. The nail plate is thick and poorly perfused, so topical agents rarely penetrate deeply enough to reach the nail bed where the fungus lives. The most effective treatments are prescription oral antifungals — terbinafine, itraconazole — which work systemically. Over-the-counter topicals can help mild cases, but they need to contain proven ingredients at meaningful concentrations.

If Metanail Complex’s topical solution is just tea tree oil at 5% in a dropper, that’s not a $105 product. If the oral supplement is a blend of biotin, zinc, and herbal extracts with no antifungal activity, it’s a $10 multivitamin with a markup.

We can’t know, because the vendor hasn’t disclosed. That’s the red flag that matters most. A legitimate supplement company publishes its supplement facts panel and ingredient list prominently — not just on the bottle after you buy, but on the sales page so you can make an informed decision. The absence here is a choice.

How the marketing oversells

The affiliate pitch on the ClickBank marketplace page is pure recruitment copy: “Hot NEW anti-fungal dropper and supplement offer! Unique angles, multiple leads, unmatched EPCs! Apply NOW!”

EPC stands for earnings per click — an affiliate metric. It means the sales page converts well enough that affiliates make good money per visitor they send. That’s why the product has gravity 11.45 (decent for a new offer). It does not mean the product is safe, effective, or worth $105.

The “unique angles” and “multiple leads” refer to different sales funnels and ad creatives the vendor provides to affiliates. Again, not a product claim. The entire pitch is designed to recruit people who will sell it, not to inform people who might buy it.

For a buyer, that’s a warning. When the marketing is aimed at the sales force and not the end user, the product often takes a back seat to the funnel.

What it costs and how the refund works

$105 one-time. No recurring billing surfaced at checkout on the date of this review.

The refund policy is ClickBank’s standard 60-day money-back guarantee. You request a refund through ClickBank’s customer service, not the vendor. That’s good — ClickBank tends to process refunds reliably within 3–7 business days.

But there’s a catch with physical products: the vendor can require you to return the items, even if opened, before the refund is issued. That’s where things get sticky. If you’ve used the dropper and opened the supplement bottle, the vendor may refuse the return or deduct a restocking fee. ClickBank’s guarantee says the vendor must honor the refund, but the fine print on returns is set by the vendor. We’ve seen cases where supplement vendors demand the unused portion back and then argue the product was “used” and deny the refund.

So the 60-day window is real, but it’s not a risk-free trial. If you buy, you should be prepared to lose the $105 if the product doesn’t work and the return gets contested.

The honest read

Metanail Complex is a black box wearing a high-converting funnel. The price is steep for an over-the-counter nail fungus product, especially when you can’t see what’s inside. Drugstore topicals with published ingredient lists cost $10–$25. Prescription oral terbinafine can be cheaper with insurance and has decades of clinical evidence behind it.

If you’ve exhausted those options and want to try something new, the only reason to consider Metanail Complex is the 60-day refund window. Buy it, try it, and if you don’t see any improvement in 4–6 weeks, request a refund immediately. Be aware that you might have to fight for it.

But if you’re expecting a dermatologist-formulated, clinically backed treatment for $105, this isn’t it. It’s a supplement marketed through affiliate hype, and the ingredient silence is the loudest part of the pitch.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’ve tried every drugstore topical and can’t or won’t take prescription oral antifungals, and you’re willing to gamble $105 on an unknown formula with a refund safety net you may have to push to use.

Skip this if you want to see an ingredient list before you spend money. Skip it if you’re looking for a dermatologist-recommended treatment with published studies. Skip it if you’re on a budget — effective prescription options may cost less with insurance, and even out-of-pocket generic terbinafine can be under $30 for a course.

— 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:

Metanail Complex - New Top Nail Offer 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is Metanail Complex a scam?
No, it's a real product that ships. But the lack of ingredient transparency and the hype-driven marketing make it a risky buy. It's not a scam in the sense of non-delivery; it's an overpriced, under-evidenced supplement.
What's actually in Metanail Complex?
We don't know. The sales page doesn't list ingredients, and the vendor hasn't published a supplement facts panel. Without that, there's no way to evaluate whether the formula contains effective anti-fungal compounds at meaningful doses.
How does the 60-day refund work?
You request a refund through ClickBank within 60 days of purchase. However, the vendor may require you to return the product — even opened bottles — and may deduct shipping or restocking fees. ClickBank's guarantee is platform-level, but the vendor sets the return conditions.
Does it actually cure nail fungus?
There's no independent evidence. Nail fungus is notoriously stubborn, and effective treatments usually require prescription oral antifungals like terbinafine. Without knowing the ingredients, we can't say whether this product has any chance of working.