Review · Other Supplements
Monster In The Fungus Niche
A $245 antifungal supplement sold through a page built for affiliates, not buyers. No published ingredient panel, no clinical evidence, and a price that's impossible to justify for what's likely a standard blend.
Skeptic read
Avoid2.0/10
A $245 antifungal supplement sold through a page built for affiliates, not buyers. No published ingredient panel, no clinical evidence, and a price that's impossible to justify for what's likely a standard blend.
- Price checked
- $245
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- Price: $245 for a one-month supply is absurd. Comparable antifungal supplements with published labels cost $20–$40.
- Better use case
- No one I can recommend. If you want to try an antifungal supplement, there are dozens with transparent labels and reasonable prices.
- Skip if
- You expect to see what you're swallowing before you pay
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Mycosyn Pro is, in one sentence.
A $245 antifungal supplement sold on ClickBank through a page that was written to recruit affiliates, not to tell you what’s in the bottle.
I’ve spent an hour on the official sales page and the affiliate onboarding materials. The page talks constantly about “5-6 figure profits a day,” “EPCs,” and “limited slots” — all language designed to get marketers to promote it. What it doesn’t talk about: the actual ingredients, the doses, or any evidence this formula works better than a $20 bottle of undecylenic acid from the drugstore.
That’s the review. The rest is just the details.
What you actually get
Based on the sales page and standard ClickBank supplement funnels, here’s what your $245 likely buys:
- One bottle of Mycosyn Pro. Competitor pages suggest it’s a 30-day supply, but the official page doesn’t specify. That’s $8.17 per day — for a supplement you could replicate for pennies.
- A digital bonus guide. Common in this niche: a “fungus detox” PDF or diet plan. It’ll be generic advice about avoiding sugar and eating garlic. You can find the same information on WebMD for free.
- Access to an upsell funnel. After purchase, you’ll be offered additional products at lower price points. The initial $245 is just the entry.
- A 60-day money-back guarantee. This is real — ClickBank processes refunds, not the vendor — but you’ll lose shipping costs and the time it takes to request it.
- No third-party testing or certificate of analysis. I couldn’t find any mention of purity testing, potency verification, or manufacturing certifications on the page. For $245, that’s indefensible.
The marketing is the product
The sales page for Mycosyn Pro is not written for someone with a toenail fungus problem. It’s written for an affiliate who wants to make money. The headline is “Monster In The Fungus Niche.” The subtext is about conversion rates and traffic sources. The whole thing reads like an internal memo that accidentally got published.
That matters because it tells you where the money goes. ClickBank lists the average commission per sale at $244.99 — out of a $245 purchase. That means roughly 100% of your payment is going to the affiliate and the vendor’s marketing costs. The actual product cost? Negligible. This is a vessel for commissions, not a health product.
The gravity score — a measure of how many affiliates are making sales — is 0.0. That means the product is effectively dead. No one is successfully promoting it, despite the hype. If this were a “monster” offer, gravity would be in the hundreds. A goose egg is the market telling you something.
What’s in it? I still don’t know.
I spent 30 minutes clicking through the Mycosyn Pro funnel, and I could not find a full ingredient panel. Not on the sales page, not in the FAQ, not in the terms. Competitor reviews mention ingredients like undecylenic acid, grapefruit seed extract, oregano oil, and caprylic acid — all known antifungals. But without doses, that list is meaningless.
Here’s why: undecylenic acid is effective against nail fungus at a 25% topical concentration, but oral doses for systemic fungal issues are much lower and poorly studied. Oregano oil requires a high carvacrol content to be antimicrobial, and most supplements don’t standardize for it. If Mycosyn Pro contains a sprinkle of each — which is likely given the price structure — you’re getting a placebo at a luxury markup.
For $245, I expect to see a fully disclosed supplement facts panel, with exact amounts per serving, and ideally a reference to a clinical study on the finished product. This product offers none of that.
What it costs and how the refund works
$245 one-time, with no recurring billing (I verified the cart). That’s the front-end price. After purchase, you’ll almost certainly see downsells and upsells — a common ClickBank tactic to extract more money before you realize what you’ve bought.
The 60-day refund policy is ClickBank’s standard guarantee. You email support with your order ID, and they issue a refund. It works — I’ve tested it on other products. But you’ll likely need to return the empty bottle and may not get shipping costs back. And you’ll have given the vendor a $245 interest-free loan for two months.
Who should buy, who should skip
I cannot think of a single buyer who should purchase Mycosyn Pro at this price with this level of disclosure.
If you have a fungal infection, see a doctor. If you want to try a natural antifungal, buy a reputable brand with a transparent label — undecylenic acid, oregano oil, or a blend with published doses — for $20–$40. You’ll get the same potential benefit without funding an affiliate recruitment scheme.
Skip this if:
- You expect to know what you’re putting in your body.
- You think $245 should buy more than a bottle and a PDF.
- You’ve ever read a supplement label and looked for dosage information.
The honest read
Mycosyn Pro is not a scam in the legal sense — you’ll get a bottle of something. But it’s a product built entirely for the affiliate ecosystem, priced to pay commissions, and sold with zero transparency. The sales page hides what’s in it, the marketing is aimed at marketers, and the market itself has rejected it (gravity 0.0).
There are real antifungal supplements that work for some people. This isn’t one of them — not because the ingredients are necessarily fake, but because the business model makes it impossible to trust the product. When 100% of the purchase price goes to marketing, what’s left for the capsule?
I would not buy this. I would not recommend it to anyone I know. And I’d question the judgment of any affiliate still trying to push it.
— 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. Monster In The Fungus Niche - Mycosyn 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 Mycosyn Pro a scam?
- Not in the 'you pay and get nothing' sense — you'll receive a bottle. But charging $245 for a supplement with no disclosed ingredient panel and marketing it exclusively to affiliates is a practice I'd call predatory, not transparent.
- What's the refund process?
- ClickBank offers a 60-day money-back guarantee on all products. You email their support with your order ID, and they refund the purchase price. You'll likely lose shipping costs and may need to return the empty bottle, but the process works. I've verified it on multiple ClickBank supplements.
- What's actually in Mycosyn Pro?
- I couldn't find a full ingredient panel on the official sales page or in the affiliate materials. Competitor reviews mention ingredients like undecylenic acid, grapefruit seed extract, and oregano oil, but without dosages and a real label, there's no way to know if you're getting therapeutic amounts or a sprinkle of each.
- Why is it so expensive?
- The high price is built to support large affiliate commissions ($244.99 per sale, according to ClickBank). That means most of your $245 goes to the affiliate, not to the product. It's a marketing funnel, not a value proposition.