Review · Other Supplements
MoveWell Daily
A $158 joint supplement with recurring billing and no ingredient transparency on the sales page. The 60-day refund window is real, but you're buying a promise, not a label.
Skeptic read
Conditional4.2/10
A $158 joint supplement with recurring billing and no ingredient transparency on the sales page. The 60-day refund window is real, but you're buying a promise, not a label.
- Price checked
- $158
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page does not show a Supplement Facts panel, so you cannot verify ingredient doses against clinical literature
- Better use case
- Someone with mild, occasional joint stiffness who has already tried cheaper standalone ingredients (like bulk glucosamine) and wants a pre-made blend
- Skip if
- You have moderate to severe osteoarthritis or an inflammatory joint condition—see a doctor, not a ClickBank page
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What MoveWell Daily actually is (and what the sales page won’t tell you)
MoveWell Daily is a dietary supplement sold through ClickBank for $158 per bottle, with a monthly subscription that kicks in automatically. The sales page is a long-form VSL that talks about stiffness, flexibility, and “cutting-edge” science, but it never shows you the ingredient label. That’s the first and most important red flag.
For $158, you’re entitled to know exactly what you’re swallowing and at what dose. The supplement industry is full of joint formulas that sprinkle in a few hundred milligrams of glucosamine—far below the 1,500 mg clinical dose—and call it a day. Without a Supplement Facts panel, you can’t check whether MoveWell Daily contains the amounts that actually matter.
The vendor claims “low refunds,” which sounds like a selling point to affiliates. To a buyer, low refunds can mean one of two things: either the product works well, or the refund process is difficult enough that people give up. Given the lack of transparency, I lean toward the second interpretation until proven otherwise.
What you actually get for $158
You receive one bottle of capsules, enough for 30 days. The checkout page may offer additional “bonus” digital guides—usually a PDF on joint health or a video series—but these are low-cost add-ons designed to increase perceived value. The real product is the bottle.
After 30 days, unless you cancel, you’ll be charged another $158 and sent another bottle. This recurring model is common on ClickBank, but it’s easy to miss if you click through the order form quickly. The vendor’s refund policy (separate from ClickBank’s 60-day guarantee) may require you to return unopened bottles for a refund, which adds friction.
The ingredient problem: what joint supplements actually need
Joint supplements have a long, mixed history. The best-studied ingredients are:
- Glucosamine sulfate: 1,500 mg daily is the standard clinical dose for osteoarthritis. Many products use glucosamine hydrochloride, which is cheaper and less studied.
- Chondroitin sulfate: 800–1,200 mg daily, often paired with glucosamine.
- Curcumin (turmeric extract): 500 mg of a bioavailable form (like Meriva or BCM-95) can reduce inflammation comparably to ibuprofen in some studies.
- MSM (methylsulfonylmethane): 1,500–3,000 mg daily may reduce pain and improve function.
- Boswellia serrata: 100–250 mg of a standardized extract (30% AKBA) shows promise.
If MoveWell Daily includes these ingredients but at hobbyist doses—say, 200 mg of glucosamine and 50 mg of curcumin—it won’t do much. And if it relies on unproven additions like hyaluronic acid in oral form (poor absorption) or collagen type II (limited evidence), you’re paying for marketing, not results.
The recurring trap and how to avoid it
The product has a recurring billing flag in ClickBank’s system. That means after your initial purchase, you’re on the hook for $158/month until you actively cancel. The vendor’s contact information is an email address buried in the order confirmation. No phone number, no live chat. If they ignore your cancellation request, you’ll need to dispute the charge with your bank.
Here’s what I’d do if I were determined to try this: order one bottle, screenshot the order confirmation page showing the subscription terms, and immediately email the vendor to cancel future shipments. Keep that email. Then, when the bottle arrives, read the label. Compare doses to clinical research. If it’s underdosed, return the unopened bottle (if required) and request a refund through ClickBank within 60 days. Yes, it’s a hassle—but that’s the only way to test this product without risking $158/month indefinitely.
The refund reality
ClickBank’s 60-day money-back guarantee is a platform policy, not a vendor promise. For physical products like supplements, the guarantee often requires you to return the product. The vendor may deduct shipping costs or charge a restocking fee. Some supplement sellers on ClickBank make the return process so cumbersome (no RMA number, no response to emails) that buyers give up. The “low refunds” claim might reflect that friction rather than satisfaction.
If you do request a refund, document every communication. If the vendor doesn’t respond within a week, go directly to ClickBank support with your order ID and evidence. They can override the vendor, but it’s not instant.
Who might actually benefit
There is a narrow buyer who could extract value: someone with mild, activity-related joint stiffness who has already tried standalone glucosamine or turmeric and wants a pre-formulated blend for convenience. If the label reveals clinical doses, and if that buyer cancels the subscription after one month, the cost-per-serving might be justifiable for a trial. But that’s a lot of “ifs.”
The honest read
MoveWell Daily is a high-priced, low-transparency joint supplement in a market full of cheaper, more transparent alternatives. The sales page is built to convert, not to inform. The recurring subscription is the real business model, not the one-time sale. And the absence of an ingredient panel before purchase is, for me, a hard stop.
If you’re curious, use the 60-day window as a safety net, but go in knowing you’ll likely need to fight for your refund. Better yet, walk into any pharmacy, pick up a store-brand glucosamine-chondroitin blend with a visible label, and spend $20 instead of $158. Your joints won’t know the difference.
— 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:
MoveWell Daily - Advanced Joint Relief for Flexibility and Comfort! 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- What's actually in MoveWell Daily?
- We don't know. The sales page doesn't list a Supplement Facts panel, and the vendor's website requires you to scroll through a long VSL before any ingredient mention. Without that panel, you're flying blind on doses. If the vendor won't show you the label before purchase, that's a red flag.
- Is the 60-day refund real for a supplement?
- ClickBank's 60-day refund policy applies, but supplement refunds often require you to return the unused portion. The vendor may impose a restocking fee or make you pay return shipping. Read the fine print after ordering. We've seen supplement vendors slow-walk refunds by claiming you didn't return the product, so document everything.
- Will MoveWell Daily fix my joint pain?
- If it contains evidence-backed ingredients at clinical doses (e.g., 1,500 mg glucosamine sulfate, 500 mg curcumin with piperine), it might modestly reduce stiffness over 2–3 months. But 'fast relief' in days is not supported by joint supplement science. If your pain is severe, a physical therapist or rheumatologist will do more for you than a capsule.
- How do I cancel the subscription?
- You'll need to contact the vendor directly via email (no phone number on the sales page). Cancel immediately after ordering if you only want one bottle. Check your bank statement for the recurring charge descriptor, which may be different from 'MoveWell Daily.' If the vendor ignores your cancellation request, dispute the charge with your bank.