Review · Other Supplements
Nervala
A 365-day refund promise is the strongest part of this offer, but $120/month recurring and an unverified ingredient list make it a tough sell for anyone not already committed to a long-term nerve-health experiment.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.2/10
A 365-day refund promise is the strongest part of this offer, but $120/month recurring and an unverified ingredient list make it a tough sell for anyone not already committed to a long-term nerve-health experiment.
- Price checked
- $120
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- Recurring billing at $120/month turns a one-time curiosity into a subscription you might not notice until the second charge hits
- Better use case
- People who have already tried standalone nerve-support ingredients (ALA, benfotiamine) and want a pre-formulated, all-in-one option with a long refund window to test it
- Skip if
- You're on a budget — $120/month adds up fast and there are cheaper ways to get the same core ingredients
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Nervala claims, in one sentence.
A natural nerve-support supplement that promises to calm tingling, numbness, and nerve discomfort without harsh chemicals or side effects — backed by a 365-day money-back guarantee and sold at $120 a bottle through ClickBank.
The marketing positions it as a breakthrough formula from a company that’s been in the supplement industry since 2004. The sales page uses language about restoring nerve health, fighting oxidative stress, and “moving freely again.” The actual bottle contains a blend of ingredients commonly found in nerve supplements — alpha-lipoic acid, benfotiamine, and others — but the exact dosages aren’t published in a way that lets us compare them head-to-head with clinical research.
What you actually get
When you order, you’re not just buying a bottle. You’re enrolling in a system.
- The bottle itself. A 30-day supply of Nervala capsules. The label lists ingredients you’ll recognize if you’ve ever researched nerve health: alpha-lipoic acid, benfotiamine (a fat-soluble form of thiamine), acetyl-L-carnitine, and a handful of herbal extracts. The problem is that the dosages aren’t independently verified, and the sales page doesn’t break them down by milligram — so you can’t check whether the ALA is at the 600–1,800 mg range used in clinical trials or something lower.
- The auto-ship enrollment. Unless you actively opt out, you’re signed up for a monthly subscription at $120 every 30 days. The terms are on the order form, but they’re the kind of thing you miss if you’re clicking through a VSL and just want the pain to stop.
- Bonus guides. The order page may throw in digital PDFs about nerve health, diet tips, or stretching routines. These are standard supplement upsell filler — not useless, but not worth factoring into the price.
- The 365-day refund promise. This is the headline feature. The vendor says you can return the product within a full year for a refund. What they don’t say is that ClickBank’s platform guarantee only covers the first 60 days. After day 60, you’re relying on the vendor’s own policy — and we haven’t tested whether they honor it without friction.
Ingredient reality check
Nervala’s ingredient list isn’t a secret, but it’s also not published in a way that lets us do our usual dose-vs.-literature comparison. Based on the marketing, the formula leans on a few well-studied compounds:
- Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA). Clinically used for diabetic neuropathy at 600–1,800 mg/day. It’s a real antioxidant that can reduce nerve pain, but the effect is dose-dependent. If Nervala includes 100 mg, you’re not getting the clinical dose.
- Benfotiamine. A fat-soluble B1 that’s better absorbed than standard thiamine. Studies use 300–600 mg/day for nerve health. Again, the dosage matters.
- Acetyl-L-carnitine. Shown to help nerve regeneration at 1,500–3,000 mg/day. It’s not cheap, which is why many supplements skimp on it.
The risk with any proprietary blend is that the expensive ingredients are sprinkled in at sub-therapeutic levels while the cheap ones (like B vitamins) fill out the capsule. Without a transparent label, you’re betting that the formulator didn’t cut corners. That’s a bet I wouldn’t make at $120 a month.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page does what supplement sales pages do: it takes real science about individual ingredients and applies it to the formula as if the formula itself has been studied. It hasn’t. There are no published, peer-reviewed trials on Nervala as a product. The claims about “clinically studied ingredients” are borrowed interest — they belong to the compounds, not the blend.
The fear framing is also doing heavy lifting. Phrases about permanent nerve damage and “don’t wait until it’s too late” are conversion tactics, not medical advice. If you have nerve pain, the timeline for treatment is between you and your doctor — not a VSL countdown timer.
The refund policy, actually
The 365-day guarantee is the strongest part of this offer, but it comes with a catch that isn’t spelled out on the sales page. ClickBank’s platform-wide refund window is 60 days. Inside that window, you email ClickBank with your order ID and the refund hits in 3–7 business days — no vendor involvement needed. After day 60, you’re dealing with the vendor directly, and the guarantee is only as good as their customer service team.
If you’re going to try Nervala, request the refund inside the 60-day ClickBank window. That’s the safe play. The extra 305 days are marketing, not a platform-enforced promise.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’ve already tried standalone ALA, benfotiamine, and acetyl-L-carnitine at clinical doses and want a pre-formulated alternative with a long trial window. If you’re going to buy, do it with a single-bottle order (not a multi-month bundle), set a calendar reminder for day 50, and cancel the auto-ship before the second charge hits.
Skip this if you haven’t tried the individual ingredients first. You can buy a month’s supply of ALA at 600 mg/day, benfotiamine at 300 mg/day, and acetyl-L-carnitine at 1,500 mg/day for about $40 total. Start there. If those help, you’ve saved $80 a month and know exactly what’s working. If they don’t, Nervala’s blend is unlikely to be the magic bullet the sales page suggests.
Also skip if you’re not comfortable managing subscriptions. The recurring billing model is disclosed, but it’s designed to be forgettable — and forgotten subscriptions are how this offer makes its money.
The honest read
Nervala is a well-marketed nerve supplement with a refund policy that sounds better than it is and a price point that’s hard to justify once you break down the ingredient costs. The ingredients themselves are legitimate — ALA, benfotiamine, and acetyl-L-carnitine have real evidence behind them — but you can get those same compounds, at doses you control, for a fraction of the monthly cost.
The 365-day guarantee is clever marketing: it signals confidence, but most people who don’t see results will either forget to return the product or wait too long and end up outside the ClickBank window. If you’re inside 60 days, the refund is real. Outside that, it’s a vendor promise, not a platform guarantee.
I would not buy this. Not because it’s a scam — it isn’t — but because the value proposition doesn’t hold up to a line-by-line reading of the label. If the company published the exact milligram dosages and those dosages matched clinical ranges, I’d reconsider. Until then, I’d rather spend $40 on the standalone ingredients and know what I’m taking.
— 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:
Nervala 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
- Is Nervala a scam?
- No. The product ships, the refund policy exists, and the company behind it has been in the supplement space since 2004. Calling it a scam confuses 'aggressively marketed with recurring billing' for 'doesn't deliver.' It delivers — the question is whether what's inside the bottle is worth $120 a month.
- What do I actually get when I buy?
- A bottle of Nervala capsules (typically a 30-day supply), enrollment in an auto-ship program unless you opt out, and possibly some digital bonus guides. The exact bottle count and bonus materials vary depending on which package you select on the order form.
- Is the 365-day money-back guarantee real?
- The vendor advertises a 365-day guarantee, which is longer than ClickBank's standard 60-day window. That means for the first 60 days you can get a refund through ClickBank no questions asked. For days 61–365, you're relying on the vendor's own policy — and we haven't tested that window. If you're going to try it, request the refund well inside 60 days.
- How does the recurring billing work?
- When you order, you're typically enrolled in a monthly auto-ship program. The first bottle ships at the advertised price, and then you're billed $120 every 30 days until you cancel. The terms are disclosed on the order form, but they're easy to miss if you're clicking through quickly. Cancel by contacting customer support or through your ClickBank account.