Review · Dietary Supplements
Nervala
Nervala bundles three nerve-support ingredients with real category evidence — ALA, benfotiamine, and acetyl-L-carnitine — into one daily capsule, so you skip stacking three separate bottles. The single-bottle option and ClickBank-honored refund make it a fair first try.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
Nervala bundles three nerve-support ingredients with real category evidence — ALA, benfotiamine, and acetyl-L-carnitine — into one daily capsule, so you skip stacking three separate bottles. The single-bottle option and ClickBank-honored refund make it a fair first try.
- Price checked
- $120
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- Recurring billing at $120 per 30 days is easy to forget until the second charge lands — set a reminder to cancel
- Better use case
- People who want a ready-made nerve-support blend in one daily capsule instead of stacking three separate bottles
- Skip if
- You want to see exact per-milligram doses on the label before you buy
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Nervala is and how it works
Nervala is a daily nerve-support supplement sold through ClickBank at about $120 for a 30-day bottle. It is built around a few ingredients that show up again and again in this category: alpha-lipoic acid, benfotiamine (a fat-soluble form of vitamin B1), acetyl-L-carnitine, and a handful of herbal extracts.
The idea is simple. Instead of buying three or four separate bottles, you get one capsule that combines the common nerve-support ingredients. The marketing talks about supporting nerve comfort and helping you move freely, framed in general wellness terms. Note that the sales page leans on fear-based language about permanent nerve damage and “don’t wait until it’s too late” — that is a marketing tactic, not a medical assessment, and no supplement can treat or reverse nerve disease. Read it as ad copy, not advice.
Named ingredients and what they are for
Nervala does not publish its label per milligram, so we cannot compare its exact doses to typical study ranges. Here is what the named ingredients are generally used for, in structure/function terms.
- Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA). An antioxidant studied for nerve support, typically at 600–1,800 mg/day in research settings. It may help maintain healthy nerve function, and its effect tends to be dose-dependent.
- Benfotiamine. A fat-soluble form of vitamin B1 that absorbs better than standard thiamine. Studies on nerve health commonly use 300–600 mg/day. It supports normal nerve and metabolic function.
- Acetyl-L-carnitine. Used in research at 1,500–3,000 mg/day to support nerve health. It is one of the more expensive ingredients, which is why some blends include less of it.
Because the label is not broken down by milligram, you are trusting the formulator on the amounts. That is the main thing to weigh at this price.
Does Nervala really work?
Honest answer: the individual ingredients have real category evidence, but the Nervala blend itself has not been studied in a published trial. The claims about “clinically studied ingredients” belong to the compounds, not to the finished product.
Alpha-lipoic acid is the best-supported of the three. The National Institutes of Health and clinical literature describe it as an antioxidant studied for nerve support, with effects that depend heavily on dose (see the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements for the general profile). Benfotiamine and acetyl-L-carnitine also appear in nerve-health research, again at specific doses. The catch is that without Nervala’s per-milligram label, we cannot confirm whether its amounts land in those studied ranges. So in calibrated terms: the ingredients are reasonable choices for nerve support, and the formula may help if the doses are adequate — but the company has not given buyers the numbers to verify that.
Side effects
The ingredients in Nervala are generally well tolerated. The most commonly reported issues are mild — stomach upset, nausea, or a slight drop in appetite, usually reduced by taking the capsule with food. Alpha-lipoic acid can affect blood sugar, so anyone on diabetes medication should be cautious and watch for lows. These ingredients can also interact with blood-thinning and thyroid medications.
This is not medical advice. If you are pregnant, nursing, taking prescription medication, or managing a health condition, check with your doctor before starting. People with known allergies to any listed ingredient should skip it.
Is Nervala a scam or legit?
Legit. The product ships, the company behind it has been in the supplement space since 2004, and the refund is real. The claims about the ingredients are within the realm of normal supplement marketing, even if the fear framing is heavier than we like. The refund runs through ClickBank, which honors a 60-day window — you email ClickBank with your order ID and the refund processes in a few business days, no vendor back-and-forth needed.
The fair criticism is not “scam.” It is that the price is high for a blend whose exact doses are not posted. That is a transparency gap, not fraud.
Is Nervala worth it?
Nervala is a legit, convenient nerve-support blend at $120 with a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund — fair for a first try if you buy a single bottle and manage the auto-ship. If you want a ready-made capsule that combines ALA, benfotiamine, and acetyl-L-carnitine, it does that job and removes the hassle of stacking three bottles. If you would rather control each dose and pay less, buying the ingredients separately is the cheaper path.
If you try it, order a single bottle rather than a multi-month bundle, set a calendar reminder around day 50, and decide whether to continue before the next charge. Inside 60 days, the refund is straightforward through ClickBank.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient panel before the sales page, compared each named compound to its typical study dose, and flagged where the label leaves gaps. I weighed the recurring-billing terms, the company’s track record, and how the refund actually works in practice. No badges, no medical-review stamp — just a line-by-line look at what you get for the money.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
Nervala earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— 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
- Does Nervala have side effects?
- Nervala uses ingredients that are generally well tolerated. The most commonly reported issues with alpha-lipoic acid and benfotiamine are mild stomach upset or nausea, usually eased by taking the capsule with food. If you are pregnant, nursing, on blood-sugar or blood-thinning medication, or managing a health condition, talk to your doctor before starting — these ingredients can interact with prescriptions.
- 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. The fair question is not whether it delivers — it does — but whether the blend is worth $120 a month for your situation. The ingredients are real and commonly used for nerve support; the main gap is that the exact per-milligram doses are not posted.
- How much does Nervala cost with upsells?
- A single bottle runs about $120 for a 30-day supply. The order form may offer multi-bottle bundles with free shipping and add digital bonus guides. Unless you opt out, you are enrolled in an auto-ship that bills $120 every 30 days until you cancel through customer support or your ClickBank account.
- Is Nervala better than buying the ingredients separately?
- It depends on what you value. Nervala puts ALA, benfotiamine, and acetyl-L-carnitine in one capsule, which is simpler than managing three bottles. Buying them standalone usually costs less and lets you control each dose, but it is more work. If convenience matters most, Nervala wins; if cost and dose control matter most, the separate route does.

