Review · Remedies
NerveRevive 360 – Supports Nerve Health, Comfort, And Mobility
A $105 nerve supplement with no disclosed ingredient list, a gravity of 0.39, and a sales page written for affiliates, not buyers. The 60-day refund window is the only safety net — and you'll need it.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.2/10
A $105 nerve supplement with no disclosed ingredient list, a gravity of 0.39, and a sales page written for affiliates, not buyers. The 60-day refund window is the only safety net — and you'll need it.
- Price checked
- $105
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The ingredient list is completely hidden from the public sales page — you have no idea what you're swallowing until the bottle arrives
- Better use case
- No one — not until the ingredient list is made public and the formula can be evaluated against clinical evidence
- Skip if
- You expect to know what you're putting in your body before you pay $105 — that's a completely reasonable expectation, and this product fails it
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What NerveRevive 360 is, in one sentence.
A $105 nerve health supplement sold through ClickBank with a hidden ingredient list, a sales page written to recruit affiliates rather than inform buyers, and a gravity score so low it suggests almost nobody is buying it successfully.
The vendor calls it the “#1 Nerve offer in 2026” — a claim that appears nowhere outside their own affiliate page. The actual market signal is a gravity of 0.39, which means fewer than one unique affiliate has made a sale in the last 12 weeks. That’s not a ranking; that’s a warning.
What you actually get
Based on the public sales page, here’s what you know before you buy:
- One bottle of NerveRevive 360. The page does not specify the capsule count, serving size, or daily dose. Most nerve supplements in this price range provide a 30-day supply, but that’s an assumption, not a fact.
- Access to upsells. The checkout page is described as “optimized” with “high converting upsells.” You won’t see the upsell products or their prices until after you enter your payment information. The average commission of $104.88 on a $105 front-end price suggests the upsells are doing heavy lifting — meaning the real out-of-pocket cost for the full system could be $200 or more.
- A 60-day ClickBank refund window. This is the one concrete protection. ClickBank will refund your purchase if you request it within 60 days, regardless of the vendor’s own policy. However, the vendor may require you to return the bottle, even if empty, and you’ll pay return shipping.
- No ingredient list, no Supplement Facts panel, no dosage information. This is the central problem. The sales page talks about “supporting nerve health, comfort, and mobility” without ever telling you what’s in the bottle. For a supplement, that’s not just an oversight — it’s a refusal to provide the one piece of information that matters.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page is written in a dialect that isn’t meant for you. It’s affiliate-ese: “Get up to 80% rev share and BEST commissions!” That’s a pitch to people who will sell the product, not to people who will swallow it. When a vendor addresses affiliates on the same page they expect customers to buy from, they’re telling you where their priorities are.
Two specific claims to flag:
“#1 Nerve offer in 2026.” There is no third-party ranking that verifies this. It’s self-declared. The gravity of 0.39 contradicts it directly — the #1 offer in any category on ClickBank would have gravity in the hundreds, not a fraction below 1.
“Optimized checkout page & high converting upsells.” This means the funnel is designed to extract maximum revenue per visitor. It does not mean the product works. A well-optimized funnel can sell a bad supplement just as efficiently as a good one — and the hidden ingredient list makes it impossible to tell which this is.
What the sales page doesn’t tell you about nerve health
Effective nerve health supplements typically contain ingredients with clinical backing: alpha-lipoic acid (600–1,800 mg/day), benfotiamine (300–600 mg/day), methylcobalamin (1,000–5,000 mcg/day), and sometimes acetyl-L-carnitine or evening primrose oil. These doses are well-documented for diabetic neuropathy and other nerve-related conditions.
Without seeing the label, you can’t compare NerveRevive 360 to those standards. It might contain therapeutic doses. It might contain trace amounts. It might contain none of the above and rely on a proprietary blend with hidden quantities. You won’t know until you’ve already paid $105.
This is not a minor omission. It’s the difference between buying a supplement and buying a mystery powder.
What it costs and how the refund actually works
The front-end price is $105, one-time. The upsells are not priced on the public page, but the average earnings per sale of $104.88 at 75% commission imply an average cart value around $140 — meaning most buyers are spending more than the initial $105. You won’t see those charges itemized until you’re in the checkout flow.
The 60-day refund window is real because ClickBank enforces it. Here’s the process: you email ClickBank support with your order ID, request a refund, and the money returns to your card in 3–7 business days. The vendor cannot deny the refund. However, the vendor’s own terms — which you should locate before buying — may require you to ship the bottle back at your expense. If that’s the case, factor in $5–$10 for return shipping, and understand that you’re paying to return a product you couldn’t evaluate before purchase.
The gravity problem
Gravity is a blunt instrument, but it’s the only public performance metric ClickBank offers. A gravity of 0.39 means that over the last 12 weeks, the total number of unique affiliates who made at least one sale is less than 1. In practical terms: almost nobody is selling this successfully. The affiliates who have tested it are not sending traffic. That’s a collective market judgment, and it’s worth more than any self-declared “#1” claim.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you are willing to treat the purchase as a research expense: buy the bottle, inspect the label immediately upon arrival, compare the ingredients and doses to clinical literature, and request a refund within 60 days if it doesn’t measure up. That’s a lot of work for a supplement, and you’ll be out return shipping if the vendor requires it.
Skip this if you want to know what you’re taking before you pay. Skip it if you’re looking for a nerve supplement with transparent labeling — there are dozens of alternatives that publish their Supplement Facts panel online. Skip it if the low gravity and affiliate-focused sales page give you pause; they should.
The honest read
NerveRevive 360 might contain a perfectly reasonable formula. The problem is, you can’t know that without buying it, and the vendor has chosen not to tell you. In the supplement industry, hiding the label is a tactic, not an accident. It prevents you from comparison shopping, from checking doses against studies, and from realizing that the same ingredients might be available for $30 elsewhere.
The 60-day refund window is your only protection, and it’s a good one — but it shifts the burden onto you. You have to buy, wait for shipping, inspect, research, and possibly return. For a product with zero public feedback (gravity 0.39) and a price at the top of the market, that’s a bet I wouldn’t take.
If the vendor publishes the Supplement Facts panel tomorrow, this review changes. Until then, the absence of information is the information.
— 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. NerveRevive 360 – Supports Nerve Health, Comfort, And Mobility 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 NerveRevive 360 a scam?
- Not necessarily a scam — the product likely ships, and ClickBank's refund process works. But selling a supplement without disclosing the ingredients is a huge red flag, and the low gravity suggests the market has already voted with its wallet. 'Scam' is the wrong word; 'unvetted and overpriced' is more accurate.
- What's actually in NerveRevive 360?
- The public sales page does not list a single ingredient. No Supplement Facts panel, no dosage information, no mention of alpha-lipoic acid, benfotiamine, B vitamins, or any of the compounds typically found in nerve health formulas. You have to buy the product to see the label — and that's not how legitimate supplement companies operate.
- Does the 60-day refund actually work for supplements?
- ClickBank processes refunds on all products, including supplements, within 60 days. The vendor can't block it. However, some supplement vendors require you to return the empty bottle, which isn't always stated upfront. Before buying, check the vendor's own refund terms (usually buried in the checkout page or a separate policy link). If they demand a return, factor in shipping costs.
- Why is the gravity so low if it's the '#1 Nerve offer'?
- The '#1 Nerve offer' claim is marketing, not a verified ranking. Gravity on ClickBank reflects how many unique affiliates have made a sale in the past 12 weeks. A gravity of 0.39 means fewer than one affiliate is selling it successfully on average. If this were truly a top-converting offer, the gravity would be in the tens or hundreds, not a fraction.