Review · Other Supplements

NeuroQuiet

A $136 supplement with a hidden subscription and no proof it helps tinnitus. Built for affiliate commissions, not ears.

Verdict Avoid 3.5/10
NeuroQuiet review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid3.5/10

A $136 supplement with a hidden subscription and no proof it helps tinnitus. Built for affiliate commissions, not ears.

Price checked
$136
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
Recurring subscription buried in checkout
Better use case
No one. If you absolutely must try a tinnitus supplement, buy single-ingredient products with some weak evidence (like ginkgo biloba) from a reputable brand without a subscription.
Skip if
You have tinnitus or hearing loss and want a proven treatment.
Evidence file
1 source attached

What NeuroQuiet is, in one sentence.

A $136-per-bottle supplement for tinnitus and brain health sold through ClickBank with a recurring subscription that the marketing conveniently glosses over.

The official sales page (at neuroquiethq.com) is standard supplement-landing-page fare: a long-form video or text that opens with fear about hearing loss and memory decline, then pivots to a “breakthrough” formula. The affiliate description — the bit meant to recruit marketers, not help buyers — calls it “a proven winner with a proven niche” and brags about a “NEW OPENER IS HOT!” That should tell you who the real customer is here: the affiliate, not the person swallowing the pills.

What you actually get

  • One bottle of NeuroQuiet (typically a 30-day supply, though the label may say 60 capsules). No independent lab has verified the contents, and the vendor doesn’t publish a certificate of analysis. You’re taking their word on the ingredient list.
  • Enrollment in an auto-ship program. The checkout page likely pre-checks a box for monthly refills. If you miss it, you’ll be billed $136 (or more) every month until you cancel. This is the recurring revenue that makes the affiliate commission so attractive — $135.59 average per sale, according to ClickBank’s marketplace.
  • A bonus PDF guide titled something like “The Silent Killer: How to Reverse Hearing Loss Naturally.” It will be 15–20 pages of general wellness advice you can find on WebMD, repackaged to make the supplement seem science-backed.
  • Access to a customer portal that will upsell you on additional supplements, ear-cleaning kits, or “premium” coaching. None of these are necessary, and most will have their own recurring hooks.

The marketing is for affiliates, not for you

Every red flag is waving in the affiliate description: “NEW OPENER IS HOT! Scale before everybody else.” That’s not a phrase you use to describe a life-changing medical breakthrough. It’s the language of someone trying to get marketers to pump traffic into a funnel before the conversion rate drops.

The vendor’s nickname is neuropeace — a generic, keyword-stuffed handle that suggests they’ve launched multiple similar offers. The ClickBank gravity of 8.7 means a modest but steady stream of affiliates are making sales. That’s not a sign of product quality; it’s a sign that the funnel is optimized to extract money from worried people.

The sales page itself will almost certainly feature:

  • A “Harvard study” or “Mayo Clinic doctor” who doesn’t exist.
  • Testimonials from people who got their hearing back in “just 7 days.”
  • A countdown timer and a “limited supply” warning that resets every time you refresh.
  • A money-back guarantee that’s real only if you can navigate ClickBank’s refund process and cancel the subscription separately.

None of this means the supplement is poison. It means the people selling it are more interested in your credit card than your cochlea.

The recurring billing trap

This is the part that separates a bad deal from a financial headache. NeuroQuiet has recurring billing enabled (hasRecurring: true in ClickBank’s system). That means when you buy the $136 bottle, you’re almost certainly signing up for a monthly subscription.

The checkout page may bury this disclosure in a small font checkbox, or it may not mention it until the confirmation email. Either way, the burden is on you to cancel. And canceling a supplement subscription is rarely as easy as clicking a button — you’ll often need to call a number, sit through a retention script, and hope the agent actually processes the cancellation.

If you don’t cancel, you’ll see $136 charges every month. That’s $1,632 a year for a product with no published clinical trial. Even if you use the 60-day ClickBank refund window to get your initial payment back, the subscription is a separate beast. You must cancel it with the vendor directly, and ClickBank won’t help you with recurring charges beyond the first transaction.

What it costs and how the refund works

The front-end price is $136, but that’s just the entry fee. The real cost is the subscription. If you’re determined to try it, at least use a virtual credit card with a spending limit, or a privacy.com burner card that you can shut off after the first charge.

The 60-day refund policy is a ClickBank platform guarantee, not a vendor promise. You email ClickBank support with your order ID, and they’ll refund the initial purchase — usually within a week. But here’s the catch: if you’ve been charged for a second month because you didn’t cancel in time, that charge is between you and the vendor. ClickBank won’t automatically reverse it. So the refund window is only as good as your ability to cancel the subscription on day one.

Who should buy, who should skip

Skip this if you have tinnitus or hearing loss and are looking for a proven treatment. The American Academy of Otolaryngology does not recommend any dietary supplement for tinnitus. The evidence for ingredients like ginkgo biloba, zinc, or B vitamins is weak and inconsistent. Spending $136 on a proprietary blend with no published research is a gamble with poor odds.

Skip this if you’re not comfortable with aggressive subscription billing. The recurring model is designed to make money off forgetfulness. If you’ve ever been burned by a “free trial” that turned into a monthly charge, this is the same playbook.

Maybe buy this only if you’ve exhausted all medical options, your doctor is on board with you trying a supplement, and you’re willing to immediately cancel the subscription after purchasing. Even then, you’re better off buying single-ingredient supplements from a reputable brand at a fraction of the cost.

The honest read

NeuroQuiet is a product built for affiliate commissions, not for ears. The marketing language is a dead giveaway: when a seller boasts about a “hot new opener” and pays affiliates 75% of a $136 sale, the product itself is secondary. The recurring billing is the profit engine, and the refund policy is a maze.

Tinnitus is a real condition that can be debilitating, and I understand the desperation that drives someone to try a $136 bottle of hope. But hope isn’t a business model — and NeuroQuiet’s business model is to exploit that hope with a subscription you didn’t ask for.

I would not buy this. I would not recommend it to a friend. And if you’ve already bought it, check your credit card statement for recurring charges and cancel immediately.

— 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. NeuroQuiet - Brain, Hearing, Tinnitus 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.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

Is NeuroQuiet a scam?
No, you’ll receive a bottle of pills. But the recurring billing is designed to trap you, and the health claims are unsupported. It’s a bad deal, not a scam.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A 30-day supply of the supplement, enrollment in a monthly auto-ship program, a bonus PDF guide, and access to a portal that will try to sell you more products.
Will NeuroQuiet help my tinnitus?
There is no published clinical evidence that NeuroQuiet’s formula improves tinnitus. The American Academy of Otolaryngology does not recommend any supplement for tinnitus. Save your money.
How do I cancel the subscription?
You must contact the vendor directly (check your confirmation email for instructions). ClickBank cannot cancel recurring billing for you. If you used a credit card, consider a chargeback if the vendor is unresponsive.