Review · Other Supplements
NeuroXen
No disclosed ingredients, no published clinical evidence, and a $107 price tag for a bottle you can't evaluate before buying. The refund window exists, but you shouldn't have to gamble on a supplement to find out what's inside.
Skeptic read
Avoid2.8/10
No disclosed ingredients, no published clinical evidence, and a $107 price tag for a bottle you can't evaluate before buying. The refund window exists, but you shouldn't have to gamble on a supplement to find out what's inside.
- Price checked
- $107
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- The sales page reveals zero ingredients — no supplement facts panel, no dosages, not even a proprietary blend label. This is a dealbreaker for any supplement review
- Better use case
- No one — there is no buyer profile that benefits from purchasing a supplement without an ingredient list at this price
- Skip if
- You value knowing what you put in your body — skip this entirely
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What NeuroXen is, in one sentence.
A brain-boosting supplement sold through ClickBank for $107 with a 60-day refund window — and a sales page that deliberately hides what’s inside the bottle.
The marketing calls it a focus and clarity aid. The website shows a bottle, a few vague benefit bullets, and a “Buy Now” button. There is no ingredient list, no supplement facts panel, no dosage information, and no clinical references. That’s not an oversight — it’s the central fact of this review.
What you actually get
One bottle of NeuroXen. The capsule count isn’t stated on the sales page. The serving size isn’t stated. The active ingredients aren’t stated. The only thing you can be sure you’re getting is a receipt with a ClickBank order ID and a bottle that may or may not contain what the label inside says it contains — if you ever get to see that label before buying.
No bonus guides, no upsells were surfaced at the cart on the date above. The checkout is a single $107 payment. That’s it.
The ingredient problem
In supplement reviewing, the ingredient list is the first thing we check. It tells us whether the product is underdosed, whether it contains anything with established cognitive benefits, and whether the formula makes sense at the price point. NeuroXen’s sales page gives us none of that.
This isn’t a minor omission. Reputable nootropic companies — even the ones selling on ClickBank — typically show a supplement facts panel or at least list key ingredients with dosages. The absence here means one of two things: either the formula is so unremarkable that disclosing it would kill the sale, or the vendor doesn’t want you to compare it against anything else before you buy. Neither is a good reason to hand over $107.
We checked the Wayback Machine and the current site. No ingredient list has ever been published on the product page. The contact page is a bare form with no phone number, no physical address, and no manufacturing details.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page uses broad, emotionally resonant language: “enhance focus,” “mental clarity,” “overall alertness.” These are the same claims you’d find on a $10 bottle of caffeine pills at a drugstore. The difference is that the drugstore bottle tells you exactly how much caffeine you’re getting.
There’s no mention of a mechanism of action, no reference to a neurotransmitter pathway, no citation of a single study — not even a cherry-picked one. The entire sales argument is the bottle image and the bullet points. For a product at this price, that’s not marketing; it’s a trust fall with no one catching.
The ClickBank gravity score of 0.15 is telling. Gravity reflects how many unique affiliates have made a sale in the past 12 weeks. A score that low usually means the product isn’t converting well, or affiliates tested it and backed away. It’s not a direct measure of product quality, but it’s a signal that the market has already voted.
What it costs and how the refund works
$107 one-time. No recurring billing. The refund is handled through ClickBank — email their support with your order ID inside 60 days and the refund typically processes in 3–7 business days. For physical products, ClickBank’s policy says the vendor may require you to return the unused portion before a refund is issued, and return shipping is usually on the buyer. The NeuroXen sales page doesn’t clarify any of this, so assume the standard policy applies.
The refund window is real, but it’s not a free trial. You’ll likely have to pay return shipping, and you’ll be out that cost even if the product is useless. And you still won’t know what you took.
Side effects and real risks
Without an ingredient list, risk assessment is impossible. That is the risk. If the product contains undisclosed stimulants, it could raise blood pressure, interact with antidepressants, or trigger anxiety. If it contains unlisted pharmaceuticals — and this has happened with nootropic supplements before — the consequences could be serious.
We are not saying NeuroXen contains hidden drugs. We are saying there is no way to know, and that alone is a reason to stay away. The FDA does not pre-approve supplements, and a vendor who hides the formula is not operating in good faith.
Who should buy, who should skip
There is no buyer profile we can recommend this to. If you want a focus supplement, buy one with a transparent label and a published certificate of analysis. If you want a nootropic, the same rule applies. NeuroXen asks you to pay a premium price for a product you can’t evaluate — and in the supplement world, that’s not a gamble, it’s a warning.
Skip this if you take any prescription medication. Skip this if you have any health condition. Skip this if you simply believe you have a right to know what you’re swallowing.
The honest read
NeuroXen is a $107 mystery bottle sold on a landing page that tells you nothing about what’s inside. The refund window exists, but it’s not a safety net — it’s a procedural hoop that still costs you time and return shipping. The low gravity score suggests the market has already looked at this offer and walked away.
In a world where transparent, well-dosed nootropics are available for less money, there is no reason to buy this. Not a single one.
I would not buy this. I would not recommend anyone buy this. And if a friend had already bought it, I would tell them to return it unopened and get their money back.
— 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. NeuroXen 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
- What's actually in NeuroXen?
- We don't know. The sales page doesn't list ingredients, and the bottle image is too low-resolution to read a label. No supplement facts panel is provided anywhere on the site. This is the single biggest red flag — reputable supplements disclose what's in them upfront.
- Is NeuroXen a scam?
- Probably not in the 'take your money and run' sense — the product ships and ClickBank's refund window is real. But selling a $107 supplement without telling you what's in it is ethically indistinguishable from a scam. You're buying a mystery bottle, and that's not a position any buyer should be in.
- How does the 60-day refund work?
- ClickBank processes refunds, not the vendor. Email their support with your order ID within 60 days and the refund usually hits in 3–7 business days. For physical products, you may need to return the unused portion at your own shipping cost. The sales page doesn't clarify return requirements — assume you'll pay return shipping.
- Does NeuroXen actually work for focus and clarity?
- There's no way to answer that without knowing what's in it. If it contains caffeine and L-theanine, it might give a mild boost. If it contains a racetam or research chemical, it could have unpredictable effects. The absence of a label means any answer is pure speculation — and that's the problem.