Review · Other Supplements

Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Solution NAFLD

A $51 PDF that repackages freely available lifestyle advice for NAFLD. The 60-day refund window is real, but the upsell and generic content make it hard to recommend over a free AASLD handout.

Verdict Skeptical 4.5/10
Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Solution NAFLD review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical4.5/10

A $51 PDF that repackages freely available lifestyle advice for NAFLD. The 60-day refund window is real, but the upsell and generic content make it hard to recommend over a free AASLD handout.

Price checked
$51
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
Everything inside is a repackage of free public health advice from AASLD, Mayo Clinic, and the NIH — you're paying $51 for formatting
Better use case
Newly diagnosed individuals with mild NAFLD who want a simple, structured starting point and will use the refund window
Skip if
You have access to a registered dietitian or hepatologist — their advice will be personalized and more effective
Evidence file
1 source attached

What the Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Solution is, in one sentence.

A digital PDF bundle that compiles standard lifestyle advice for NAFLD — diet, exercise, weight loss — and sells it for $51 through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window.

The marketing frames it as a unique solution for a condition with no medications. That’s true: NAFLD is managed with lifestyle changes. But the information inside is not proprietary, not new, and not worth $51 when the same guidance is available for free from the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD), Mayo Clinic, and the NIH.

What you actually get

Four digital files, no physical products, no coaching:

  • Main guide PDF. Around 80 pages covering what NAFLD is, why it happens, and the standard triad of dietary changes, exercise, and gradual weight loss. It also includes a section on “liver detox” — which is not a medical concept but a wellness-framing staple.
  • 7-day meal plan. A week of recipes with calorie counts. It’s generic — no differentiation for diabetes, age, or activity level — but it follows a Mediterranean-style pattern that aligns with clinical guidelines.
  • Exercise routine PDF. Bodyweight circuits, walking plans, and stretching. Safe for most sedentary adults. No progression beyond the first month, so it’s a starter, not a long-term program.
  • Progress tracking sheets. Printable pages for weight, waist circumference, and food logging. The most useful part if you actually fill them out.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page uses a single statistic — “25% of the population suffer from NAFLD” — to imply a vast, underserved market and an urgent need. That statistic is roughly accurate, but the product doesn’t address the nuance: most cases are mild and resolve with modest weight loss. The page also emphasizes that there are “no medications,” which is true, but it omits that the first-line treatment is free (lifestyle counseling from a primary care provider).

The upsell flow is where the real revenue sits. After checkout, you’re offered a $99 “advanced protocol.” We haven’t reviewed that upsell, but the pattern across similar ClickBank health guides is consistent: it’s often the same content reorganized or a collection of bonus PDFs that add little. If you buy the front-end, skip the upsell unless you’re willing to test it inside the same refund window.

What it costs and how the refund works

$51 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced at the cart on the date above. The $99 upsell is a separate purchase, also covered by ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy.

ClickBank — not the vendor — handles refunds. Email ClickBank support with your order ID inside the 60-day window and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. The guarantee is real and platform-enforced, not a vendor promise you have to argue over.

The medical reality of NAFLD

NAFLD is a spectrum. At the mild end, simple steatosis, it’s reversible with 7–10% body weight loss. At the severe end, NASH with fibrosis, it requires close medical follow-up and sometimes clinical trials. This guide does not distinguish between the two. It treats all NAFLD as the same, which is a dangerous oversimplification if you have anything beyond mild fatty liver on ultrasound.

The advice it gives — eat fewer refined carbs, move more, lose weight — is medically sound. But so is the free patient handout your gastroenterologist hands you. The difference is that the handout comes with a doctor who knows your labs.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re newly diagnosed with mild NAFLD, you want a single, structured PDF to print and stick on your fridge, and you’ll use the refund window. Read it in a weekend, implement the meal plan for two weeks, and decide by day 50 if it’s worth keeping.

Skip this if you have access to a dietitian or hepatologist. Their advice will be personalized, and you’ve already paid for it through insurance or taxes. Skip it if you’re looking for a supplement or a shortcut — this guide won’t provide either, and the upsell won’t either. Skip it if your liver enzymes are more than mildly elevated or you have fibrosis on imaging.

The honest read

The Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Solution is a competent curation of free public health advice. It’s not wrong. It’s not harmful if you have mild disease. It’s just not worth $51 when the same information is a browser tab away from AASLD, Mayo Clinic, or the British Liver Trust.

The market signal is weak: gravity 2.4 means this isn’t a top-converting offer, which suggests affiliates aren’t excited about it. That’s not a coincidence. A product that sells well usually has something unique — a proprietary method, a coaching component, a supplement. This has none of those.

If you buy, use the refund window. If you don’t, spend 30 minutes on the AASLD patient site and you’ll have the same knowledge for free.

— 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:

Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Solution NAFLD 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is the Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Solution a scam?
No. The product is delivered, the refund window is honored, and the content is generally safe. Calling it a scam confuses 'overpriced for what you get' with 'doesn't exist.' It exists — it's just a curated collection of free information.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A main PDF guide, a 7-day meal plan, an exercise routine, and tracking sheets. Everything is digital. There is no supplement, coaching call, or medical consultation included despite what the imagery might suggest.
Is the 60-day refund real, or do they hassle you?
Refunds are processed through ClickBank, not the vendor, so the vendor can't slow-walk you. Email ClickBank support with your order ID inside the window and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. We have watched this work.
Will this cure my fatty liver?
NAFLD can be reversed with sustained weight loss and dietary changes, which this guide encourages. But it won't do the work for you, and it's not a cure — it's a structured reminder of what you'd hear from a doctor. If you have advanced liver disease, this PDF is not a substitute for medical care.