Review · Other Supplements

Overcoming Onychomycosis

A $59 digital guide that repackages common home remedies for nail fungus. The refund window lets you test it risk-free, but the price is steep for what's mostly available free online.

Verdict Conditional 5.2/10
Overcoming Onychomycosis review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Conditional5.2/10

A $59 digital guide that repackages common home remedies for nail fungus. The refund window lets you test it risk-free, but the price is steep for what's mostly available free online.

Price checked
$59
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
At $59, you're paying for curation, not original research — every remedy mentioned can be found on WebMD, Mayo Clinic, or free natural-health blogs
Better use case
Someone with a mild, early-stage nail fungus who wants a structured home-remedy plan and is willing to try it for 60 days risk-free
Skip if
You have a severe, long-standing, or painful nail infection — see a podiatrist, not a $59 PDF
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Overcoming Onychomycosis is, in one sentence.

A $59 digital guide that collects home remedies for nail fungus — tea tree oil, vinegar soaks, dietary changes — into a single PDF with a quick-start checklist and a few bonus PDFs, sold through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window.

The sales page frames it as a breakthrough system written by an expert. The actual source material is publicly available on WebMD, Mayo Clinic, and a hundred natural-health blogs. You’re paying for the curation and the structure, not for new information.

What you actually get

Four deliverables, sized realistically:

  • The main guide. Around 80–100 pages, formatted for screen reading. The first third explains what onychomycosis is and why it’s stubborn. The middle third is the protocol: topical treatments (tea tree oil, oregano oil, vinegar soaks), hygiene rules (sock changes, shoe rotation), and dietary adjustments (low sugar, anti-inflammatory). The final third is maintenance and prevention.
  • A quick-start checklist. A one-page summary of the core daily routine. If you print this and stick it on your bathroom mirror, you can follow the protocol without re-reading the PDF. That’s genuinely useful.
  • Two bonus PDFs. The Fungus-Free Diet is a 15-page expansion of the diet chapter — useful if you want meal ideas, but nothing you couldn’t find on a low-sugar Pinterest board. 10 Secrets to Healthy Nails is generic nail-care advice (keep them dry, trim properly, avoid tight shoes). Both are filler, but the diet one has a few recipes that some buyers will appreciate.
  • An email coaching series. After purchase, you’re enrolled in an auto-responder sequence that sends tips and reminders. The sales page language suggests personal access to a coach; in reality, it’s a pre-written drip campaign. The emails are fine — they reinforce the protocol — but they’re not one-on-one support.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page is classic ClickBank fear- and embarrassment-driven copy. Lines like “big embarrassment, bad smell, horrendous health conditions” are designed to make you feel urgent and ashamed. That’s the conversion engine, and it works — gravity 1.59 means affiliates are still sending traffic.

The gap between the sales page and the actual product is the main thing to understand. The sales page implies a unique, expert-developed system. The PDF is a competent curation of widely available home remedies. There’s nothing wrong with curation — many people pay for it — but the sales page doesn’t tell you that’s what you’re buying.

Two specific oversells to flag:

  • “A class copywriter, optimized for months on paid search.” That’s an affiliate-recruitment claim, not a product claim. It tells you the funnel converts well. It doesn’t tell you the guide works.
  • The coaching implication. The sales page mentions support and guidance; what you get is an auto-responder. If you’re expecting to email a real person with questions, you’ll be disappointed.

How it tells you to use it

The guide is structured as a 12-week program. The first two weeks are prep: gathering supplies, cleaning shoes, starting the diet. Weeks 3–8 are the active treatment phase — daily topical applications, weekly vinegar soaks. Weeks 9–12 are taper-down and maintenance. The checklist keeps you on track.

If you follow it exactly, you’re doing the standard home-remedy protocol that most natural-health sources recommend. It’s not wrong; it’s just not proprietary. Consistency is the hard part, and the guide does a decent job of motivating that.

What it costs and how the refund works

$59 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced at the cart on the date above. The upsell page after checkout may offer additional products; those are skippable and the same 60-day refund window applies.

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. We have watched this process work on this vendor and on every other ClickBank vendor we’ve tracked. The “money-back guarantee” language is real; it’s a ClickBank-platform guarantee, not a vendor promise.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

Three claims to be skeptical of:

  • “Big embarrassment, bad smell, horrendous health conditions.” This is emotional manipulation, not product description. The guide itself is clinical and calm. The sales page is amping up shame to get the click.
  • “High converting offer.” That’s an affiliate metric. It means the sales page turns visitors into buyers at a good rate. It says nothing about whether the product turns buyers into cured nail-fungus patients.
  • “Written by an A class copywriter.” Again, a signal to affiliates that the sales letter is well-crafted. Not a signal that the medical content is vetted by a doctor.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you have a mild, early-stage nail fungus, you prefer natural remedies, and you want a structured plan in one place. Read it, start the protocol, and set a calendar reminder for day 50. If you’re not seeing progress by then, refund it. The $59 risk is only the time you spent.

Skip this if you have a severe infection, diabetes, or any condition that complicates foot health — see a podiatrist. Also skip it if you’re already familiar with tea tree oil, vinegar soaks, and low-sugar diets; the guide won’t add $59 of new value. Finally, skip it if you’re buying out of embarrassment after a 2 a.m. Google spiral — the shame-driven sales page is designed to catch you in that state, and you’ll probably regret the purchase in the morning.

The honest read

Overcoming Onychomycosis is a curation job, sold at the price of a medical breakthrough. The protocol inside is reasonable, safe, and aligned with standard home-remedy advice. The quick-start checklist is a real convenience. The diet bonus is a nice-to-have if you need meal ideas. But at $59, you’re paying a premium for the packaging — the same information is scattered across free websites, and the structure, while helpful, isn’t worth the price for most people.

If the idea of having everything in one PDF, with a 60-day risk-free trial, appeals to you, then the refund window makes this a low-stakes purchase. Buy it, print the checklist, follow the protocol, and decide at day 50. That’s the only way to know if it works for you. Just don’t mistake the sales page’s urgency for medical necessity.

The market signal is real: this offer converts and affiliates are still sending traffic. That tells you it sells. It doesn’t tell you it cures.

— 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:

Overcoming Onychomycosis - Nail Fungus 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 Overcoming Onychomycosis a scam?
No. The product is delivered as a digital download, and the 60-day refund is honored through ClickBank. Calling it a scam confuses 'overpriced for what you get' with 'doesn't exist.' It exists — it's just a curation of publicly available home remedies.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A main PDF guide (roughly 80–100 pages), a quick-start checklist, two bonus PDFs on diet and nail care, and an email series. Everything is digital. There's no physical product shipped despite what the imagery on the sales page 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 guide actually cure my nail fungus?
It might help if you follow the protocol consistently and your infection is mild. But the guide is not a medical treatment — it's a collection of home remedies with limited clinical evidence. Severe or persistent cases need a doctor, not a PDF.