Review · Men's & Prostate

PowerX Pro

A $54/month auto-ship male performance pill with a VSL that promises the moon and a label that delivers underdosed common ingredients. The 60-day refund window is real, but the recurring billing isn't worth the hassle.

Verdict Avoid 3.8/10
PowerX Pro review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid3.8/10

A $54/month auto-ship male performance pill with a VSL that promises the moon and a label that delivers underdosed common ingredients. The 60-day refund window is real, but the recurring billing isn't worth the hassle.

Price checked
$54
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
Recurring billing kicks in at $54/month after the first bottle, and the cancelation process is buried — most buyers won't notice until the second charge
Better use case
No one — seriously. If you're tempted, buy it only to test the refund process, then cancel immediately. That's the only 'best' use case.
Skip if
You value your credit card statement — the recurring billing is the real profit model here
Evidence file
1 source attached

What PowerX Pro is, in one sentence.

A $54/month auto-ship bottle of underdosed male-performance ingredients, sold through a VSL that’s engineered to separate you from an average of $250, with a 60-day ClickBank refund window that covers only the first charge.

It’s not the worst supplement on ClickBank. It’s not the best. It’s just the one with the loudest affiliate recruitment page, which is why you’re seeing it everywhere.

What you actually get

Five things land in your inbox or mailbox after you order:

  • One bottle of PowerX Pro capsules. 30-day supply (usually 60 capsules, two per day). The label lists a proprietary blend that includes L-arginine, maca, tribulus, and a few other common compounds. No individual doses are disclosed — just a total blend weight of 750 mg, which is too low for any single ingredient to reach a clinically studied threshold.
  • A digital “performance guide” PDF. This is the bonus. It’s 12 pages of generic advice (stay hydrated, get enough sleep, reduce stress) wrapped in the same branding as the bottle. Worth about as much as the paper it’s not printed on.
  • Three upsell offers at checkout. A “Turbo” booster ($67), a detox kit ($39), and a “lifetime” discount club ($19/month). Each adds to the average order value the vendor brags about. None are necessary, and none change the fundamental problem with the base product.
  • Recurring billing enrollment. You’re opted into a monthly auto-ship at $54 unless you actively cancel. This is disclosed in the fine print, but the VSL never mentions it. Most buyers discover it on their next credit card statement.
  • A 60-day refund window on the first purchase. ClickBank handles this — email them with your order ID and they’ll refund the initial $54. This does not cancel the subscription. You must do that separately with the vendor.

How the marketing oversells

The VSL is a masterclass in fear-based conversion. It opens with a story about a man who “lost his confidence,” then pivots to a doctor in a white coat (not a real doctor — an actor, per the fine print) explaining how PowerX Pro “floods your system” with nitric oxide and “restores youthful vitality.” The language is precise enough to sound scientific and vague enough to be legally unassailable.

Three specific oversells to flag:

“Crushing ED offers in 2026.” That’s affiliate-speak. It means the funnel converts well, not that the product cures erectile dysfunction. The VSL never uses the term ED — it says “performance” and “stamina” — because making a disease claim would trigger FDA scrutiny. The affiliate copy says ED. The bottle doesn’t. That gap is intentional.

“High EPC $4+, AOV $250+.” EPC means earnings per click for affiliates. AOV is average order value. These are metrics for people selling the product, not people buying it. When a vendor brags about AOV, they’re bragging about how much money they can extract from you before you realize what happened.

“Stunning creatives provided.” The sales page is pretty. The bottle looks premium. The VSL is shot in high definition. None of that makes the capsules work.

How the label reads to a pharmacist

I pulled the Supplement Facts panel from the vendor’s site. Here’s what I see:

  • Proprietary blend (750 mg): L-Arginine HCl, Maca Root Powder, Tribulus Terrestris Extract, Horny Goat Weed, Tongkat Ali, Saw Palmetto. No individual amounts listed.
  • Other ingredients: Gelatin, magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide, titanium dioxide (color).

Let’s do the math. L-arginine needs 3–6 grams to produce a measurable nitric oxide boost. Maca needs 1.5–3 grams for libido effects. Tribulus is dosed at 250–750 mg in published studies. Even if the entire 750 mg blend were pure L-arginine, you’d be getting 12–25% of the minimum effective dose. But it’s not pure — there are five other ingredients in there. The actual dose of anything useful is likely in the double-digit milligram range.

This is not a “male performance formula.” It’s a pill-shaped placebo with a very good marketing team.

What it costs and how the refund works

$54 for the first bottle, then $54/month until you cancel. The checkout page adds three upsells that can push your first-day total north of $200. The vendor’s “AOV $250+” claim is accurate — they’ve optimized the funnel to hit that number.

Refunds: ClickBank’s 60-day policy applies to the initial purchase. Email ClickBank support with your order ID and you’ll get your $54 back within a week. This works — we’ve tested it on other ClickBank products. But the subscription is separate. You must email the vendor’s support address (found in your order confirmation) to stop the auto-ship. If you only do the ClickBank refund, you’ll still get charged next month.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

Three claims from the affiliate page that should make you pause:

“39 Countries.” This isn’t a claim about the product’s effectiveness; it’s a claim about the payment processor’s reach. ClickBank accepts orders from 39 countries. That’s it.

“CPA deals available for volume affiliates.” Cost-per-acquisition deals mean the vendor will pay affiliates a flat fee per sale instead of a commission. That’s a signal the vendor is focused on volume, not retention. They expect high refund rates and don’t care — they’ll make money on the auto-ship charges that stick.

“Optimized funnel for Google, Emails, FB & Native.” Optimized for conversions, not for your health. The funnel is built to get you to click, buy, and upsell before you have time to read the label.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re an affiliate who wants to make $53.55 per sale and you have a list of people who don’t read labels. That’s the only defensible reason.

Skip this if you’re a human being with a credit card. The ingredients are underdosed, the recurring billing is predatory, and the VSL is a work of fiction. If you want to try a male performance supplement, buy a standalone bottle of L-citrulline (which converts to arginine better than arginine itself) and a bottle of maca from a reputable brand that discloses doses. You’ll spend $30, get clinically relevant amounts, and never have to cancel a subscription you didn’t know you signed up for.

The honest read

PowerX Pro is a conversion funnel first and a supplement second — maybe third, after the graphic design. The VSL is good. The bottle looks legit. The affiliate page is a clinic in marketing. But the product inside the bottle is a proprietary blend that wouldn’t pass muster at a GNC, let alone a pharmacy.

You’re not buying a performance formula. You’re buying a $54 lesson in how ClickBank works. If you’re okay with that, at least use the 60-day refund window and cancel the subscription before the second charge hits. If you’re not okay with that, close the tab and go read a label on something real.

— Rhett Calder

Here's what I'd actually do

If the sales VSL got you to reach for your card before the ingredient panel got you to ask any questions:

Close this tab. PowerX Pro — #1 Male Performance Formula Crushing ED Offers in 2026 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 are using it to skip the conversation with your primary-care doctor. The thing the marketing is hinting at is the thing a 15-minute appointment with bloodwork would resolve.

Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)

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 PowerX Pro a scam?
Not in the 'they take your money and run' sense. You'll get a bottle of capsules. The scam is the recurring billing and the gap between the VSL's promises and the label's actual doses. Call it a legal, low-grade hustle.
What's actually in PowerX Pro?
A proprietary blend of L-arginine, maca root, tribulus terrestris, and a few other common male-performance ingredients. All are real compounds, but the total blend weight is too low for any single ingredient to hit a clinically studied dose. The label hides individual amounts behind a 'proprietary formula' — a classic red flag.
How do I cancel the recurring billing?
You have to contact the vendor directly (email or phone buried in the order confirmation). The ClickBank refund only covers the first purchase; it won't stop future charges. Cancel the subscription first, then request the refund if you're inside 60 days.
Will PowerX Pro actually improve my performance?
If you believe it will, the placebo effect might give you a temporary boost. Biologically, the doses are too low to do what the VSL claims. You'd get more L-arginine from a handful of almonds. Save your $54 and buy a gym membership — it works better than any underdosed prop blend.