Review · Other Supplements
Prosta Peak
A $172 prostate supplement that hides behind a proprietary blend and a 180-day guarantee that doesn't match ClickBank's 60-day refund window. The concept is plausible, but the pricing and opacity don't add up.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.8/10
A $172 prostate supplement that hides behind a proprietary blend and a 180-day guarantee that doesn't match ClickBank's 60-day refund window. The concept is plausible, but the pricing and opacity don't add up.
- Price checked
- $172
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- The 180-day guarantee on the sales page is vendor puffery — ClickBank only guarantees 60 days, and the vendor can't extend that
- Better use case
- Men who want a single-pill convenience and are willing to pay a steep premium for it
- Skip if
- You take prescription medications — saw palmetto and beta-sitosterol can interact with blood thinners and hormone therapies; check with a pharmacist
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Prosta Peak is, in one sentence.
A $172 prostate supplement sold through ClickBank with a recurring billing hook and a 180-day guarantee that doesn’t match the platform’s 60-day refund window.
The marketing frames it as a premium, all-natural solution for urinary flow, nighttime bathroom trips, and hormonal balance. The ingredient list is a standard stack of saw palmetto, beta-sitosterol, pygeum, and other prostate-support nutrients — all of which you can buy individually for a fraction of the cost, at doses you can actually verify.
What you actually get
- One bottle of Prosta Peak. 30-day supply. The label lists a proprietary blend, so you can’t tell how much of each active you’re taking. This is the central problem with the product.
- A digital bonus guide. Usually a PDF on prostate-friendly diet or lifestyle tips. It’s filler — the kind of thing you can find on any reputable health site for free.
- A subscription you probably didn’t notice. Recurring billing is on by default. The initial checkout doesn’t scream it, but you’ll be charged again in 30 days unless you cancel. The cancellation process requires contacting customer support; it’s not a one-click unsubscribe.
- A 180-day guarantee that isn’t. The sales page promises 180 days, but ClickBank’s refund policy caps at 60 days. If you believe the 180-day claim, you’ll miss the real window and lose your money.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page hits all the right fear points for men over 50: frequent urination, weak stream, interrupted sleep. It then pivots to a “science-backed blend” narrative without ever showing you the science on the actual formula.
Two specific oversells to flag:
“180-Day Money-Back Guarantee.” This is the headline trust signal, and it’s a lie. ClickBank processes refunds, and ClickBank’s policy is 60 days. The vendor can’t extend that. If you try to claim a refund on day 61, ClickBank will deny it. The vendor might offer store credit or a partial refund, but that’s at their discretion — not a guarantee.
“Clinically studied ingredients.” The sales page cites studies on saw palmetto, beta-sitosterol, and pygeum. Those studies are real, but they used specific doses. The Prosta Peak label doesn’t disclose doses. It’s entirely possible the bottle contains a sprinkle of each — enough to list on the label, not enough to match the research. This is the oldest trick in the supplement playbook, and it works because almost no one looks up the studies.
What the ingredient list hides
The label groups all actives into a single proprietary blend. That means you know the total weight of the blend (maybe 500 mg), but you don’t know how much is saw palmetto vs. beta-sitosterol vs. filler. Here’s why that matters:
- Beta-sitosterol: clinical studies used 60–130 mg per day. If the blend is 500 mg and contains six ingredients, you might be getting 30 mg — far below the effective dose.
- Saw palmetto: studies used 320 mg of a standardized extract. Again, you can’t verify.
- Pygeum: 100–200 mg is common in trials.
Without dose transparency, you’re not buying a supplement — you’re buying a hope. And $172 is a lot to pay for hope.
The price breakdown
$172 for a 30-day supply. That’s $5.73 per day. If you bought the likely actives separately from a reputable retailer:
- Beta-sitosterol (60 mg/day): ~$15/month
- Saw palmetto (320 mg/day): ~$10/month
- Pygeum (100 mg/day): ~$12/month
- Zinc, selenium, etc.: ~$5/month
Total: around $42/month. You’re paying a $130 premium for the convenience of a single pill and a label that doesn’t tell you what’s inside.
The refund reality
You have 60 days from purchase to request a refund through ClickBank. The process works: email ClickBank support with your order ID, and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. We’ve verified this on dozens of ClickBank products.
But the vendor’s 180-day claim is a trap. If you wait until month three, you’re out of luck. And because the recurring billing kicks in after 30 days, you’ll be charged for a second bottle before you’ve even finished the first. To get a full refund, you’d need to cancel the subscription and request a refund within 60 days of the initial purchase. That’s a tight window, and the vendor knows it.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you’re willing to treat it as a 60-day experiment. Order one bottle, cancel the subscription immediately after purchase, and if you don’t see measurable improvement (or if you’re not comfortable with the unknown doses), request a refund before day 60.
Skip this if you take any prescription medications without first checking the ingredient list against potential interactions. Saw palmetto and beta-sitosterol can interfere with blood thinners, hormone therapies, and some antidepressants. A pharmacist can check this in five minutes.
Skip this if you’re comfortable buying standalone ingredients. You’ll get the same actives at clinically studied doses for less than $50/month, and you’ll know exactly what you’re taking.
The honest read
Prosta Peak is a convenience product with a transparency problem. The ingredient categories are sensible for prostate support. The problem is you can’t verify the doses, and the price is inflated to cover the affiliate commissions (the vendor pays $172.29 per sale at 75% — that’s a huge cut). The 180-day guarantee is a marketing lie that exploits the fact that most people won’t check ClickBank’s actual policy.
If the vendor published the full supplement facts panel with individual doses, and if the doses matched the clinical literature, this could be a reasonable product at a lower price. But they don’t, and it isn’t.
I would not buy this.
— 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. Prosta Peak 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
- Is Prosta Peak a scam?
- No, it's a real product that ships. But calling it a scam misses the point. The issue is value: you're paying $172 for a bottle of ingredients you can't dose-verify, with a refund window that's shorter than advertised. That's not a scam — it's just a bad deal.
- Does the 180-day guarantee actually work?
- The sales page says 180 days, but ClickBank's refund policy caps at 60 days from purchase. The vendor can't override that. If you try to claim a refund after 60 days, ClickBank will deny it. So the 180-day promise is marketing theater. If you want a refund, you must request it within 60 days through ClickBank, not the vendor.
- What are the ingredients?
- The sales page lists a proprietary blend of saw palmetto, beta-sitosterol, pygeum, stinging nettle, zinc, and other prostate-support nutrients. But because it's a proprietary blend, you don't know how much of each you're getting. Many of these ingredients have clinical studies at specific doses (e.g., beta-sitosterol at 60-130 mg/day), and without that information, you can't know if the product is underdosed.
- Will this actually help my prostate symptoms?
- It might, but you're gambling. Some of the listed ingredients have evidence for reducing BPH symptoms, but only at certain doses. Without knowing the actual amounts, you're relying on the manufacturer's good faith. A better approach: buy the individual ingredients at clinically studied doses, which will cost you about $40-50/month, and see if they work.
