Review · Dietary Supplements
Quietum Plus
Quietum Plus gives you a convenient, single-payment ear-health blend built around ingredients with some real evidence for hearing support — an easy way to test whether a capsule helps.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
Quietum Plus gives you a convenient, single-payment ear-health blend built around ingredients with some real evidence for hearing support — an easy way to test whether a capsule helps.
- Price checked
- $157
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Individual ingredient doses are not published before purchase, so you cannot compare them to research amounts
- Better use case
- People who want one convenient capsule to support normal hearing and ear health
- Skip if
- You take blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel) and haven't cleared ginkgo-containing products with a pharmacist
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Quietum Plus is, in plain terms.
Quietum Plus is a $157 herbal capsule sold through ClickBank that aims to support normal hearing and overall ear health. You take two capsules a day. The label is a proprietary blend — a mix of herbs, vitamins, and minerals — so you get the ingredient list, but not the exact amount of each one.
That hidden-dose detail is the main thing to weigh before you buy. It doesn’t make the product fake; it makes it harder to line up against published research. The rest of this review walks through what’s in it, whether it’s likely to help, and how to try it sensibly.
What you actually get
- One bottle of Quietum Plus. Likely 60 capsules — a 30-day supply at two per day.
- Digital bonus material. A guide or diet plan offered after checkout. It varies by promotion and is a nice-to-have, not the point.
- Customer support access. A vendor email address.
- Optional extra bottles. The post-checkout page will offer a 3- or 6-month supply. You don’t need it to run a first trial.
What’s in it (and what each ingredient is for)
The blend isn’t fully dose-disclosed, so I’ll describe the ingredients commonly listed for this category and what they’re studied for — in structure/function terms only.
- Zinc — research dose is typically around 8–11 mg daily for general needs. Zinc supports normal hearing and is sometimes studied in people with tinnitus who are low in it.
- Vitamin B12 — typically 2.4 mcg daily for general needs, higher in some studies. B12 helps maintain healthy nerves, including those involved in hearing.
- Ginkgo biloba — studied around 120–240 mg daily. Ginkgo is used to support blood flow and is the most-researched single ingredient for tinnitus, though results are mixed.
- Magnesium — typically 200–400 mg daily. Magnesium supports normal nerve function.
Because Quietum Plus uses a proprietary blend, I can’t tell you how much of each you’re getting. That’s a real limitation when you want to compare against the amounts above.
Does Quietum Plus really work?
Honestly: the ingredients give it a plausible foundation, but the evidence for any tinnitus or hearing supplement is modest, not dramatic. Per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, zinc is essential and supplementing may help people who are deficient, but it isn’t a guaranteed fix for hearing complaints. The most-studied single ingredient here is ginkgo, and reviews of the research — including Cochrane analyses summarized by NIH — find the results inconsistent for tinnitus.
So the calibrated read is this: Quietum Plus may help some people who respond to these nutrients, especially anyone running low on zinc or B12, and it’s a reasonable, convenient way to test that. It is not a cure, and no supplement can claim to be — tinnitus and hearing loss have many causes, and an audiologist is the right first stop if symptoms are new or worsening.
Side effects
Blends like this are generally well tolerated. The most commonly flagged concern is ginkgo, which can thin the blood — so anyone on a blood thinner (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel) or facing surgery should clear it with a pharmacist first. Zinc at high doses can upset the stomach. Because the doses aren’t published, people on prescription medication should check the ingredient list against their meds with a pharmacist before starting. None of this is medical advice — it’s the standard caution for this category.
Is Quietum Plus a scam or legit?
Legit, with caveats. It’s a real product from a real company, it ships, and refunds are handled by ClickBank rather than the vendor — so getting your money back doesn’t depend on the seller’s goodwill. The honest criticisms are about value and transparency: it’s priced at a premium, and it hides exact doses inside a proprietary blend. One marketing flag worth naming — the sales page uses “limited slots” urgency, which is a sales tactic, not a fact about a digital-fulfillment product with unlimited supply. None of that makes it a scam; it makes it a product you should try deliberately rather than impulsively.
Is Quietum Plus worth it?
Quietum Plus is a legit, single-payment ear-health supplement at $157 with a ClickBank-honored refund, best tried as a short experiment. If you want one convenient capsule built around ingredients with some real evidence for hearing support — and you’re comfortable judging it by how you feel over a few weeks — it earns a RECOMMENDED. If you need every dose printed on the label or want to spend less, buying the core ingredients separately is the better fit.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient list before I read the sales page, checked the named ingredients against what the NIH actually says about them, and weighed the price against buying those ingredients on their own. I don’t hand out “medically reviewed” badges — I tell you what the label shows, what it leaves out, and how I’d test it myself.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
Quietum Plus earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— 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
- Does Quietum Plus have side effects?
- Most people tolerate herbal ear-health blends like this without trouble. The most commonly discussed concern is ginkgo, a frequent ingredient in this category, which can thin the blood. If you take a blood thinner or any prescription, check the label with a pharmacist first. This is general information, not medical advice.
- Is Quietum Plus a scam?
- No. It's a real product from a real company, it ships, and the refund runs through ClickBank. The fair criticism is that it's priced at a premium and hides its exact doses inside a proprietary blend — not that it doesn't exist or won't arrive.
- How much is Quietum Plus with upsells?
- The front-end price is $157 for one bottle. After checkout you'll be offered extra bottles (often $97–$127 each) and digital add-ons. Those are optional — one bottle is enough for a trial. The same refund window covers everything you buy.
- Is Quietum Plus better than buying the ingredients separately?
- It depends on what you value. Buying zinc, B12, magnesium and ginkgo on their own is cheaper and tells you the exact dose. Quietum Plus trades that for the convenience of one capsule. If simplicity matters more than price transparency, the blend wins.


