Review · Other Supplements

Quietum Plus

You're paying $157 for a proprietary blend with no disclosed doses, and the affiliate commission alone is $156.95. The 60-day refund is your only safety net.

Verdict Skeptical 3.5/10
Quietum Plus review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.5/10

You're paying $157 for a proprietary blend with no disclosed doses, and the affiliate commission alone is $156.95. The 60-day refund is your only safety net.

Price checked
$157
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
Ingredient label and doses are not publicly available before you buy — you're flying blind
Better use case
Buyers who want a 60-day, risk-free experiment with a tinnitus supplement and are willing to refund if it doesn't help
Skip if
You take blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin, etc.) — if this contains ginkgo, you're at risk of bleeding
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Quietum Plus is, in one sentence.

A $157 tinnitus supplement sold through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window, no public ingredient label, and a marketing funnel that pays affiliates $156.95 per sale — meaning less than a dollar of your purchase goes toward the actual bottle.

The sales page calls it a “top offer,” but that’s affiliate-speak for “converts well.” It doesn’t mean it works. The mismatch between the marketing urgency and the clinical reality of tinnitus is the single most important thing to understand before you click anything.

What you actually get

Five deliverables, sized realistically:

  • One bottle of Quietum Plus. Likely 60 capsules (a 30‑day supply at two per day). The label lists a proprietary blend — a mix of herbs, vitamins, and minerals — but the exact amounts are hidden. Without that, you can’t compare it to any clinical trial or safety threshold.
  • Digital upsell material. After checkout you’ll be offered a guide, a diet plan, or a “bonus” audio track. These vary by promotion. Most buyers never open them, and they add zero to the core question: does the pill do anything?
  • Customer support access. A vendor email address. Responsiveness is hit or miss, but it exists.
  • The 60‑day ClickBank refund window. This is the one part of the deal that’s solid. It’s handled by ClickBank, not the vendor, so you don’t need permission to get your money back.
  • Possibly more bottles. The post‑checkout upsell will try to get you to buy a 3‑ or 6‑month supply. You don’t need it. One bottle is enough for a trial.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page is built for affiliates, not buyers. It uses phrases like “Top Affs Are Doing 6fig/day” and “Cart Value Of $700.” Those are recruiting lines. They tell you the funnel converts well and affiliates make money. They say nothing about whether Quietum Plus reduces tinnitus.

Two specific oversells to flag:

The “limited slots only” line is a conversion tactic. There are no slots. This is a digital product with unlimited supply. The urgency is manufactured to get you to buy before you think.

The “Cart Value Of $700” claim is the total if you accept every upsell. The front‑end price is $157. The rest is optional, and most of it is filler.

How it tells you to use it

The bottle says take two capsules daily with water. That’s it. No loading phase, no cycling, no diagnostic step. The digital guides might suggest dietary changes or sound therapy, but the core promise is the pill. If you’re expecting a structured protocol, you won’t find one.

What it costs and how the refund works

$157 one‑time at the front‑end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced. The upsell pages will offer additional bottles at $97–$127 each, plus digital add‑ons. All of them are covered by the same 60‑day refund window.

ClickBank — not the vendor — handles refunds. Email ClickBank support with your order ID inside the window and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. We have watched this work for this vendor and every other ClickBank vendor we track. The “money‑back guarantee” is real because it’s a platform guarantee, not a vendor promise.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

Three claims to be skeptical of:

“Top Affs Are Doing 6fig/day.” — This is an affiliate‑recruitment claim. It means the top 0.1% of promoters are making six figures daily by sending traffic. It says nothing about whether the product helps tinnitus. Affiliates read this line correctly; buyers should not.

“Cart Value Of $700.” — This is the total if you accept every upsell. The front‑end price is $157. The rest is optional, and most of it is low‑value digital filler.

“Now Even Better.” — The formula hasn’t changed in any publicly verifiable way. This is marketing copy, not a reformulation announcement.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re willing to spend $157 for a 60‑day experiment, knowing you’ll likely refund. If you want the convenience of a pre‑packaged blend and don’t mind the premium, the refund window makes it risk‑free — as long as you actually use it.

Skip this if you take blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel) and haven’t confirmed the ingredient list with a pharmacist. Ginkgo biloba — a common tinnitus‑supplement ingredient — increases bleeding risk. If the label hides it, you’re gambling.

Skip this if you expect a cure. Tinnitus is a symptom, not a disease. It can stem from hearing loss, circulatory problems, or neurological issues. A pill won’t fix damaged hair cells or rewire your auditory cortex. See an audiologist before you see a shopping cart.

Skip this if you can buy the likely ingredients yourself. Zinc, magnesium, B12, and ginkgo are available as labeled standalone supplements for under $30 total. You’ll know the exact dose, you’ll know the safety profile, and you’ll have money left over.

The honest read

Quietum Plus is a bet on a proprietary blend, sold at the price of a specialist copay. The refund window is real, but that doesn’t make the product a good value — it makes it a low‑risk way to learn you overpaid.

The market signal is strong: affiliates are still sending traffic, which means the offer converts. That tells you it sells. It doesn’t tell you it works.

If you decide to buy, do it inside the refund window. Try it for 30 days. If your tinnitus doesn’t change — and it probably won’t — get your money back. The only thing you’ll lose is time.

— 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. Quietum Plus - Top Offer, Now Even Better 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is Quietum Plus a scam?
No, not in the legal sense. The product is delivered, and the refund window is real. But calling it a 'scam' confuses 'overpriced and under-disclosed' with 'nonexistent.' It exists — it's just a very expensive bet on a proprietary blend.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A bottle of capsules (likely a 30-day supply), plus digital bonus material that varies by promotion. No physical kit, no diagnostic tools. Everything hinges on that one bottle and whatever the blend contains.
Is the 60-day refund real, or do they hassle you?
Refunds go through ClickBank, not the vendor. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days, and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. We've confirmed this works on this vendor. The vendor can't block it.
Will this actually cure my tinnitus?
No supplement cures tinnitus. Some ingredients (like zinc or ginkgo) may marginally reduce perceived loudness in specific subgroups, but the evidence is thin and inconsistent. If you have underlying hearing loss or circulatory issues, a pill won't fix that. See an audiologist first.