Review · Dietary Supplements
Reliver Pro
For about $45, Reliver Pro offers a plant-based formula built around well-known liver-support botanicals, sold as a single payment with no rebills and a ClickBank-honored return policy — a low-pressure way to try the category.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
For about $45, Reliver Pro offers a plant-based formula built around well-known liver-support botanicals, sold as a single payment with no rebills and a ClickBank-honored return policy — a low-pressure way to try the category.
- Price checked
- $45
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No Supplement Facts panel is shown on the sales page before purchase, so you can't confirm doses up front
- Better use case
- People curious about plant-based liver-support botanicals who want a single, no-commitment purchase
- Skip if
- You want a supplement with a fully disclosed label and published clinical support before you buy
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Reliver Pro is and how it works
Reliver Pro is a plant-based daily capsule marketed to support liver health and healthy weight. The idea behind this category is straightforward: the liver handles a constant load of processing and filtering, and certain botanicals are used to help maintain normal liver function and support the body’s everyday metabolic work. Reliver Pro positions itself as a once-a-day routine rather than a powder or a complicated stack.
The sales page leans on the word “detox.” It’s worth being plain about that term: a healthy liver already filters your body around the clock. So a supplement doesn’t “flush out” anything dramatic. What botanicals in this family may help with is supporting normal liver function as part of an overall healthy routine — not replacing one.
Named ingredients and what they’re for
Reliver Pro is sold as a blend in the classic liver-support family. The sales page doesn’t publish a full Supplement Facts panel before purchase, so I’m describing the botanicals this category is built on and the doses studied for them — confirm the actual amounts on the panel when your bottle arrives.
- Milk thistle (silymarin) — typically studied around 200–400 mg per day. Used to help maintain normal liver function and support the liver’s antioxidant defenses.
- Dandelion root — commonly included in the 100–400 mg range. Traditionally used to support digestion and bile flow.
- Artichoke leaf — often dosed around 300–600 mg. Used to support healthy digestion and liver function.
- Turmeric (curcumin) — commonly 200–500 mg. Used to support the body’s normal antioxidant and inflammatory balance.
These are structure/function uses, not promises to treat any condition. The exact lineup and doses in Reliver Pro should be read off the panel before you rely on any of them.
Does Reliver Pro really work?
Honestly: the category has some support, the specific finished formula doesn’t have its own published trial, and the real answer depends on dose. Milk thistle is the most-studied piece — the National Institutes of Health Office of Dietary Supplements notes silymarin is the most-researched compound for liver support, while also being candid that the clinical evidence is mixed and far from a sure thing (ods.od.nih.gov). That’s the calibrated truth: some promising signal, no guarantee.
On weight, be realistic. Liver health and body weight are connected, but a liver-support capsule is not a fat burner. Any benefit a botanical like this may have for weight is modest and works only alongside diet and activity changes. If a sales page implies a supplement alone melts away pounds or fixes fatty liver disease, that’s a claim no supplement can legally make — treat it as marketing, not medicine.
The fair way to set expectations: Reliver Pro may help support normal liver function as part of a healthy routine, and the proof for any one shopper comes down to whether the panel shows real doses.
Side effects
For most healthy adults, the botanicals in this family are generally well tolerated. The most commonly reported effects are mild and digestive — loose stool, an upset stomach, or mild heartburn. Dandelion can cause a reaction in people allergic to ragweed and related plants. Milk thistle and turmeric can interact with some medications.
This isn’t medical advice, just the plain pattern: if you take prescription drugs, are pregnant, are nursing, or have a known plant allergy, read the panel and check with your doctor before starting. Because the full label isn’t shown before purchase, confirm every ingredient when the bottle arrives.
Is Reliver Pro a scam or legit?
It reads as legit, with one honest caveat. On the credibility checklist: there’s a real product that ships, the charge is a one-time $45 with no rebills surfaced at checkout, and returns are handled through ClickBank rather than the vendor — so a request can’t simply be ignored. The claims, taken as structure/function support, are within the normal range for the category.
The one mark against it is transparency: the Supplement Facts panel isn’t disclosed before you buy. That’s a fair criticism, not evidence of fraud. Reputable companies post their labels, and Reliver Pro should too. Until it does, you’re trusting the category until the bottle is in your hands — which is exactly why the one-time price and ClickBank-honored return policy matter.
Is Reliver Pro worth it?
Reliver Pro is a legit $45 plant-based liver-support supplement with a ClickBank-honored return policy. For a single payment with no rebills, it’s a low-pressure way to try liver-support botanicals — just read the panel when it arrives and keep your weight expectations grounded in diet and activity, not the pill alone.
How we evaluated this
I read the ingredient story before I read the sales pitch, weighed the studied doses for each botanical against what the category can honestly claim, checked the billing and return terms, and flagged where the marketing reaches past what a supplement can support. No medical-review badge here — just a retired nurse reading the label the way she’d read an intake chart: slowly, with receipts.
— 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:
Reliver Pro 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 Reliver Pro have side effects?
- For most healthy adults, the botanicals typically used in liver-support blends — milk thistle, dandelion, artichoke — are well tolerated. The most commonly reported issues are mild digestive upset or, for people with ragweed allergies, a possible reaction to dandelion. Because the full label isn't published before purchase, check the panel when the bottle arrives and talk to your doctor first if you take prescription medication, are pregnant, or are nursing.
- Is Reliver Pro a scam?
- It doesn't look like one in the 'pay and get nothing' sense. You receive a physical bottle, the purchase is a one-time $45 charge with no hidden rebills, and the return policy is handled by ClickBank rather than the vendor. The fair criticism is transparency: the Supplement Facts panel isn't shown before you buy, so you're trusting the category until the bottle arrives.
- How much does Reliver Pro cost with upsells?
- The core product is $45 as a one-time payment. After checkout you'll see optional upsell pages — extra bottles or digital guides — that you can decline. If you skip every add-on, your total stays at $45.
- Is Reliver Pro better than a standalone milk thistle supplement?
- A standalone, standardized milk thistle (silymarin) product gives you a clearly labeled dose, which is its main advantage. Reliver Pro bundles several liver-support botanicals into one capsule for convenience at a single $45 price. If dose transparency matters most to you, a labeled standalone may suit you better; if you want a simple all-in-one routine, the blend is reasonable.

