Review · Other Supplements

RELIVER

A $45 liver supplement with no public ingredient list, sold on affiliate metrics rather than clinical evidence. The 60-day refund makes it a low-risk gamble, but you're betting on a product that refuses to show its hand.

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

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.5/10

A $45 liver supplement with no public ingredient list, sold on affiliate metrics rather than clinical evidence. The 60-day refund makes it a low-risk gamble, but you're betting on a product that refuses to show its hand.

Price checked
$45
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
No ingredient list or Supplement Facts panel available before purchase — you literally don't know what you're swallowing
Better use case
Someone who's already decided to buy a liver supplement, has $45 to risk, and will use the refund window if the label disappoints
Skip if
You want a supplement with transparent labeling and published clinical support for its claims
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Reliver Pro claims to be

A plant-based liver support supplement that also helps with weight loss and fatty liver. The sales page (a video sales letter, or VSL) frames it as a daily detox that restores energy, improves digestion, and nudges the scale downward. The language is standard for this corner of the supplement market: “gentle,” “natural,” “metabolic health.”

But the most telling description comes from the vendor themselves. In the ClickBank marketplace, where affiliates find products to promote, the listing reads: “2026 Update: A Unique Liver Health Supplement Targeting Weight Loss & Fatty Liver -4.2 % CVR On Cold Traffic. 3.82$ EPC. Send 100 Clicks to our VSL, and You’ll Be Shocked.”

That’s not a health claim. That’s a conversion-rate pitch aimed at affiliate marketers. It tells you exactly who this product is built for — and it’s not the person swallowing the capsules.

What you actually get

You get one bottle of capsules. The sales page doesn’t specify the count, but at $45 and typical supplement pricing, it’s almost certainly a 30-day supply. You also get whatever the upsell flow throws in — likely a digital detox guide or meal plan, the kind of PDF that gets skimmed once and forgotten.

What you don’t get before you pay: a Supplement Facts panel. The VSL doesn’t pause on a label. The checkout page doesn’t show one. The competitor landing pages mention “plant-based formula” and “GMP-certified” but dance around the actual ingredient list. You’re buying a bottle of pills without knowing what’s in them or at what doses.

You do get a 60-day ClickBank refund window. That’s real. But it often requires you to return the bottle — even if it’s empty — and you’ll eat the return shipping. So you can try it, but the “risk-free” framing is a bit of a stretch.

The ingredient transparency problem

Supplements live and die by their ingredients and dosages. Milk thistle (silymarin) has some evidence for liver protection at doses around 200–400 mg per day. Dandelion root, artichoke leaf, and turmeric are common in these formulas, but their effects on liver enzymes are modest and dose-dependent. For weight loss, the evidence is even thinner — green tea extract might nudge thermogenesis a few percent, but you need a meaningful dose, and it’s not going to override a poor diet.

Reliver Pro could contain all of these at clinical doses. It could contain none of them. The point is you can’t know before you buy, and that’s a deliberate choice by the vendor. In a market where reputable supplement companies post their labels online, hiding the label is a signal. It means either the formula is underdosed, or it’s so generic that seeing it would kill the sale.

How the marketing oversells

The VSL likely follows a familiar script: scare you about a sluggish liver, promise a “natural detox,” and flash before-and-after photos. The word “detox” is the engine here. Medically, your liver doesn’t need detoxing if you’re healthy — it detoxifies your body every second of every day. What people mean when they say “liver detox” is usually “I want to feel less bloated and have more energy,” which is a fine goal, but it’s not achieved by flushing anything out. It’s achieved by eating fewer processed foods, drinking less alcohol, and moving more.

The weight loss angle is even shakier. Fatty liver disease is real and linked to obesity, but a supplement that “supports liver health” is not a weight loss treatment. The marketing conflates correlation with causation, and the VSL is designed to make that conflation feel like science.

What it costs and the refund reality

$45 one-time, no rebills. The 60-day refund is processed through ClickBank, not the vendor, so the vendor can’t stonewall you. But the process isn’t frictionless. You email ClickBank with your order ID, and they’ll likely tell you to return the product to the vendor’s address. Return shipping is on you. If the bottle is unopened, you might get a full refund minus shipping. If it’s opened or empty, you still might get the refund, but some vendors push back. We’ve seen it work, but it’s not as clean as the sales page implies.

A better way to think about it: you’re paying $45 for a 60-day trial with the option to claw back most of your money if you’re willing to mail a bottle back. That’s not a scam, but it’s also not a glowing endorsement of the product.

Who might consider it, who should skip

Consider it if you’re curious about liver supplements, have $45 you don’t mind floating for two months, and are willing to do the return legwork if the label disappoints. The refund window gives you an out.

Skip it if you expect a clinically proven weight loss aid. Skip it if you take prescription medications — without knowing the ingredients, you can’t check for interactions. Skip it if you believe a supplement label should be visible before you hand over your credit card number. And skip it if you’re managing actual liver issues; this is not a substitute for medical advice, and the lack of transparency should make you run, not walk.

The honest read

Reliver Pro is a product built for affiliates, not for customers. The vendor’s own description is a conversion-rate brag. The gravity is 1.84 — low, meaning not many affiliates are successfully pushing it. That could be because the product doesn’t convert well once people see the label, or because the market is saturated with identical offerings.

You can buy it and return it. That’s the best thing I can say. But you’re buying a mystery bottle from a company that spends more energy wooing affiliates than informing customers. In the supplement world, that’s a red flag the size of a liver.

— 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. RELIVER- #1 Highest Converting Liver & Weight Loss Supplement! 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 Reliver Pro a scam?
Not in the 'you pay and get nothing' sense. You'll receive a bottle. The issue is that you're buying a supplement without knowing what's in it, and the sales pitch relies on affiliate metrics rather than clinical data. That's a transparency red flag, not a criminal enterprise.
What are the ingredients in Reliver Pro?
The vendor doesn't list them on the sales page or in the VSL we reviewed. Competitor landing pages mention 'plant-based formula' and 'liver support,' but no specific ingredients or dosages. Without that information, you can't compare it to studied doses of milk thistle, dandelion, artichoke, or anything else.
Does the 60-day refund really work?
Yes, through ClickBank. You initiate a refund request with your order ID within 60 days. However, many supplement vendors require you to return the bottle — even if it's empty — and you pay return shipping. That can cost $5–$10, so your 'risk-free' trial isn't free.
Can Reliver Pro help with weight loss?
There's no published clinical trial on Reliver Pro itself. Liver health and weight are connected — fatty liver disease is linked to obesity — but a supplement that 'supports liver function' is not a weight loss pill. If the formula includes ingredients like green tea extract or milk thistle, the evidence for meaningful weight loss is thin and dose-dependent. You'd likely get more benefit from diet changes than from this bottle.