Review · Remedies

Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally

A $30 bait for a recurring supplement subscription, pitched to affiliates, not to patients. The product is a black box—only buy if you enjoy fighting ClickBank's cancellation process.

Verdict Avoid 2.5/10
Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid2.5/10

A $30 bait for a recurring supplement subscription, pitched to affiliates, not to patients. The product is a black box—only buy if you enjoy fighting ClickBank's cancellation process.

Price checked
$30
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The vendor's own marketplace description is entirely about affiliate commissions and conversion rates, not what the product actually contains
Better use case
Buyers who want to test ClickBank's refund process with a $30 experiment and will cancel any recurring billing within the first week
Skip if
You have a diagnosed liver condition and need evidence-based medical advice
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Reverse Your Fatty Liver actually is, in one sentence.

A low-gravity ClickBank digital guide with a hidden recurring supplement subscription, sold by a vendor whose own catalog description reads like an affiliate recruitment ad.

The product name promises a 100% natural reversal of fatty liver. The vendor describes it as a program that “converts on diet, diabetes, joint pain, liver, supplement, even non-health lists.” That sentence tells you everything: this is a conversion funnel, not a medical protocol.

What you actually get

Because the sales page is vague and the vendor spends zero words describing the product’s contents, here’s what you can reasonably expect based on the ClickBank listing and the commission structure:

  • The main guide. Likely a PDF, possibly with some video. The topic is diet and lifestyle for fatty liver. There are no named authors, no preview pages, and no way to verify whether the advice is evidence-based before you buy.
  • A supplement upsell. The listing offers 50% commission on supplements, which means the vendor sells a physical product alongside the digital guide. This is almost certainly a monthly auto-ship — the recurring billing flag is on. You won’t know what’s in the supplement until you’re already in the funnel.
  • Recurring billing. The “hasRecurring: true” field means you’re not just paying $30 once. You’re entering a continuity program. The supplement will ship again next month unless you cancel. The refund policy covers the initial purchase; the subscription is a separate beast.
  • Bonus materials. Typical ClickBank health programs throw in a few extra PDFs or a “quick-start” video. Assume these are filler unless proven otherwise.

How the marketing oversells

The vendor’s own words, pulled directly from the ClickBank marketplace:

“Affiliates earn 75% commission on all versions and 50% commission on supplements. Fatty liver program converts on diet, diabetes, joint pain, liver, supplement, even non-health lists. Please opt-in and read rules BEFORE you promote to stay compliant.”

That’s not a product description. That’s an affiliate pitch. The vendor is selling you — the buyer — as a conversion statistic to affiliates. The promise that the program “converts on” a laundry list of health conditions is a signal that the marketing is built to catch anyone worried about their health, not to deliver a specific, credible solution for fatty liver.

The name “100% Naturally” is a marketing phrase, not a medical claim. It implies no drugs, no doctors, no risk. But fatty liver disease — especially non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) — is a serious condition that can progress to cirrhosis. “Natural” doesn’t mean safe, and it doesn’t mean effective.

What it costs and how the refund works

The front-end price is $30. That’s what you’ll see at checkout. What you won’t see clearly is the recurring billing. ClickBank confirms the product has a rebill, so somewhere in the order flow you’re being enrolled in a subscription. The most likely scenario: a monthly supplement shipment, probably priced at $30–$50 per month.

ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy applies to the initial purchase. You can email support, cite your order ID, and get your $30 back. But that refund does not automatically cancel the recurring subscription. You must cancel that separately. If you forget, you’ll be charged again next month. This is a known ClickBank continuity trap, and low-gravity products like this one often rely on it.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

The catalog copy doesn’t give us a sales page to dissect, but the gravity number — 1.0 — is its own indictment. Gravity measures how many unique affiliates have sold the product in the last 12 weeks. A gravity of 1 means almost nobody is promoting it. If this product really “converted on” all those health lists, affiliates would be swarming it. They’re not. That means either the conversion rate is poor, the refund rate is high, or the vendor is new and unproven. None of those are good for a buyer.

The recurring billing flag is the second red flag. The vendor is making more money on the supplement continuity than on the guide. That means the guide is the bait, and the supplement is the hook. You’re not buying a fatty liver program; you’re being acquired as a supplement customer.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re a process nerd who wants to document exactly how a low-gravity ClickBank continuity funnel works. Buy it, screenshot every page, note where the recurring billing is disclosed (or not), and refund it on day 59. That’s a $30 experiment in consumer protection, and you’ll learn something.

Skip this if you actually have fatty liver disease. The standard of care is weight loss of 7–10% of body weight, a Mediterranean diet, and exercise. That advice is free from your doctor or from the American Liver Foundation. You don’t need a $30 PDF to hear it, and you absolutely don’t need an unvetted supplement that could make your liver enzymes worse.

Skip this if you’re not comfortable fighting ClickBank’s cancellation process. The refund is real, but the subscription cancellation is a separate step, and the vendor has no incentive to make it easy.

The honest read

Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally is a product built for affiliates, not for patients. The vendor’s own description is a commission sheet. The gravity is near zero. The recurring billing is a trap waiting to spring. And the supplement upsell — the thing the vendor actually wants to sell you — is a black box of unknown ingredients that you’re supposed to put into a liver that’s already struggling.

I would not buy this. I would not recommend it to a reader. And if a family member asked me about it, I’d tell them to spend the $30 on a copay to see a hepatologist instead.

The fatty liver space is full of real, evidence-based interventions. This product isn’t one of them. It’s a conversion funnel wearing a health claim like a mask.

— 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. Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally 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 Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally a scam?
Not in the sense that you get nothing. You'll receive a digital guide and possibly a supplement shipment. The 'scam' is the opacity: the vendor prioritizes affiliate recruitment over buyer transparency, and the recurring billing can turn a $30 purchase into a much larger expense if you don't cancel quickly.
What is the recurring billing for?
The product listing has 'hasRecurring: true,' meaning there's a subscription attached. Based on the commission structure (50% on supplements), it's almost certainly a monthly auto-ship of a liver supplement. You'll need to cancel that subscription separately from any refund — ClickBank refunds the initial guide, not the recurring supplement charges unless you also cancel the continuity program.
Will this program actually reverse my fatty liver?
Fatty liver reversal is medically possible through sustained weight loss, dietary changes, and exercise. A generic PDF might offer some useful starting points, but it cannot replace a hepatologist's guidance. The supplement upsells are a wildcard; some 'liver detox' herbs can stress the liver further. If you have diagnosed NAFLD, this product is not a substitute for medical care.
How do I cancel the recurring billing if I buy?
You must contact ClickBank support separately and request cancellation of the subscription. The 60-day refund for the initial guide does not automatically stop future rebills. Check your ClickBank order confirmation for a subscription ID and cancel it immediately if you don't want the supplement.