Review · Remedies
Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally
A low-cost, plain-English guide to the diet and lifestyle habits that support a healthier liver — useful if you want one organized starting point and you read the fine print on billing.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
A low-cost, plain-English guide to the diet and lifestyle habits that support a healthier liver — useful if you want one organized starting point and you read the fine print on billing.
- Price checked
- $30
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No named author or clinician credentials listed, so you can't vet the source before buying
- Better use case
- People who want one organized, plain-English starting point on liver-friendly diet and daily habits
- Skip if
- You have a diagnosed liver condition and need a personalized, evidence-based plan from your own clinician
- Evidence file
- 2 sources attached
What Reverse Your Fatty Liver actually is
Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally is a $30 digital guide, sold through ClickBank, that walks you through the diet and lifestyle habits associated with a healthier liver. In plain terms: it’s a PDF that organizes the eat-this, move-like-this, lose-weight-gradually advice into one place.
The name leans hard on “100% Naturally.” Read that as a marketing phrase, not a medical promise. “Natural” doesn’t automatically mean effective, and no guide can guarantee it will reverse a medical condition. What it can do is hand you a structured starting point.
How it works
There’s no mystery mechanism here. The guide rests on a premise that’s genuinely well-supported: the habits that support liver health are dietary and lifestyle-based. The NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) names the same first-line measures most clinicians do — gradual weight loss, a Mediterranean-style eating pattern, and regular physical activity. This guide is, at its core, a packaged version of that approach.
What you actually get
- The main guide. A PDF covering diet and lifestyle habits that support liver health. There are no named authors and limited preview pages, so you’re buying somewhat sight-unseen.
- Bonus materials. A few extra PDFs or a quick-start section, typical of ClickBank health guides.
- An optional supplement. At checkout you may be offered a supplement on a recurring auto-ship basis. It is optional, the ingredients aren’t disclosed up front, and you can decline it. If you opt in and later want out, cancel it through ClickBank separately.
The ingredients question
This is a guide, not a formula, so there’s no fixed ingredient panel to grade. The dietary building blocks it leans on, though, are well-studied:
- Mediterranean-style eating — vegetables, olive oil, fish, whole grains. The NIDDK points to this pattern as a way to support liver health and overall metabolic health.
- Gradual weight loss — clinicians commonly cite a 7–10% reduction in body weight as a meaningful, evidence-based target for people with fatty liver.
- Regular exercise — both aerobic activity and resistance work are associated with healthier liver markers.
If you opt into the checkout supplement, treat it separately: because its ingredients aren’t shown before purchase, you can’t dose-check it, and that’s a reason to be cautious rather than to assume benefit.
Does Reverse Your Fatty Liver really work?
Here’s the honest read. The guide can’t be measured like a pill, so “work” comes down to whether the advice is sound and whether you act on it. The advice category is sound: the foundation of liver health really is diet, weight, and movement, and that’s well documented by the NIH’s NIDDK. A $30 guide that puts those habits in one organized place has real value as a starting point.
What it can’t do is replace personalized care. There’s no named clinician behind it, no custom plan, and no follow-up. If you have diagnosed non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) or steatohepatitis (NASH), the sales page’s “100% Naturally” framing can imply more than any supplement or guide can legally claim — a guide cannot treat or reverse a diagnosed disease, and you should read it that way. Use it as a primer that sits next to your doctor’s guidance, not on top of it.
Side effects
The guide itself carries no side effects — it’s reading material. The habits it recommends (Mediterranean-style eating, gradual weight loss, exercise) are considered safe for most adults; anyone with an existing medical condition should still run a new diet or exercise plan past their own clinician.
The thing to watch is the optional checkout supplement. Its ingredients aren’t disclosed before purchase, and some “liver detox” herbs sold in this category can be hard on the liver rather than helpful. If you’re tempted by it, ask your doctor before starting — especially if you already have a liver condition.
Is Reverse Your Fatty Liver a scam or legit?
Legit, with caveats. You do get a real digital product for your $30, it’s sold through ClickBank, and refunds are ClickBank-honored. The premise is grounded in mainstream lifestyle advice, not a miracle claim.
The fair criticisms are about transparency, not fraud. There’s no named author to vet, the preview is thin, and an optional supplement is offered on a recurring auto-ship basis at checkout. None of that makes it a scam — but it does mean you should read the checkout page line by line, decline any recurring add-on you don’t want, and keep your order confirmation in case you need to cancel or refund.
Is Reverse Your Fatty Liver worth it?
Reverse Your Fatty Liver is a $30 lifestyle guide that’s worth it as a starter, but read the checkout carefully and watch for the optional recurring supplement add-on. For the price of a doctor’s copay, you get an organized primer on the habits that genuinely support liver health. Just don’t expect it to do the work for you, and don’t let the optional supplement enroll you in something you didn’t intend.
Who it’s best for
It’s a good fit if you want one tidy, plain-English starting point on liver-friendly eating and daily habits and you’d rather act on something than nothing. It’s a poor fit if you have a diagnosed liver condition and need a personalized plan, if you need a credentialed author you can verify, or if you’re hoping a single guide or pill will replace the slow, real work of lifestyle change.
How we evaluated this
I read the listing and what the sales page discloses, checked the core claims against authoritative sources like the NIH’s NIDDK, and weighed the guide against the free, evidence-based advice you’d get from your own doctor or the American Liver Foundation. I flagged the optional recurring supplement and the missing author credentials as the things a buyer most needs to know before clicking. No “medically reviewed” badge here — just a careful reader who’s seen a lot of supplement pitches.
— 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:
Reverse Your Fatty Liver 100% Naturally 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)
- NIH — National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases: NAFLD diet and lifestyle — Authoritative reference on diet, weight, and liver health
Frequently asked questions
- Does Reverse Your Fatty Liver have side effects?
- The core product is a PDF guide, so the guide itself carries no side effects. The habits it covers — a Mediterranean-style diet, gradual weight loss, and exercise — are widely considered safe for most adults. The one thing to watch is the optional supplement offered at checkout: its ingredients aren't disclosed up front, and some 'liver detox' herbs can be hard on the liver. If you have a diagnosed liver condition, clear any supplement with your doctor first.
- Is Reverse Your Fatty Liver a scam?
- No. You receive a real digital guide for your $30, and ClickBank honors refunds. The honest caveat is transparency: there's no named author, and an optional supplement subscription is offered at checkout. That's not a scam, but it means you should read the checkout page carefully and decline or cancel any recurring add-on you don't want.
- How much does it cost with upsells?
- The guide is $30 one-time. At checkout you may be offered an optional supplement on a recurring auto-ship basis, typically in the $30–$50/month range for these products. The supplement is not required to use the guide. If you opt in and change your mind, cancel the subscription through ClickBank separately from any refund on the guide.
- Will this guide fix my fatty liver?
- No guide can promise that, and this one shouldn't be read as a medical treatment. What the science supports is that diet, gradual weight loss, and exercise are the foundation of liver health — the NIH's NIDDK lists exactly those habits as first-line lifestyle measures. This guide organizes that kind of advice in one place. If you have diagnosed NAFLD or NASH, use it alongside your doctor, not instead of one.