Review · Remedies

Revierta Su Diabetes Tipo 2 y Pre-Diabetes, Contro

A Spanish-language diabetes guide with recurring billing, no verifiable credentials, and a sales page that talks only to affiliates. The 60-day refund window exists, but the vendor's 'very low refunds' boast is a red flag.

Verdict Avoid 2.5/10
Revierta Su Diabetes Tipo 2 y Pre-Diabetes, Contro review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid2.5/10

A Spanish-language diabetes guide with recurring billing, no verifiable credentials, and a sales page that talks only to affiliates. The 60-day refund window exists, but the vendor's 'very low refunds' boast is a red flag.

Price checked
Not listed
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
Sales page contains zero product details — it's entirely affiliate recruitment copy boasting about payouts and 'very low refunds' rather than describing the product
Better use case
Spanish-speaking individuals who are desperate for a diabetes solution and willing to test the product strictly within the 60 days ClickBank allows for refunds, fully prepared to cancel the recurring billing immediately
Skip if
You have diabetes and are looking for medically sound, evidence-based guidance — this product lacks any verifiable authority
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Revierta Su Diabetes actually is, in one sentence.

A Spanish-language digital guide (likely PDF or video) that claims to reverse type 2 diabetes and control type 1, sold through ClickBank with recurring billing and three add-on offers, marketed almost entirely to affiliates rather than buyers.

The vendor’s own description on ClickBank reads like an affiliate recruitment poster: “Ahora con Facturación Recurrente (Exito Total). Consulte por nuestro 90% de Comisión y Premios! Gane Más Dinero con 3 Upsells. Producto con la mejor conversión. El mejor producto para tratar la diabetes. Reembolsos muy bajos.” Translation: “Now with recurring billing (total success). Ask about our 90% commission and prizes! Earn more money with 3 upsells. Product with the best conversion. The best product to treat diabetes. Very low refunds.”

That’s it. That’s the entire pitch. There is no description of what the product contains, who created it, what medical evidence supports it, or how it works. The sales page exists to convince affiliates to promote it, not to convince buyers to buy it. That’s the first and biggest red flag.

What you actually get

The vendor never says. Based on the structure of similar ClickBank products in the diabetes niche, you’re probably buying:

  • A main guide, likely a PDF or video series, that outlines a diet and lifestyle protocol. The title suggests it’s aimed at Spanish speakers with type 2 diabetes, pre-diabetes, or type 1 diabetes.
  • Three add-on offers, which are standard in this niche: a more detailed diet plan, an exercise program, and a supplement guide. Each one adds to the cost, and you’ll have to actively decline them at checkout to avoid paying more.
  • Recurring billing, which the vendor highlights as “Facturación Recurrente (Exito Total).” You’ll be charged again after the initial purchase, but the sales page doesn’t explain what the recurring charge delivers. It could be a monthly membership, access to updated content, or a supplement auto-ship — but you won’t know until after you buy.

Because the vendor provides no product details, you’re buying blind. The only thing you can be sure of is that you’ll be charged at least once, and likely again.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page is in Spanish, so I had it translated. The entire page is built to recruit affiliates, not to sell the product to end users. It talks about how much money promoters can make, payout rates, and prizes for top sellers. It calls the product “el mejor producto para tratar la diabetes” — the best product to treat diabetes. That’s an extraordinary claim with zero evidence.

There is no mention of:

  • Who created the program (a doctor? a nutritionist? a person with diabetes?)
  • What scientific principles it’s based on
  • Any studies or testimonials from actual users
  • What the recurring billing actually pays for

Instead, the page brags about “reembolsos muy bajos” — very low refunds. That’s not a selling point for buyers; it’s a warning. It tells you the vendor is proud that few people get their money back. In my experience, that often means the refund process is made difficult, or the product is structured to make you think you got something of value even when you didn’t.

The red flags

Let’s line them up:

  1. Affiliate-only sales page. The product’s own vendor description is written for affiliates, not buyers. That’s not how legitimate health products are sold. A real diabetes guide would tell you what’s inside, who wrote it, and why it’s trustworthy.

  2. Recurring billing without disclosure. The vendor shouts “Facturación Recurrente” as a feature for affiliates, but doesn’t explain what the buyer gets for the ongoing charges. This is a classic subscription trap. You might think you’re buying a one-time guide, and then find monthly charges on your card.

  3. No verified sales. ClickBank’s data shows no record of sales for this product in the past several weeks. That means it’s either brand new or has no traction, so there’s no user feedback to evaluate. You’re buying into something completely unproven.

  4. Extraordinary medical claims with no evidence. “Reverse type 2 diabetes” and “control type 1 diabetes” are claims that require serious backing. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition that cannot be controlled by diet alone — it requires insulin. Type 2 diabetes can sometimes be put into remission through significant lifestyle changes, but that should be done under medical supervision. This product offers no credentials, no references, and no safety information.

  5. “Very low refunds” as a selling point. The vendor is telling affiliates that buyers rarely get refunds. That’s either because the product is so good nobody wants a refund (unlikely, given the lack of details), or because the vendor fights refunds. Either way, it’s a red flag.

What it costs and how the refund works

The front-end price isn’t listed on the sales page, but typical ClickBank products in this niche run $37–$47 for the main guide, with paid add-ons that can push the total over $100. The recurring billing is an unknown amount, charged at an unknown interval. You won’t know the full cost until you’re at the checkout page, and even then, the recurring terms might be buried in fine print.

Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. In theory, you can request a refund through ClickBank support and get your money back. In practice, the vendor’s boast of “very low refunds” suggests they may contest requests. If you do buy, keep all receipts, document the product’s shortcomings, and be prepared to escalate to ClickBank if the vendor refuses.

The recurring billing is the bigger risk. Even if you get a refund for the initial purchase, canceling the recurring charges might require contacting the vendor directly, and if they’re unresponsive, you could be stuck with ongoing charges. I would not give my payment information to a vendor who hides the recurring terms this aggressively.

Who should buy, who should skip

There is no buyer for whom this makes sense. The vendor’s entire pitch is aimed at people who want to promote the product for money, not at people who want to use it. As someone considering it for your own diabetes, there is no reason to purchase this product.

Skip this if:

  • You have diabetes and need reliable, evidence-based information. This product has no verifiable authority. Talk to your doctor, a registered dietitian, or a certified diabetes educator instead.
  • You don’t speak Spanish. The entire sales process and product are in Spanish, and you’ll have no way to evaluate what you’re buying.
  • You can’t afford surprise recurring charges. The billing model is opaque, and you could end up paying far more than you expected.

Is Revierta Su Diabetes worth it?

No — Revierta Su Diabetes isn’t worth it at roughly $37–$47; it’s an affiliate funnel with unproven medical claims. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored.

The verdict is Avoid. The sales page won’t tell you what you’re buying, who wrote it, or what evidence backs the claim that it “reverses” diabetes. Add recurring billing the vendor never explains, and you have a purchase that’s all downside. Spend your money — and your trust — somewhere accountable.

The honest read

Revierta Su Diabetes is a product built for promoters, not for people with diabetes. The sales page is a recruitment tool, the medical claims are unsubstantiated, and the recurring billing is a trap. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored — but the vendor’s pride in “very low refunds” tells me you’ll have to fight for your money.

If you’re a Spanish speaker desperate for a diabetes solution, I understand the appeal. But there are free, credible resources available from organizations like the American Diabetes Association (diabetes.org in Spanish) and the CDC (cdc.gov/diabetes/spanish). They won’t charge you a recurring fee, and they won’t make promises they can’t keep.

I would not buy this.

— 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:

Revierta Su Diabetes Tipo 2 y Pre-Diabetes, Contro 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.

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

Frequently asked questions

Is Revierta Su Diabetes a scam?
It's a real digital product you'll receive after purchase, but the sales page is designed to recruit affiliates, not inform buyers. The medical claims are unsubstantiated, and the recurring billing model isn't transparent. I'd call it a high-risk purchase, not an outright scam — but you should treat it like one until proven otherwise.
What do I actually get when I buy?
The sales page doesn't specify. Based on similar ClickBank products in this niche, you'll likely get a PDF guide or video series about diet and lifestyle changes for diabetes, plus paid add-ons for meal plans, exercise programs, or supplement recommendations. The recurring billing probably gives you access to a members' area or monthly tips, but the vendor never explains this.
Can I get a refund if it doesn't work?
Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. You can request a refund through ClickBank support. However, the vendor's boast of 'very low refunds' suggests they may contest requests or make you jump through hoops. Be prepared to document your request and escalate if needed.
Does this program really reverse diabetes?
There is no evidence provided. Type 2 diabetes can sometimes be put into remission through significant diet and lifestyle changes, but that requires medical supervision. This product offers no credentials, no study references, and no indication that its protocol is safe or effective. Relying on it instead of medical care is dangerous.