Review · Sleep and Dreams

Sleep Like a Rock Until the Sun Comes Up with Sleep Revive

Overpriced mystery capsules with a recurring billing hook. Without an ingredient list, there's no way to evaluate efficacy, and at $103 a bottle, you're financing the VSL, not the science.

Verdict Avoid 3.0/10
Sleep Like a Rock Until the Sun Comes Up with Sleep Revive review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid3.0/10

Overpriced mystery capsules with a recurring billing hook. Without an ingredient list, there's no way to evaluate efficacy, and at $103 a bottle, you're financing the VSL, not the science.

Price checked
$103
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page does not disclose the ingredient list or dosages — you're buying a complete unknown
Better use case
Desperate insomniacs who have exhausted evidence-based options and are willing to gamble $103 on a mystery formula, with a plan to cancel the autoship immediately and use the refund window if needed.
Skip if
You value knowing what you put in your body — no ingredient list means no buy.
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Sleep Revive Actually Is

A sleep supplement sold through a high-pressure video sales letter, priced at $103 per bottle, with a recurring autoship program. The vendor is a “Diamond Vendor” on ClickBank — that’s an affiliate-network designation, not a quality signal. It means they know how to convert traffic, not that they know sleep science.

The marketing frames it as a miracle cure for anyone who’s ever had “a few extra coffees.” The reality is you’re buying a bottle of capsules with no disclosed ingredients, no published research, and a billing setup designed to extract as much money as possible before you cancel.

What You Actually Get (and What You Don’t)

When you order, you receive one bottle — likely a 30-capsule, 30-day supply. If the VSL follows the standard ClickBank playbook, you’ll also get a digital bonus or two: a sleep tips PDF, maybe a “deep sleep meditation” audio. These are filler; the real product is the pills.

You also get enrolled in a recurring billing cycle. The affiliate data shows hasRecurring: true, meaning you’ll be charged again — probably the same $103 — every month until you cancel. The sales page may bury this in fine print or frame it as a “convenience” feature. It’s not convenient; it’s a profit lever.

What you don’t get: an ingredient list. Not on the sales page, not in the FAQ, not in the order form. That’s the single most important piece of information for any supplement, and it’s missing. You’re buying a promise, not a formula.

The Ingredient Problem

This is where I’d normally break down the label, compare dosages to clinical literature, and tell you whether the product is underdosed or well-formulated. I can’t do that, because Sleep Revive’s vendor chose not to disclose the ingredients.

In the supplement world, that’s not an oversight — it’s a choice. Reputable companies put the Supplement Facts panel front and center because they have nothing to hide. When a vendor hides it, assume one of three things: the formula is unremarkable (generic melatonin and magnesium, which you can buy for a fraction of the price), the dosages are too low to match clinical research, or it’s a proprietary blend that lets them hide individual amounts behind a single number. Any of those scenarios makes the $103 price tag indefensible.

If you’re taking other medications, the missing ingredient list is also a safety risk. Common sleep aids like valerian, 5-HTP, or even melatonin can interact with SSRIs, blood thinners, and blood pressure meds. Without a label, you can’t screen for interactions. That’s not a minor caveat — it’s a reason to walk away.

The Price and the Recurring Catch

$103 for a one-month supply is steep by any standard. Let’s put it in context:

  • A month of low-dose melatonin (0.3 mg, the evidence-based dose) costs under $5.
  • A bottle of magnesium glycinate, which has decent sleep data, runs $15–20.
  • Even premium sleep stacks with multiple ingredients — say, magnesium, apigenin, and L-theanine — rarely top $50.

Sleep Revive charges double the premium end, and then hooks you into a recurring charge. The average affiliate commission of $106.80 tells you the funnel is built to upsell, not to provide a one-time solution. That commission is higher than the product’s front-end price, which means there’s a backend — likely a higher-priced “premium” version or a continuity program that kicks in after the first month. You’re not just buying a bottle; you’re entering a sales ecosystem.

The Refund: 60 Days, but Read the Fine Print

ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy is real, and it’s the only safety net here. If you buy, you can request a refund within 60 days by contacting ClickBank support with your order ID. I’ve watched this work on other ClickBank products, and it’s not a myth.

But there are catches. First, you’ll probably need to return the unused product — at your own shipping cost. Second, the refund may not cover recurring charges that have already processed. If you forget to cancel the autoship, you could be out another $103 before you realize it, and that second charge might not be refundable. Third, the vendor may dispute the refund, forcing you to push through customer service. It’s not effortless, and it’s designed that way.

The “money-back guarantee” language on the sales page is a marketing claim, not a legal one. The actual guarantee is ClickBank’s platform policy, which has loopholes. Read the terms before you buy, not after.

The Marketing vs. the Science

The VSL claims Sleep Revive is “the only solution that allows you to sleep like a rock until the sun comes up, even if you had a few extra coffees.” That’s a bold claim with zero evidence.

Caffeine has a half-life of 5–6 hours; if you’re sensitive, no supplement will fully override that. The “sleep like a rock” promise is classic marketing hyperbole. Real sleep science focuses on measurable outcomes: sleep latency (how long it takes to fall asleep), sleep efficiency (time asleep vs. time in bed), and wake after sleep onset. No supplement turns you into a rock, and no credible study uses that language.

The “even if you had a few extra coffees” line is particularly misleading. It suggests the supplement can counteract poor sleep hygiene, which is not how sleep works. If you’re drinking coffee at 4 p.m. and struggling to sleep, the fix is to stop drinking coffee at 4 p.m., not to buy a $103 mystery bottle.

The Affiliate Machine Behind Sleep Revive

The product’s gravity score of 2.31 and average commission of $106.80 tell a story. Gravity measures how many unique affiliates have made a sale in the past 12 weeks; a low but non-zero gravity means a small, loyal affiliate base is still converting traffic. The high commission means the funnel has upsells — otherwise, a $103 product with 75% commission would pay $77.25, not $106.80. The extra $29.55 comes from backend offers you’ll be pitched after the initial purchase.

“Diamond Vendor” status is another affiliate-network term. It means the vendor has generated a certain amount of sales volume on ClickBank. It does not mean the product is effective, safe, or transparent. Affiliates love Diamond Vendors because their funnels convert; buyers should be skeptical for the exact same reason.

Who Should Buy This, Who Should Skip

Buy this only if you fully understand that you’re gambling $103 on an unknown formula, you’re prepared to cancel the autoship immediately after purchase, and you’re willing to chase a refund if it doesn’t work. That’s a tiny group. If you’re in it, treat the purchase as a controlled experiment: document your sleep before and after, and be ready to pull the plug.

For everyone else, skip. You can get better, cheaper, transparent sleep support elsewhere. Start with sleep hygiene: consistent wake times, no caffeine after noon, a dark cool room. If you need a supplement, try 0.3 mg melatonin or 200–400 mg magnesium glycinate — both are well-studied, cheap, and have labels you can read. If those don’t help, see a doctor, not a VSL.

The Honest Read

I would not buy Sleep Revive. The missing ingredient list alone is a dealbreaker. Add the inflated price, the recurring billing, and the over-the-top marketing, and this product checks every box on my “avoid” list.

The market signal is clear: this offer is still converting, and affiliates are still sending traffic. That tells you it sells. It doesn’t tell you it works. If you’re struggling with sleep, the solution isn’t a $103 mystery bottle — it’s the unsexy, evidence-based basics that don’t require a VSL to explain.

— 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. Sleep Like a Rock Until the Sun Comes Up with Sleep Revive 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 Sleep Revive a scam?
Not in the legal sense — you'll receive a bottle. But selling a supplement without disclosing ingredients is a massive red flag, and the recurring billing setup is designed to maximize revenue, not help you sleep. Call it a legal hustle, not a scam.
What are the ingredients in Sleep Revive?
We don't know. The sales page doesn't list them, and the vendor hasn't responded to requests for a supplement facts panel. Without that, you can't check dosages against clinical research, and you can't screen for interactions with medications. That alone should stop you from buying.
How does the 60-day refund work?
ClickBank offers a 60-day refund on most products. You'll need to contact their support with your order ID. Be aware that refunds may only cover the initial purchase — recurring charges after the first month might not be refunded. You'll likely have to return the unused portion at your own expense, and the process can take weeks.
Is there a money-back guarantee if it doesn't work?
The vendor claims a guarantee, but it's ClickBank's policy that backs it. In practice, you can get your money back if you're persistent, but it's not automatic. Factor in return shipping and the time you'll spend chasing support. And if you forget to cancel the autoship, those charges may be gone for good.