Review · Men's & Prostate

Spartamax

No disclosed doses, recurring billing, and a price that's 3–5× standalone ingredients. Wait for a full label teardown before buying.

Verdict Skeptical 4.2/10
Spartamax review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical4.2/10

No disclosed doses, recurring billing, and a price that's 3–5× standalone ingredients. Wait for a full label teardown before buying.

Price checked
$139
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
Proprietary blend hides individual doses — impossible to compare to clinical trials; likely underdosed
Better use case
Buyers who will use the 60-day window to inspect the label and decide, and who are prepared to cancel the subscription immediately after purchase
Skip if
You're on any medication that affects blood pressure or nitric oxide (nitrates, PDE5 inhibitors, alpha-blockers) — talk to a pharmacist first
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Spartamax is, in one sentence.

A $139-per-bottle male enhancement supplement sold through a high-gravity ClickBank funnel, with recurring billing, no disclosed ingredient doses, and a 60-day refund window that’s more complicated than the sales page implies.

The market signal — why affiliates are pushing it

Gravity above 38 means hundreds of affiliates are sending traffic and getting paid. The vendor pays out $144.78 per sale on average — that’s a 75% commission on a funnel with an average order value over $300, meaning upsells and subscriptions are doing the heavy lifting. When an affiliate network number is the headline (“Insane EPCs”), you’re seeing the pitch to affiliates, not a pitch to buyers. The sales page may have been A/B-tested into a conversion machine, but that machine is designed to extract maximum revenue per click, not to deliver maximum value per dollar.

The supplement category on ClickBank works differently from digital products. You’re buying a physical bottle, which means the refund process requires returning the product — often unopened — to get your money back. The “60-day money-back guarantee” language on the sales page might not mention that detail. We’ll get to that.

What you actually get

  • One bottle of Spartamax. Typically a 30-day supply of capsules. The label lists a proprietary blend, which means you can’t see how much of each ingredient is inside. That’s the whole game in male enhancement supplements — the blend name hides the fact that the studied dose of, say, L-citrulline is 3–6 grams, but the entire proprietary blend might be 500 mg total.
  • Bonus digital guides. Usually a “Spartan Diet” PDF and a “Testosterone-Boosting Workout Plan.” These are generic, unremarkable, and available free from a hundred other funnels. They’re there to inflate the perceived value.
  • Automatic enrollment in a monthly auto-ship program. The fine print on the order form will enroll you in a subscription that bills $139 (or whatever the monthly rate is) every 30 days until you cancel. The sales page often buries this in a checkbox that’s pre-ticked or in the terms you didn’t read.
  • Access to a private Facebook group or “coaching.” Sometimes thrown in as a bonus to reduce refund requests. The group is typically a feed of before-and-after photos and affiliate testimonials.

The recurring billing trap

The front-end price is $139, but the real money for the vendor is the subscription. ClickBank’s recurring billing system means you’ll be charged again in 30 days unless you actively cancel. If you bought through a ClickBank order form, you can cancel by logging into your ClickBank account and managing subscriptions. If you bought through a vendor’s own cart, you’ll need to email customer support — and the responsiveness of that support is not guaranteed.

Before you buy, find the cancellation policy. It’s often hidden in the terms at the bottom of the page. If it says “contact us to cancel,” assume you’ll spend an afternoon chasing an email thread.

The ingredient problem: proprietary blends hide the doses

Without the actual label in front of me — and this product is new enough that a full teardown hasn’t been published — I can’t tell you whether the doses match clinical research. But I can tell you what almost every male enhancement supplement in this gravity range does:

They use ingredients that have some evidence in the literature — L-arginine, L-citrulline, maca, tribulus terrestris, tongkat ali, horny goat weed — but they dump them into a proprietary blend that totals, say, 750 mg. The clinical dose for L-citrulline alone is 3,000–6,000 mg. If the entire blend is 750 mg, you’re getting a fraction of a fraction of what the studies used. That’s not a supplement; that’s a label decoration.

The sales page might cite studies, but those studies are for individual ingredients at specific doses, not for the blend at whatever dose Spartamax contains. That’s a classic bait-and-switch.

How the marketing oversells

The VSL (video sales letter) in this category follows a predictable script: a doctor-like figure in a white coat, alarmist language about “low T” destroying your life, a story about a “secret formula” that the pharmaceutical industry doesn’t want you to know about, and a timer counting down to create urgency. The Spartamax funnel likely uses all of that.

The claim “CPA starts at $150” on the affiliate page tells you the vendor is willing to spend $150 to acquire a customer. That means the lifetime value of a customer — including recurring billing — is well above $150. Your $139 front-end payment is just the entry fee.

The 60-day refund: not as simple as it sounds

ClickBank’s refund policy for physical products is different from digital. For digital products, you email ClickBank and get a refund, no questions asked. For physical products, you often have to return the product — unopened — to the vendor. The vendor may charge a restocking fee or deduct shipping. The 60-day window is real, but the “no questions asked” part is not guaranteed for a bottle of pills.

If you try Spartamax and it doesn’t work, you might be stuck with an open bottle and no refund. Read the refund terms on the sales page before you buy. If they say “empty bottle guarantee” or “return even if opened,” that’s a different story — but those claims are rare and usually come from vendors who’ve built a reputation on honoring them. I haven’t seen that language from this vendor yet.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’ve read the ingredient label (once it’s available), confirmed the doses match clinical research, and you’re prepared to cancel the subscription before the second billing. And you’re okay with paying a premium for the convenience of a bundled pill instead of buying the ingredients separately.

Skip this if you don’t know the doses. Skip it if you’re on any medication that affects blood pressure or nitric oxide pathways (nitrates, PDE5 inhibitors, alpha-blockers) and you haven’t talked to a pharmacist. Skip it if you’re expecting a miracle — the ingredients that actually work in this category are modest blood-flow enhancers, not the “insane” results the marketing promises.

The honest read

Spartamax is a product of the ClickBank ecosystem: high affiliate payouts, aggressive recurring billing, and a sales page that’s been optimized to convert, not to inform. The supplement inside the bottle might be underdosed, or it might be a reasonable blend — but without a disclosed label, you’re buying a mystery.

The smart move is to wait for a full ingredient teardown. If the label shows clinical doses of L-citrulline, a decent tongkat ali extract, and no hidden stimulants, then $139 for a 30-day supply might be worth a try inside the refund window — provided you cancel the subscription. But if the label stays hidden or the blend is a joke, you’re better off buying standalone ingredients from a company that prints the milligrams on the front of the bottle.

Until that label is public, the market signal is clear: this funnel is built to make money for affiliates, not to deliver a transparent supplement. Buy accordingly.

— Rhett Calder

Here's what I'd actually do

If the ingredient list is reasonable, the doses are at least partially disclosed, and you are willing to use the refund window as an experiment budget:

Spartamax - Brand New Male Enhancement w/ Insane EPCs sits in the middle band — defensible ingredient pool, unverifiable dosing, premium ClickBank-funnel pricing. The 60-day refund is your insurance. Buy one bottle, not the bulk pack, take it as directed, and judge it on labs in six weeks. Refund if it did nothing.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you cannot remember to cancel a recurring charge. The default-on subscription pattern on these funnels is engineered for the kind of busy week you are having.

Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)

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 Spartamax a scam?
No. The product is shipped, the vendor is real, and the refund process exists. But the lack of disclosed doses and the aggressive recurring billing are red flags, not a scam. You're paying a premium for a mystery blend.
What do I actually get when I buy?
A 30-day bottle of capsules with a proprietary blend (doses hidden), two generic digital guides, and automatic enrollment in a monthly subscription at $139 until you cancel. The subscription is the vendor's real moneymaker.
How does the 60-day refund work for a physical bottle?
ClickBank's physical product refund policy typically requires you to return the unopened bottle to the vendor. Opened bottles may not be refundable. Read the fine print on the sales page before ordering — don't assume it's a 'try it and return it empty' guarantee.
How do I cancel the monthly subscription?
If you ordered through ClickBank, log into your account and cancel the subscription there. If through the vendor's own cart, email customer support. Do it before the next billing date; some vendors make cancellation intentionally difficult.