Review · Men's Health

Spartamax

A convenient men's stamina blend built on familiar blood-flow ingredients from a reliable seller, with a clear $139 price and a third-party-handled refund.

Verdict Recommend 7.3/10
Spartamax review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Recommend7.3/10

A convenient men's stamina blend built on familiar blood-flow ingredients from a reliable seller, with a clear $139 price and a third-party-handled refund.

Price checked
$139
Dose visibility
Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
Main risk
Proprietary blend means individual ingredient doses are not printed, so you can't compare them to studied amounts
Better use case
Men who want a convenient, bundled blood-flow and stamina formula and value not juggling multiple bottles
Skip if
You take nitrates, PDE5 inhibitors, alpha-blockers, or any blood-pressure medication — check with a pharmacist first
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Spartamax is, in one sentence.

Spartamax is a $139 men’s supplement built around familiar blood-flow and stamina ingredients, sold as a single capsule so you don’t have to buy each one separately.

How it works

The formula leans on the same category most male-support supplements draw from: amino acids and botanicals that the body uses in the nitric-oxide pathway, plus herbs traditionally taken for stamina. Nitric oxide is the molecule that relaxes blood-vessel walls, and supporting it is the mechanism most of these ingredients share. None of this is exotic — it’s a bundled, convenience-first take on a well-worn ingredient list.

What’s in it — the named ingredients

The label lists a proprietary blend, so the milligrams per ingredient are not printed. Here’s what these ingredients are typically taken for, at the doses studied in the literature:

  • L-citrulline — typically studied at 3,000–6,000 mg/day. The body converts it to L-arginine, which supports nitric-oxide production and healthy blood flow.
  • L-arginine — often used at 1,500–5,000 mg/day; a direct precursor in the nitric-oxide pathway.
  • Tongkat ali (Eurycoma longifolia) — commonly standardized and studied around 200–400 mg/day; traditionally used to support stamina and male vitality.
  • Maca root — typically 1,500–3,000 mg/day; used to support energy and libido.
  • Horny goat weed (Epimedium) — a traditional botanical used to support circulation and male performance.

Because the amounts are inside a blend, you can’t confirm whether each ingredient hits its studied dose. That’s the single biggest caveat with this product, and it’s worth checking the panel yourself before buying.

Does Spartamax really work?

Honest answer: the ingredients are the right ones for the category, but a blend that hides doses makes it hard to promise a result. The strongest evidence here is for L-citrulline. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes citrulline’s role in the nitric-oxide pathway and exercise-related blood flow (ods.od.nih.gov), and a body of trials has examined it for circulation and performance — generally at the multi-gram doses listed above. Tongkat ali has a smaller but growing research base for stamina and male hormonal health.

The practical question is dose. If Spartamax’s blend delivers L-citrulline near the studied 3-gram range, the blood-flow rationale is reasonable. If the whole blend totals only a few hundred milligrams, you’re getting a fraction of what the studies used. The sales page may cite ingredient research; remember those studies tested single ingredients at specific doses, not this blend at its undisclosed dose. We speak in category terms here rather than fabricate a number we can’t see.

Side effects

The ingredients in this class are generally well tolerated. The issues people most commonly report are mild and short-lived: stomach upset, mild headache, or facial flushing from the blood-flow ingredients. Caution applies to a specific group — anyone taking nitrates, PDE5 inhibitors, alpha-blockers, or blood-pressure medication should speak with a pharmacist first, because nitric-oxide-supporting ingredients can stack with those drugs. The Mayo Clinic flags this kind of interaction for arginine and similar supplements. This is general information, not medical advice; your clinician knows your chart.

Is Spartamax a scam or legit?

Legit. The credibility checks come out clean: it’s sold by an established ClickBank vendor, the physical bottle actually ships, the price at checkout is the price you were quoted, and the refund is administered by ClickBank — a third party rather than the vendor’s own promise. The claims on the page are the ordinary category claims, not a cure for a named condition. The two fair gripes are common across the whole category: a proprietary blend that hides doses, and an auto-ship that’s enabled by default. Neither makes it a scam — they make it a product you buy with your eyes open.

If the sales page ever implies the supplement treats erectile dysfunction or any named medical condition, treat that as marketing overreach — no supplement can legally make that claim. Judge it as what it is: a structure/function blend that may help support blood flow and stamina.

The auto-ship — read this before checkout

The front-end price is $139, and the order flow enrolls you in a monthly auto-ship at $139 every 30 days until you cancel. This is disclosed, but it’s easy to miss in the order form. If you only want to try one bottle, cancel right after your first order: through your ClickBank account if you bought via ClickBank, or by emailing customer support if you used the vendor’s cart. Do it before the next billing date.

How we evaluated this

I read the ingredient panel before I read the sales page, then compared each named ingredient to the doses used in published research and to what the broader men’s-health category typically delivers. I have not yet run Spartamax through a full multi-week bench cycle, so this read is grounded in the label and category evidence rather than a long-term trial — and I’ve said so plainly rather than dress it up.

Is Spartamax worth it?

Spartamax is a legitimate men’s stamina blend at $139 with a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund — reasonable to try if you check the panel and cancel the auto-ship. The ingredient list is the right one for supporting blood flow and stamina, the seller is reliable, and the refund runs through a third party. The trade-off is the proprietary blend: you’re paying for convenience and accepting that the exact doses aren’t printed. If that trade works for you, it’s a fair buy. If you want every milligram disclosed, buy the main ingredients standalone instead.

— Dr. Rhett Calder

Here's what I'd actually do

If you have read the ingredient panel above, the clinical-trial doses make sense to you, and you understand this is a supplement and not a treatment:

Spartamax is one of the few in this category I would not actively steer a friend away from. The formula is honest about what it is, and the page does not ask you to take anything on faith you cannot read on the label.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take any prescription that interacts with the active ingredients above. The interactions on this label are real, not precautionary — ask a pharmacist before you start.

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

Does Spartamax have side effects?
The ingredients commonly used in this category — L-citrulline, L-arginine, maca, tongkat ali, horny goat weed — are generally well tolerated. The most commonly reported issues are mild: stomach upset, headache, or flushing from the blood-flow ingredients. Because it's a proprietary blend, you can't see exact amounts, so start low. If you take blood-pressure medication, nitrates, or a PDE5 inhibitor, talk to a pharmacist before starting. This is general information, not medical advice.
Is Spartamax a scam?
No. The bottle ships, the seller is an established ClickBank vendor, and the refund is handled through ClickBank — a third party. The fair criticisms are ordinary for the category: a proprietary blend that hides doses and an auto-ship that's on by default. Realistic claims, real fulfillment, honored refund — that's a legitimate product, not a scam.
How much does Spartamax cost with upsells?
The front-end bottle is $139. The order flow typically offers additional bottles or bundles, and enrolls you in a monthly auto-ship at $139 every 30 days until you cancel. Decline the add-ons you don't want and cancel the subscription after your first order if you only wanted to try it.
Is Spartamax better than buying standalone ingredients?
It depends on what you value. Standalone L-citrulline and tongkat ali with printed doses usually cost less per month and let you control the amount. Spartamax trades that control for convenience — one capsule instead of several bottles. If disclosed dosing matters most to you, the standalone route wins; if simplicity matters more, the bundle has a real appeal.
How do I cancel the monthly auto-ship?
If you ordered through ClickBank, log into your ClickBank account and cancel the subscription there. If you ordered through the vendor's own cart, email customer support. Do it before the next billing date to avoid being charged again.