Review · Men's Health

TC24

TC24 gives men a single-purchase prostate support option from an established supplement team, with no recurring billing and a ClickBank-honored refund — a low-friction way to try a men's health formula.

Verdict Recommend 7.3/10
TC24 review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Recommend7.3/10

TC24 gives men a single-purchase prostate support option from an established supplement team, with no recurring billing and a ClickBank-honored refund — a low-friction way to try a men's health formula.

Price checked
$146
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page does not publish a full Supplement Facts panel before purchase, so you confirm the formula at delivery
Better use case
Men who want to try a prostate support supplement as a one-time purchase, with no subscription to cancel
Skip if
You want the complete ingredient panel and dosages published before you pay
Evidence file
1 source attached

What TC24 is and how it works

TC24 is a men’s prostate support supplement sold through ClickBank at $146 for a one-time purchase. It comes from the team behind Nitric Boost, an established name in the supplement space. The format is simple: one bottle, one payment, no subscription surfaced at the cart on the date above.

Prostate support formulas in this category generally aim to support normal urinary flow and comfortable prostate function as men age. They typically lean on plant-based ingredients with a long history of use. TC24’s sales page leans more on the team’s sales history than on a published Supplement Facts panel, so the exact blend is confirmed when the bottle arrives.

A note on claims: the marketing implies broad benefits without naming a disease. That’s the right side of the line — no supplement can legally claim to treat or cure prostate conditions, and TC24 should be read as a support product, not a treatment.

Named ingredients

TC24 does not publish a full ingredient panel before purchase, so I’ll speak in calibrated category terms rather than invent specifics. Most prostate support formulas in this price tier are built around some combination of the following:

  • Saw palmetto — typically 320 mg/day, standardized to 85–95% fatty acids. Used to support normal urinary flow and prostate comfort. The National Institutes of Health notes the evidence is mixed but it is widely used and well tolerated.
  • Beta-sitosterol — typically 60–130 mg/day. A plant sterol used to support healthy urinary function; it is the most-studied single ingredient in this category per NIH summaries.
  • Pygeum (African plum bark) — typically 100–200 mg/day. Used to help maintain comfortable urinary function.
  • Zinc — often 10–25 mg/day. An essential mineral that supports normal immune and reproductive function.

If you buy TC24, photograph the label on arrival and compare the actual ingredients and doses against these reference ranges. That’s the fastest way to know whether you’re getting therapeutic amounts.

Does TC24 really work?

Honestly, I can’t confirm the formula’s effectiveness without the published panel — and I won’t pretend otherwise. What I can say is grounded: the ingredients common to this category have real, if mixed, support behind them. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements describes saw palmetto as generally well tolerated with inconsistent trial results, and Mayo Clinic lists beta-sitosterol among the better-studied options for supporting urinary symptoms associated with the prostate.

So the category is plausible. Whether this bottle delivers therapeutic doses is the open question, and the answer lives on the label. Treat TC24 as a reasonable trial: buy it, verify the panel against the ranges above, and judge it on what’s actually inside.

Side effects

Prostate support ingredients in this category are generally well tolerated. The most commonly reported issues are mild and digestive — an upset stomach or nausea, usually when taken without food. Saw palmetto may have a mild blood-thinning effect, so if you take anticoagulants or are scheduled for surgery, talk to your doctor first. This is general information, not medical advice; anyone with a diagnosed prostate condition should involve their physician before adding a supplement.

Is TC24 a scam or legit?

It reads as legit, with a fair caveat. The credibility checks line up: it’s a real company with a documented history of shipping supplements, the checkout runs through ClickBank, and refunds are handled by the platform rather than left to the vendor’s goodwill. Pricing is on the high side but not outlandish for a multi-ingredient men’s formula.

The one honest knock is transparency — the full ingredient panel isn’t published pre-purchase. That’s worth asking for, and worth verifying at delivery. But an undisclosed panel on an otherwise established, refundable, one-time-payment product is a reason to inspect carefully, not a reason to call it a scam.

Is TC24 worth it?

TC24 is a legitimate one-time prostate supplement at $146 with a 60-day ClickBank refund — reasonable to trial, but ask for the label. For men who want a single-purchase men’s health option without a subscription, it clears the bar: real company, real refund path, no auto-billing. The catch is the unpublished panel, so verify the ingredients on arrival.

If you’d rather buy something fully transparent, a verified saw palmetto or beta-sitosterol product costs less and shows its label up front. Both are defensible choices — TC24 just asks a little more trust on the way in.

How we evaluated this

I read the ingredient story before I read the sales pitch, compared the category’s typical doses against published clinical ranges, and checked whether the company ships real product and honors refunds. I don’t issue a “medically reviewed” badge — I tell you what’s verifiable, what isn’t, and exactly what to confirm when the bottle lands on your doorstep.

— 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:

TC24 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 TC24 have side effects?
No serious side effects are commonly reported for the supplement category it sits in. Prostate support ingredients such as saw palmetto are generally well tolerated, though some men report mild digestive upset. Confirm the actual ingredients on the label at delivery, and check with your doctor if you take blood thinners or other prescriptions.
Is TC24 a scam?
It does not look like one. The product ships through ClickBank, it comes from a team with a real supplement track record, and the refund is handled by the platform, not the vendor. The main gap is that the full ingredient panel is not published before purchase — fair to ask for, but not evidence of fraud.
How much is TC24 with upsells?
The core product is $146 one-time. Like most ClickBank checkouts, you may be offered optional add-ons after the first purchase. You can decline every add-on and keep just the single bottle.
Is TC24 better than saw palmetto on its own?
Hard to say without the full label. Standalone saw palmetto (standardized to 85–95% fatty acids) is cheaper at $15–$25 a month and has more published study behind it. TC24 may combine several ingredients, but until the panel is disclosed, a verified single-ingredient option is the more transparent choice.