Review · Men's & Prostate
TC24
A $146 prostate supplement sold on affiliate hype, not evidence. Until the label is disclosed and the claims are substantiated, this is a bet you're likely to lose.
Skeptic read
Avoid2.8/10
A $146 prostate supplement sold on affiliate hype, not evidence. Until the label is disclosed and the claims are substantiated, this is a bet you're likely to lose.
- Price checked
- $146
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page lists zero ingredients, zero dosages, zero clinical references — you're buying a black box for $146
- Better use case
- Someone willing to gamble $146 on an unlabeled supplement, read the label after delivery, and potentially use the refund window if the formula is weak
- Skip if
- You want to know what you're swallowing before you pay — the label is the bare minimum, and TC24 doesn't show it
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What TC24 actually is
A men’s prostate supplement sold through ClickBank at $146 per bottle, pitched almost entirely in the language of affiliate marketing. The sales page doesn’t tell you what’s in it. It tells you how well it converts.
That’s not a mistake. That’s a strategy. The product is being sold to affiliates first, and to end users second. The pitch — “converting like crazy to men’s traffic,” “$100 million+ in supplement sales,” “from the creators of Nitric Boost” — is a recruitment ad for people who will sell the product, not a clinical argument for people who will take it.
None of that means TC24 is empty. It means you, the buyer, are being asked to pay $146 for a bottle of something you cannot evaluate before purchase. No ingredient list. No Supplement Facts panel. No dosages. No mechanism of action. Just a promise, a price tag, and a refund window.
What you actually get
Three things:
- One bottle of TC24. The size, capsule count, and formula are unknown until the mail arrives. That’s the core of the problem.
- Digital bonuses. The sales funnel likely includes upsells or PDFs — common in this category — but the sales page doesn’t detail them. Assume they’re filler unless proven otherwise.
- A 60-day ClickBank refund window. This is the only real safety net. If you open the bottle, read the label, and find saw palmetto dust at 10x the pharmacy price, you can request a refund. ClickBank processes it, not the vendor, which is why the window is credible.
How the marketing oversells
The entire pitch is built on affiliate metrics, not product ones. “Gravity 10.0” means affiliates are making sales. “$146.28 average payout” means the commission is high enough to attract them. “$100 million+ in supplement sales” is a team credential — it tells you they know how to sell supplements, not that they know how to formulate them.
The line “from the creators of Nitric Boost” is doing heavy lifting. Nitric Boost is a nitric oxide supplement — a different category with different biochemistry. A good sales record there doesn’t make this prostate formula effective. It makes it marketable.
What it costs and how the refund works
$146 one-time, with no recurring billing surfaced at the cart on the date above. That’s a premium price for a prostate supplement. For comparison, a month’s supply of high-quality saw palmetto (standardized to 85–95% fatty acids) runs $15–$25. Beta-sitosterol, the most studied prostate ingredient, is $20–$40. TC24 costs 3–7x that, with zero disclosed evidence it contains either.
The refund is processed through ClickBank, not the vendor. Email support with your order ID inside 60 days. The vendor can’t block it, though they may make you jump through a return-authentication hoop. We’ve watched this work on dozens of ClickBank products. It’s the only reason to even consider buying a black-box supplement.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
“Converting like crazy to men’s traffic.” — This is an affiliate-recruitment claim. It means the sales page is good at getting men to click “buy.” It says nothing about whether the product works.
“$100 million+ in supplement sales.” — Total team sales across all products, not TC24 sales. It’s a pedigree claim, not a performance claim.
“NEW Prostate Offer – PROMOTE NOW.” — The urgency is aimed at affiliates, not patients. Prostate health doesn’t have a launch window. Your prostate doesn’t care about the marketing calendar.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you’re comfortable gambling $146 on a supplement you can’t vet, with the intention of inspecting the label on arrival and refunding if the formula doesn’t match the price. That’s a rational use of the refund window, but it’s a hassle.
Skip this if you want to know what you’re taking before you pay. There are dozens of prostate supplements with published labels, third-party testing, and clinical evidence at a fraction of the cost. Start with Examine.com’s prostate health page, pick a formula with beta-sitosterol or saw palmetto at a known dose, and pay $30 instead of $146.
Skip this if the marketing language alone sets off your bullshit detector. It should.
The honest read
TC24 is a bet placed in the dark. The sales page asks you to trust a team that knows how to sell, not a team that’s shown you what’s in the bottle. At $146, that’s an expensive bet — and the only thing that makes it tolerable is the 60-day refund window.
If you’re curious, buy it, open it immediately, photograph the label, and compare it to the evidence. If the ingredients and dosages aren’t worth $146, refund it. If the vendor makes that difficult, report back — we track that.
But if you’re asking whether this product is likely to outperform what you can buy at the pharmacy for a third of the price, the answer is no. Not because it’s definitely bad — because it’s definitely unknown.
— Rhett Calder
Here's what I'd actually do
If the sales VSL got you to reach for your card before the ingredient panel got you to ask any questions:
Close this tab. TC24 - NEW Prostate Offer - PROMOTE NOW 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 are using it to skip the conversation with your primary-care doctor. The thing the marketing is hinting at is the thing a 15-minute appointment with bloodwork would resolve.
— 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- What's actually in TC24?
- We don't know. The sales page doesn't list ingredients, dosages, or a Supplement Facts panel. Until the vendor publishes that, any guess about efficacy is just that.
- Is TC24 a scam?
- Not necessarily — a product will probably ship. But selling a $146 supplement with no disclosed ingredients and no clinical evidence is a classic 'hope and a bottle' play. The refund window is your only real protection.
- How does the refund work?
- ClickBank handles refunds, not the vendor. Email support with your order ID within 60 days and you'll typically get your money back in 3–7 business days. We've verified this on other ClickBank products, but it's not a guarantee the vendor won't fight it — though they rarely win.
- Does Nitric Boost's success mean TC24 will work?
- No. Nitric Boost is a nitric oxide booster; prostate supplements work through different mechanisms (5-alpha-reductase inhibition, anti-inflammatory pathways). A good track record in one category doesn't translate to another without evidence.