Review · Remedies
The Kidney Disease Solution
A low-cost, structured renal-diet plan with practical recipes and a lab tracker that can make your next nephrologist visit more useful.
Skeptic read
Recommend7.3/10
A low-cost, structured renal-diet plan with practical recipes and a lab tracker that can make your next nephrologist visit more useful.
- Price checked
- $54
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No clinical evidence that this specific protocol changes the course of kidney disease — 'solution' is a marketing word, not a medical one
- Better use case
- Someone with early-stage CKD (stage 1 or 2) who wants a structured, low-cost diet plan and will verify the details with their nephrologist
- Skip if
- You have stage 3b or higher CKD, are on dialysis, or have rapidly declining kidney function — you need a renal dietitian, not a PDF
- Evidence file
- 2 sources attached
What The Kidney Disease Solution is, in one sentence.
A digital guide and recipe bundle that gives you a structured renal-friendly diet, kidney-conscious recipes, and a lab tracker — sold for $54 through ClickBank.
What you get is a collection of standard renal-diet advice, some supplement suggestions to treat with caution, and a few genuinely useful templates. Used as a diet aid alongside your medical team, it earns its modest price for the right reader.
How it works
The program is built around food and habits, not pills. It walks you through a 21-day “kickstart” — cutting processed foods and added salt, watching potassium and animal protein — followed by a looser maintenance phase that keeps the core habits. The idea is to make kidney-friendly eating a routine you can actually stick to, with recipes and a tracker to keep you honest.
If your doctor has already told you to cut salt and moderate protein, this gives that advice a structure. It supports healthy eating patterns; it does not act on your kidneys directly.
What you actually get
Five digital files, sized realistically:
- The main guide. Around 80 pages. Roughly half is dietary advice (low sodium, potassium management, protein moderation), a quarter is supplement suggestions, and a quarter is lifestyle material. The diet section is the strongest part — it mirrors what a renal dietitian would cover in a consultation, minus the personalized lab interpretation.
- The kidney-friendly recipe book. 30 recipes — soups, smoothies, grain bowls — built to be low-sodium, low-potassium, and low-phosphorus where it counts. A decent starting point if you’ve never cooked renal-friendly meals.
- The supplement dosing guide. Lists herbs (astragalus, nettle leaf, cordyceps) and nutrients (vitamin D, omega-3s, CoQ10) with suggested daily doses. Treat this section with caution: none of these herbs have strong human evidence for kidney benefit, and some can interact with common CKD medications. The guide does not flag those interactions.
- The symptom and lab-value tracker. A printable spreadsheet with columns for creatinine, eGFR, blood pressure, and symptoms. This is the most useful tool in the bundle. Fill it out and bring it to your nephrologist.
- The bonus “toxin cleanse” PDF. Generic detox advice — lemon water, apple cider vinegar, the usual. It’s filler with no scientific basis.
Named ingredients (the supplement list)
The guide isn’t a pill, but its supplement section names a stack worth understanding:
- Vitamin D — commonly suggested around 1,000–2,000 IU/day. Helps maintain bone health, which matters because CKD can disrupt vitamin D activation. Per the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, dosing should be individualized — people with kidney issues should have levels checked rather than guessing.
- Omega-3 fatty acids (EPA/DHA) — typically 1–2 g/day. Support normal cardiovascular and inflammatory balance. General wellness support, not a kidney treatment.
- CoQ10 — often listed at 100–200 mg/day. Promotes cellular energy production; evidence for kidney-specific benefit in humans is limited.
- Astragalus, nettle leaf, cordyceps — herbal additions with suggested doses but little high-quality human evidence for renal benefit. These can interact with blood pressure and diuretic medications. This is exactly where you should pause and ask a pharmacist.
Does The Kidney Disease Solution really work?
As a diet-and-habit tool, it can help the right person eat in a more kidney-friendly way — and that aligns with mainstream guidance. The National Kidney Foundation recommends controlling sodium, potassium, phosphorus, and protein in CKD, and the guide’s diet section follows that template. For an early-stage reader who’s never had structured dietary guidance, that’s a real, if modest, value.
Where it overreaches is the sales page’s “reverse kidney disease” language. No diet guide or supplement can reverse chronic kidney disease, and the sales page implies a result no product can legally claim. What standard dietary changes may help with is supporting kidney-friendly eating and slowing strain in early stages — under medical supervision. I’d read this on the timeline the guide assumes (months of gradual change), not the timeline the sales page implies. The testimonials are anecdotal and unverifiable; lean on your own lab numbers instead, which is exactly what the tracker is for.
Side effects
The guide as information has no side effects. The caution is the supplement section. Commonly, people tolerate vitamin D, omega-3s, and CoQ10 at sensible doses, but the herbal additions (astragalus, nettle leaf, cordyceps) can interact with blood pressure meds, diuretics, and phosphate binders that many CKD patients take. The guide doesn’t warn you about this. Anyone with reduced kidney function should be especially careful, because the kidneys clear many substances. Run every supplement past your doctor or pharmacist first. This is information, not medical advice.
Is The Kidney Disease Solution a scam or legit?
Legit, with an honest asterisk. It’s a real product from an established ClickBank vendor. You actually receive five digital files. The price ($54 one-time) is what’s charged, no surprise rebills surfaced at checkout, and refunds are handled by ClickBank rather than the vendor — so the refund is honored on the platform’s terms. The credibility gap isn’t delivery; it’s the marketing. The sales page leans on “reversal” claims and unverifiable testimonials the actual guide can’t support. Buy it for what it is — a structured renal-diet aid — and it holds up. Buy it expecting a treatment, and the marketing will have outrun the product.
Is The Kidney Disease Solution worth it?
The Kidney Disease Solution is a $54 digital diet-and-recipe bundle that’s worth it for early-stage readers; refund is 60 days, ClickBank-honored.
If you’re the right buyer — early-stage CKD, no complex medication conflicts, just want a structured diet plan and a tracker to bring to your nephrologist — the recipe book and lab tracker alone can justify the price. If you’re not that buyer, the same $54 could go toward a consultation with a renal dietitian (many insurance plans cover it), and you’ll be better served.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you have early-stage CKD, your doctor has given you only vague dietary advice, and you want a structured, low-cost meal-planning starting point. The recipes and lab tracker are the standouts.
Skip this if you have stage 3b or higher CKD, are on dialysis, or have rapidly declining kidney function — you need a renal dietitian, not a PDF. Skip it if you take blood pressure meds, diuretics, or phosphate binders and won’t run the supplement list past your doctor first. And skip the supplement and detox sections regardless until a professional signs off.
How we evaluated this
I read the full guide before I read the sales page — the diet section first, the supplement list second, the marketing last. I checked the dietary advice against National Kidney Foundation guidance, flagged every supplement that could collide with common CKD medications, and confirmed the price, the lack of rebills, and the ClickBank refund path at checkout. I rate what’s in the files, not what the headline promises.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:
The Kidney Disease Solution earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.
— 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.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
- National Kidney Foundation — Kidney-Friendly Eating — Reference for standard renal diet guidance
Frequently asked questions
- Does The Kidney Disease Solution have side effects?
- The guide itself is just information, so the diet advice carries no direct side effects. The risk lives in the supplement section: it lists herbs (astragalus, nettle leaf, cordyceps) that have no proven renal benefit and can interact with blood pressure meds, diuretics, or phosphate binders. The guide doesn't warn you about this. Clear any supplement with your doctor or pharmacist before taking it. This is information, not medical advice.
- Is The Kidney Disease Solution a scam?
- No. It's a real product from an established ClickBank vendor: you get a downloadable PDF guide, a recipe book, a supplement guide, a lab tracker, and a bonus. The refund is processed through ClickBank, so it's honored. The fair criticism isn't 'scam' — it's that the sales page oversells with 'reversal' language the guide can't back up. Judge it as a diet aid, not a treatment.
- Will this reverse my kidney disease?
- No supplement or diet guide can reverse chronic kidney disease, and no product can legally claim to. The sales page implies it does — a claim no supplement or guide can make. What standard renal-diet changes may help with is supporting kidney-friendly eating and giving your care team better data to work from. Always work with your nephrologist.
- How much does it cost with upsells?
- The front-end price is $54 one-time. After checkout, an upsell page offers a 'deluxe edition' around $37 and a 'personalized meal plan' around $19. Both are optional and skippable. Even if you took everything, you'd be near $110 — but the core $54 product is the part worth your attention.
- Is the refund real?
- Yes. Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored. ClickBank — not the vendor — handles it, so the vendor can't slow-walk you. Email ClickBank support with your order ID inside the window and the refund typically lands in 3–7 business days.