Review · Other Supplements
The Neuro Wave
A $29 digital nerve-pain guide with no verifiable credentials and a sales page that speaks to affiliates, not buyers. The 60-day refund window is real, but so is the risk of delaying proper diagnosis.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.5/10
A $29 digital nerve-pain guide with no verifiable credentials and a sales page that speaks to affiliates, not buyers. The 60-day refund window is real, but so is the risk of delaying proper diagnosis.
- Price checked
- $29
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No medical credentials shown for the author — nerve pain demands a real diagnosis, not a PDF
- Better use case
- Someone with mild, undiagnosed tingling who wants a low-risk, refundable read before seeing a doctor
- Skip if
- You have diagnosed neuropathy, diabetes-related nerve damage, or any progressive numbness — see a specialist, not a PDF
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What The Neuro Wave is, in one sentence.
A $29 digital bundle — likely a PDF guide and a few videos — that claims to address nerve pain through something called the “neuro wave” method. The sales page is written primarily to recruit affiliates, not to explain what you’re buying.
The gravity on this offer is 1.02. That’s low. It means very few affiliates are successfully selling it, and the ones who try aren’t making many sales. In the ClickBank ecosystem, that’s a signal: either the product doesn’t convert well, or the market has already seen enough nerve-pain offers to know they’re thin. Either way, the gravity number tells you more about the offer’s health than any testimonial on the page.
What you actually get
This is where the review gets uncomfortable. The vendor doesn’t publish a clear list of deliverables. The sales page (stopneuropain.com) is a classic VSL-style pitch with urgency triggers, and the affiliate tools page is even less buyer-friendly — its first bullet is “Get 1 sale to get bumped to 85% full funnel.” That’s not a consumer-facing promise; it’s an affiliate recruitment line.
From the structure of the pitch and the niche, the bundle likely includes:
- A main PDF guide, probably 50–80 pages, walking through the “neuro wave” approach.
- A set of video modules — 3 to 5, unverified in length or production quality.
- A dietary protocol, almost certainly an anti-inflammatory eating plan you can find for free on WebMD.
- An exercise routine, likely low-impact nerve-gliding movements that physical therapists teach in one session.
- Access to a private Facebook group or similar, where engagement is impossible to verify before buying.
Is any of that worth $29? Possibly, if the videos are well-produced and the guidance is practical. But you won’t know until after you pay, and the sales page doesn’t help you decide.
How the marketing oversells
Two things stand out immediately.
First, the affiliate tools page — which is the only detailed product-facing page we could find — is written for the people selling the product, not the people buying it. The headline benefit is getting bumped to an 85% commission after your first sale. That tells you the vendor’s priority is recruiting affiliates, not helping customers.
Second, the nerve-pain niche is crowded with digital offers that all follow the same template: a scary VSL about “nerve damage,” a proprietary-sounding method (often a single word like “wave” or “pulse”), a set of exercises and diet tips, and a price point under $50. The content is rarely original. More often, it’s repackaged physical therapy, anti-inflammatory nutrition, and stress reduction — all good things, but not worth $29 when you can get them from a free YouTube channel or a single visit to a physical therapist.
What it costs and how the refund works
$29 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced on the date of this review. The refund is handled by ClickBank, not the vendor, which means you email ClickBank support within 60 days, give them your order ID, and the money comes back in under a week. That process is real and we’ve verified it across dozens of ClickBank products.
So the financial risk is low. The bigger risk is wasting time and emotional energy on a method that might not work, and delaying real medical care if your nerve pain has an underlying cause.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
“Get 1 sale to get bumped to 85% full funnel.” — This isn’t a buyer benefit. It’s an affiliate incentive. If a product’s own promotional page leads with how much money you can make selling it, the product itself is secondary.
“Brand new digital nerve offer.” — “Brand new” often means untested, unvetted, and unrevised. The low gravity suggests the market agrees.
Any testimonials on the sales page — we can’t verify them. ClickBank allows a wide range of marketing claims, and nerve-pain offers frequently use anonymous “former sufferers” whose stories can’t be checked.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you have mild, occasional tingling and you’re curious enough to spend $29 on something you’ll read with a skeptical eye, knowing you can refund it. If you do buy, set a calendar alert for day 55 and decide then.
Skip this if you have diagnosed neuropathy, diabetes, or any progressive numbness. Nerve pain is a symptom, not a diagnosis, and a PDF won’t tell you whether you have a compressed nerve, an autoimmune condition, or a vitamin deficiency. The cost of delaying a real workup is higher than $29.
Also skip if you’ve bought similar digital guides before. The pattern is consistent: a scary video, a proprietary name, a handful of stretches, and an anti-inflammatory diet. You already have that information.
The honest read
The Neuro Wave is a low-gravity digital offer in a niche that thrives on fear and hope. The refund window is real, so you can’t lose money if you’re disciplined. But you can lose time, and you can lose the window for early treatment if you take the sales page at its word.
The affiliate-first marketing is the biggest red flag. When a product’s own vendor page talks about commissions before it talks about outcomes, the buyer is the product — not the beneficiary.
If you’re looking for nerve pain relief, start with a neurologist or a physical therapist. If you want a $29 experiment you can refund, fine. But treat this like a pamphlet, not a prescription.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you have already read the label and you are willing to test it for six weeks against your own lab work, not against how you feel:
The Neuro Wave - Digital Nerve Pain Offer 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 would not also pay for a basic metabolic panel to test whether it did anything. Without labs, you cannot tell the supplement from the placebo from the regression-to-the-mean.
— 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)
Frequently asked questions
- Is The Neuro Wave a scam?
- Not in the sense that you'll get nothing. You'll receive digital files. But the marketing is built to recruit affiliates, not to honestly describe a clinically validated solution. 'Scam' is a strong word — 'overpromising underdelivered' is more accurate.
- What exactly do I get when I buy?
- The vendor doesn't publish a detailed table of contents on the sales page. Based on similar offers, expect a PDF guide, a few videos, and some bonus reports. The exact contents aren't verifiable until after purchase — which is why the refund window matters.
- Does the 60-day refund really work?
- Yes. ClickBank handles refunds, not the vendor. You email ClickBank with your order ID, and the refund processes in 3–7 business days. There's no hassle from the vendor because they never touch the refund request.
- Can this cure my nerve pain?
- Unlikely. Nerve pain has many causes — diabetes, compression, autoimmune disorders — and no single digital guide can address them all. If the guide includes gentle exercises and diet advice, it might help manage symptoms, but 'cure' is a word the sales page probably uses and you should ignore.