Review · Other Supplements
The Stem Cell Solution
A $67 supplement with no disclosed ingredients, riding stem-cell hype. The refund is real, but the product isn't worth the gamble.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.5/10
A $67 supplement with no disclosed ingredients, riding stem-cell hype. The refund is real, but the product isn't worth the gamble.
- Price checked
- $67
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Sales page does not disclose the full ingredient list or dosages — that's a dealbreaker for a supplement
- Better use case
- Curious buyers with $67 to risk, who will actually use the refund window if they're not satisfied
- Skip if
- You expect a supplement to list what's in it and at what dose
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What The Stem Cell Solution is, in one sentence.
A $67 bottle of capsules sold on ClickBank with stem-cell buzzwords and no disclosed ingredient list, backed by a 60-day refund window that ClickBank—not the vendor—honors.
The marketing positions it as a breakthrough for stem cell health. The sales page at stemcellsolution.info avoids saying what’s actually inside. That gap is the entire review.
What you actually get
Three things, realistically:
- One bottle of capsules. A 30-day supply, according to the order form. The label isn’t shown on the sales page, so you won’t know what you swallowed until the bottle arrives.
- A digital PDF guide. Some versions of the funnel mention a companion guide with “stem cell activation protocols.” Whether that’s a real document or a single-page upsell depends on the day you order. We couldn’t confirm a consistent deliverable.
- The ClickBank refund safety net. 60 days from purchase, you can get your money back. ClickBank processes it, not the vendor, so the vendor can’t slow-walk you. If the product is physical, you’ll need to return the bottle, and you’ll eat the return shipping.
The ingredient problem
This is where the review gets short. A dietary supplement that doesn’t list its ingredients on the sales page is asking you to buy on faith, not on evidence. We checked the vendor site, the order form, and the affiliate page. None of them show a Supplement Facts panel.
That matters because stem-cell support claims are almost always tied to a handful of ingredients—things like resveratrol, quercetin, curcumin, or certain herbal extracts that show modest effects on stem cell proliferation in petri dishes or mice. The problem is that the doses used in those studies rarely match what ends up in a capsule, and the oral bioavailability is often terrible.
If The Stem Cell Solution contains any of those ingredients, it’s not telling you how much. That means you can’t compare it to the clinical literature. You can’t know if you’re getting a meaningful dose or a sprinkle. You can’t even rule out that the bottle contains nothing more than a multivitamin with a fancy label.
I would not buy a supplement that hides its label. That’s not a supplement; that’s a mystery box.
How the marketing oversells
The vendor’s pitch to affiliates is the most honest thing about this product. It says: “Extremely profitable EPC’s as high as $5.50. Works on all types of Health Traffic.” Translation: this offer converts well enough that affiliates can make money sending traffic to it. That’s a statement about the funnel, not about the pill.
The consumer-facing sales page leans on stem-cell imagery and vague promises of rejuvenation. It doesn’t cite a single clinical trial. It doesn’t name a single researcher. It uses the phrase “stem cell” the way energy drinks use “extreme”—as a vibe, not a mechanism.
The low gravity (0.65) tells you that very few affiliates are currently selling it. That could mean the product is new, or it could mean affiliates tested it, saw the refund rates, and walked away. We don’t know which, but we know the number is small.
What it costs and how the refund works
$67 one-time at the front-end checkout. No recurring billing surfaced on the date of this review. The upsell page after checkout may offer additional products; we didn’t complete a purchase, so we can’t confirm what those are or what they cost.
The refund is through ClickBank. You email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days, and the refund hits in 3–7 business days. For physical products, you’ll likely need to return the unused portion. The vendor’s site doesn’t spell out the return process, but ClickBank’s standard policy applies: you get your purchase price back, not the shipping, and you pay to send the bottle back.
This is a real safety net, but it’s not frictionless. You’re out the return shipping and the time you spent waiting for a bottle that didn’t disclose what was in it.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Three claims to be skeptical of:
“EPC’s as high as $5.50.” — Earnings per click, an affiliate metric. It tells you the funnel converts well for the right traffic. It tells you nothing about whether the supplement works. Affiliates read this line correctly; buyers should ignore it.
“Works on all types of Health Traffic.” — Means the sales page is broad enough to convert across different audiences. That’s a funnel design claim, not a product quality claim. A well-designed sales page can sell a bad supplement just as easily as a good one.
“Bestselling Stem Cell Health Supplement.” — Bestselling where? On ClickBank? At a gravity of 0.65, it’s not even in the top 100 of its own category. The word “bestselling” is doing work here that the numbers don’t support.
The risk you’re actually taking
The obvious risk is that you spend $67 on a bottle of capsules that don’t do anything. But the bigger risk is that you take a supplement with unknown ingredients and unknown doses. If the formula contains something you’re allergic to, or something that interacts with a medication you’re taking, you won’t know until it’s in your system.
Stem-cell-support supplements sometimes include ingredients like astragalus or blueberry extract, which are generally safe. But they can also include things like high-dose resveratrol, which can interact with blood thinners. Without a label, you’re guessing.
This is not a theoretical concern. It’s the reason the FDA requires Supplement Facts panels. A vendor that hides the label on the sales page is either careless or deliberately opaque. Neither is reassuring.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you’re willing to treat $67 as the price of curiosity, you’ll open the bottle and read the label immediately, and you’ll request a refund on day 55 if the ingredients don’t check out. That’s a narrow window, and it’s the only window where this purchase makes sense.
Skip this if you want a supplement you can research before you buy. Skip it if you’re on any medication and can’t afford to gamble with an unknown formula. Skip it if you believe the phrase “stem cell solution” implies a level of scientific rigor that this product almost certainly doesn’t have.
The honest read
The Stem Cell Solution is a $67 bet that you won’t ask what’s in the bottle. The refund window is real, and that’s the only reason this review isn’t a flat “avoid.” If you have $67 you don’t need for two months, and you’re genuinely curious, you can buy it, read the label, and decide. Most people will find that the label reveals a generic blend of polyphenols and herbs that you can get elsewhere for $20, with doses too low to match the studies the marketing vaguely gestures at.
The market signal is weak: low gravity, no ingredient transparency, and an affiliate pitch that talks about EPCs instead of outcomes. That’s not a supplement I’d recommend to anyone I care about.
I would not buy this.
— Mara Vance
Here's what I'd actually do
If you opened this at 11 pm and the page made the supplement look like an answer to something larger:
Close this tab. The Stem Cell Solution 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 have a diagnosed condition that this product is implicitly addressing. See a clinician. A $69 bottle does not replace a $0-with-insurance lab panel.
— 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
- What's in The Stem Cell Solution?
- The sales page doesn't say. That's the first and biggest red flag. Without a full ingredient panel, you can't verify if any component is dosed at a clinically relevant level. We reached out to the vendor for a label; no response.
- Is the 60-day refund real?
- Yes, because ClickBank handles it, not the vendor. You can request a refund within 60 days and get your money back, minus any return shipping if it's a physical product. That's a real safety net, but you'll still be out the cost to return the bottle.
- Will this actually help my stem cells?
- There's no evidence that this specific blend does anything for stem cells. The term 'stem cell' is used because it sounds cutting-edge, but the science of supporting endogenous stem cells with oral supplements is still in its infancy. Most products like this are built on animal studies or in vitro work that doesn't translate to a pill.
- Why is the gravity so low?
- Gravity measures how many unique affiliates made a sale recently. A gravity of 0.65 means very few affiliates are moving this product. That can indicate a new product, a product that doesn't convert well, or one that affiliates have abandoned after testing. It's not a quality signal, but it tells you there's no massive wave of satisfied customers.