Review · Other Supplements

Top Gut / Digestive Health Offer

A $113 gut-health supplement with zero disclosed dosages and a sales page that runs on urgency, not evidence.

Verdict Avoid 3.5/10
Top Gut / Digestive Health Offer review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Avoid3.5/10

A $113 gut-health supplement with zero disclosed dosages and a sales page that runs on urgency, not evidence.

Price checked
$113
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The sales page lists 14 ingredients but gives zero milligrams — without dosages, you can't compare it to anything that's been studied, and you're essentially buying a proprietary mystery blend
Better use case
No one — at this price and with this level of disclosure, there is no buyer profile for whom VivoGut is a smart first choice
Skip if
You expect a supplement label to tell you how much of each ingredient you're swallowing — VivoGut doesn't
Evidence file
1 source attached

What VivoGut actually is

A bottle of capsules. The sales page says it contains 14 natural ingredients and targets bloating, irregular digestion, and nutrient absorption. The vendor’s ClickBank listing calls it an “advanced gut health formula.” The reality is simpler: you’re buying a proprietary blend of herbs and possibly enzymes, sold at $113 for a likely 30-day supply, with no milligram amounts anywhere on the page.

That missing information is the whole review. Without dosages, you cannot know whether the ingredients are present at levels that match anything studied. You cannot compare VivoGut to a clinical trial. You cannot assess safety if you’re on medication. You’re buying a black box.

What you actually get

  • One bottle of VivoGut capsules. The exact count and daily serving aren’t stated on the sales page we reviewed. Based on standard supplement economics, assume a 30-day supply at two capsules per day.
  • A “limited launch” price that isn’t limited. The urgency language is a conversion tactic. The product has been on ClickBank for months with a gravity around 2.4 — not a launch.
  • ClickBank’s 60-day refund window. This is the one real consumer protection. It means you can try the product and get your money back through the platform, regardless of what the vendor’s own guarantee says (and the vendor’s page doesn’t say much — we couldn’t find a clear refund policy outside ClickBank’s default).
  • No extras. No diet guide, no lab report, no third-party testing certificate. Just the bottle.

How the marketing oversells

The sales page runs on three psychological levers, none of which tell you anything about the product:

“Limited launch phase spots! Apply Now!” This is fake gates. There is no application. There is no limited stock. The button doesn’t lead to an application form; it leads to a standard order page. The language is designed to make you feel like you’re getting access to something exclusive. You’re not.

“14 research-informed natural ingredients.” “Research-informed” is not the same as “clinically proven.” It means someone read a paper about ginger and put ginger in a capsule. It does not mean VivoGut itself has been tested. And because no dosages are given, you can’t even verify whether the amounts match the research.

“Unmatched results.” Compared to what? The vendor doesn’t cite a single comparator — not a placebo, not a competing product, not a baseline. It’s a filler claim.

What’s inside the bottle (the ingredient problem)

We don’t know. The sales page doesn’t list the 14 ingredients with amounts. Competitor pages for VivoGut mention ginger, peppermint, licorice root, and digestive enzymes, but that’s marketing copy, not a label. Even if that list is accurate, without milligrams you’re guessing.

Here’s why that matters. Ginger has some evidence for reducing nausea and bloating at doses of 1–2 grams per day. Peppermint oil is studied for IBS at 0.2–0.4 mL of enteric-coated oil three times a day. Licorice root can raise blood pressure if taken in large amounts for more than a few weeks. If VivoGut contains a sprinkle of ginger and a meaningful dose of licorice, the risk profile changes. But you have no way to know.

A supplement company that won’t disclose dosages is either hiding a weak formula or doesn’t want you to compare it to anything. Both are reasons to keep your wallet closed.

What it costs and how the refund works

$113 one-time at checkout. No recurring billing surfaced on the date above. Shipping may be extra — the cart didn’t auto-calculate without entering an address, so factor in another $5–$10.

The 60-day refund is handled by ClickBank, not the vendor. You email ClickBank support with your order ID and they’ll refund the purchase price. The process takes 3–7 business days. You may need to return the bottle if the vendor requests it, but in practice, supplement vendors rarely enforce this. The refund is real, and it’s the only reason to even consider trying VivoGut.

Who should buy, who should skip

Skip this if you have any standards for supplement transparency. There are gut-health products on the market that list every ingredient with exact amounts and provide third-party testing. VivoGut does none of that. At $113, it’s priced like a premium formula but discloses like a gas-station pill.

Skip this if you’re on daily medication. Undisclosed herbal blends and drug interactions are a bad combination. Don’t experiment with your liver enzymes.

The only scenario where buying makes sense is if you’re a habitual ClickBank buyer who treats the refund window like a trial period. Buy it, open the bottle, try it for two weeks, and if your digestion doesn’t noticeably change, refund it. But even then, you’re gambling on a product that hasn’t earned the benefit of the doubt.

The honest read

I would not buy this. The sales page withholds the one piece of information that matters — how much of each ingredient is inside — and fills the gap with urgency and vague science words. That’s a pattern, not an accident. It’s how you sell a weak formula at a strong price.

The ClickBank refund window is real, and if you’re determined to try VivoGut, that’s your exit. But you’re still out the shipping cost and the time it takes to realize that a mystery blend isn’t a gut-health solution. Save the $113 and buy a bottle of peppermint oil capsules and some ginger tea. You’ll know exactly what you’re taking, and you’ll have $100 left.

— 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. Top Gut / Digestive Health Offer 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.

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

Frequently asked questions

Is VivoGut a scam?
Not in the 'you pay and get nothing' sense. You'll receive a bottle of capsules. The scam is the price-to-evidence ratio: $113 for a supplement with no disclosed dosages that's sold on urgency, not results. That's legal, but it's not a good buy.
What's actually in VivoGut?
The sales page mentions 14 natural ingredients but doesn't list them with amounts. Based on competitor pages, the blend likely includes ginger, peppermint, licorice root, and digestive enzymes, but without a label we can't confirm. That omission is the product's biggest problem.
Can I get a refund if it doesn't work?
Yes, through ClickBank's 60-day policy. You email ClickBank support with your order ID, and they'll refund the purchase price. The vendor doesn't get to say no. You'll probably have to pay return shipping if they want the bottle back, but that's rarely enforced for supplements.
Does VivoGut have any side effects?
Without a full ingredient list and dosages, it's impossible to say. Herbal blends can interact with medications (especially blood thinners, diabetes drugs, and antidepressants). If you're on any prescription, skip this until you can show a label to your doctor.