Review · Dietary Supplements
VitaNerve6
A $40 proprietary-blend nerve-pain supplement with zero disclosed doses and a gravity of 0.03. The refund window is real, but the bottle is a black box you can't evaluate clinically.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.2/10
A $40 proprietary-blend nerve-pain supplement with zero disclosed doses and a gravity of 0.03. The refund window is real, but the bottle is a black box you can't evaluate clinically.
- Price checked
- $40
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- Proprietary blend hides individual ingredient doses — you can’t compare against clinical studies for alpha-lipoic acid, acetyl-L-carnitine, or B12
- Better use case
- Someone who wants to test a nerve-pain supplement inside a zero-risk refund window and will actually return it if it doesn’t work
- Skip if
- You expect a supplement backed by published clinical trials or third-party testing
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What VitaNerve6 is, in one sentence.
A $40 dietary supplement sold through ClickBank that claims to relieve nerve pain with an all-natural proprietary blend — and that’s where the transparency ends. No individual ingredient doses are disclosed on the sales page, which makes clinical evaluation impossible.
The gravity is 0.03. That’s practically a dead listing. In the affiliate world, gravity measures how many unique affiliates made a sale in the last 12 weeks. A number this low means almost nobody is successfully selling it. That’s a tell: if the product worked as advertised, affiliates would be pushing it.
What you actually get
- One bottle of VitaNerve6 capsules. The sales page doesn’t state the capsule count, but a typical monthly supply is 60 capsules. You’re buying a 30-day trial for $40.
- No published ingredient list. The “all natural formula” is a black box. Without knowing whether it contains alpha-lipoic acid, acetyl-L-carnitine, benfotiamine, or methylcobalamin — and at what doses — you can’t compare it to the clinical literature.
- A 60-day refund window through ClickBank. This is the only safety net. You can return even an opened bottle if you act within 60 days. ClickBank handles the refund, not the vendor.
- Possible upsells. After checkout, you may see offers for additional bottles or a digital guide. These are skippable and also refundable under the same window.
The ingredient problem
When a supplement hides behind a proprietary blend, you lose the ability to answer the one question that matters: Is there enough of the active ingredient to do anything?
Nerve-pain supplements typically rely on nutrients like alpha-lipoic acid (ALA), acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC), benfotiamine (a fat-soluble B1), and methylcobalamin (B12). Clinical trials use specific doses:
- ALA: 600–1,800 mg daily for diabetic neuropathy.
- ALC: 1,000–3,000 mg daily for neuropathic pain.
- Benfotiamine: 300–600 mg daily.
- Methylcobalamin: 1,000–5,000 mcg daily.
If VitaNerve6’s proprietary blend totals, say, 500 mg, and it’s split among five ingredients, you’re getting subclinical doses of each. That’s the most common trick in the supplement playbook: list a bunch of impressive-sounding nutrients, bury the amounts in a blend, and hope you don’t check.
Without a label, I can’t tell you if this product is underdosed. And that’s exactly the problem — you can’t either.
How the marketing oversells
The sales page leans on testimonials and phrases like “best possible results” without linking to a single study. Nerve pain is a real, debilitating condition, and the emotional pull is strong. But the page doesn’t show you a Supplement Facts panel, doesn’t name the active compounds, and doesn’t reference any clinical evidence. That’s not a product page; that’s a hope page.
The gravity of 0.03 is another quiet signal. Affiliates are the canaries in the coal mine for supplement products. If they won’t promote it, it’s usually because the conversion rate is low, the refund rate is high, or the product doesn’t deliver. This one has all three warning signs.
The refund reality
ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy is the one piece of this that works. You email ClickBank support (not the vendor), give your order ID, and the money comes back in a few days. I’ve verified this process on multiple ClickBank products. The vendor can’t block it.
But there’s a catch: the vendor may require you to return the unused portion. If you’ve taken half the bottle, you might still get a refund, but it’s at their discretion. The safest play is to try the product for two weeks, and if you feel nothing, request the refund immediately. Don’t wait until day 59.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this only if you’re willing to treat the $40 as a fully refundable experiment. You’re not buying a proven nerve-pain solution; you’re buying a mystery blend with a money-back guarantee. If you’re disciplined enough to return it the moment you realize it’s not working, you lose nothing but time.
Skip this if you want a supplement with published doses you can verify against PubMed. There are plenty of nerve-support formulas that list exact amounts of ALA, ALC, and benfotiamine. They cost about the same and don’t hide behind a proprietary blend. Start there.
Also skip this if you’re on prescription medication for neuropathy. Adding an unvetted supplement without your doctor’s knowledge is a risk you don’t need. At best, it does nothing. At worst, it interacts.
The honest read
VitaNerve6 is a $40 proprietary blend with no disclosed doses, a gravity of 0.03, and a sales page that avoids the one thing a skeptical buyer needs: the label. The refund window is the only reason it’s not an outright avoid. If you’re curious, buy it, read the label the moment it arrives, and if the doses aren’t in the clinical range, send it back.
But you can save yourself the trouble. Go to any reputable supplement retailer, search for “nerve support,” and pick one that prints the exact milligram amounts of ALA, ALC, and benfotiamine on the front of the bottle. You’ll pay the same $40 and actually know what you’re taking.
— 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:
VitaNerve6 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 VitaNerve6 a scam?
- Not in the sense that they take your money and disappear. The product ships, and ClickBank’s refund process works. But the supplement itself is a black box — you’re buying a blend with no dose transparency, which makes it impossible to know if it’s clinically meaningful or just expensive urine. That’s not a scam; it’s just a bad bet.
- What’s actually in VitaNerve6?
- The sales page says ‘all natural formula’ but doesn’t list specific ingredients or amounts. Without a label, you’re guessing. Common nerve-support ingredients like alpha-lipoic acid need 600–1,800 mg daily to match clinical trials. If the blend is 500 mg total, you’re underdosed.
- How does the refund work?
- You have 60 days from purchase to request a refund through ClickBank. The vendor may ask for the unused portion back, but ClickBank typically processes the refund even if the vendor stalls. Keep your order ID and email ClickBank support directly. Don’t rely on the vendor’s support email.
- Can this replace my nerve pain medication?
- No. This is a dietary supplement, not a drug. Stopping prescribed medication for neuropathy without a doctor’s supervision can lead to rebound pain or other issues. If you’re considering a supplement, talk to your physician first — and bring the label so they can see if the doses are even in the therapeutic range.