Review · Other Supplements
Whispeara
An overpriced tinnitus spray with an undisclosed ingredient list and a recurring billing hook. The sales page is built to recruit affiliates, not inform buyers.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.2/10
An overpriced tinnitus spray with an undisclosed ingredient list and a recurring billing hook. The sales page is built to recruit affiliates, not inform buyers.
- Price checked
- $135
- Dose visibility
- Limited: key ingredient doses are hidden or hard to verify
- Main risk
- The ingredient list is not shown on the sales page or order form — you’re buying blind
- Better use case
- Buyers with disposable income who are willing to test a mystery supplement inside the refund window
- Skip if
- You expect to see an ingredient list before you buy — Whispeara doesn’t provide one
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Whispeara claims to do
Whispeara is an oral spray sold as a dietary supplement for brain and hearing support, with tinnitus relief as the headline promise. The marketing copy says it “helps reduce ringing in the ears,” supports cognitive function, and promotes relaxation. The sales page mentions neurotransmitter balance and ear wellness, but the language is broad enough to cover almost any nootropic or hearing formula.
The product is sold through ClickBank under the vendor nickname whispeara, and the affiliate page is unusually frank: “NEW for 2026 : Category Killer - Highest Payouts. Apply now [email protected].” That’s not a product claim — it’s a recruitment pitch for affiliates. The payout is $134.59 per sale at 75% commission, which tells you the vendor is spending more on marketing than on ingredients. That’s a pattern worth noting before you pull out your credit card.
What you actually get
A single bottle of Whispeara contains a 30 ml spray bottle, enough for about a month of daily use. If you order three or six bottles, you’ll also get three digital bonus guides — the sales page shows them as free gifts, but they’re the standard PDF filler you see in almost every ClickBank supplement funnel. The guides likely cover general wellness tips, not anything specific to Whispeara.
The spray format is interesting. Sublingual absorption can bypass first-pass metabolism, meaning some ingredients might hit the bloodstream faster than a capsule. But that only matters if the ingredients themselves are backed by evidence, and Whispeara doesn’t tell you what those ingredients are. You’re buying a delivery system without knowing what’s being delivered.
The price and the recurring trap
The single-bottle price is $135. That’s steep for any supplement, and it’s roughly three to five times what you’d pay for a transparent tinnitus formula from a brand that actually lists its ingredients. The multi-bottle discounts bring the per-bottle cost down: three bottles drop to about $59 each, six to $49. Those prices are still high for a product with no disclosed formulation.
More importantly, the vendor has recurring billing enabled. That means the checkout funnel can — and likely will — steer you toward a subscription. On the day we tested, the auto-ship checkbox wasn’t pre-ticked, but the order flow is designed to make the subscription look like the default. If you miss the fine print, you’ll get charged again in 30 days. And because the vendor controls the rebill, you’re relying on their goodwill to cancel, not just ClickBank’s refund window.
Ingredient transparency: a red flag
Here’s the core problem: the sales page doesn’t list the ingredients. Not on the main page, not on the order form, not in the affiliate materials. The competitor pages that rank for Whispeara reviews are also silent on the actual label — they talk about “natural ingredients” and “carefully selected” this and that, but no one names a single compound with a dose.
For a supplement that costs $135, that’s a dealbreaker. A legitimate hearing-support product would tell you upfront if it contains magnesium, ginkgo biloba, zinc, or any of the other ingredients with even weak clinical backing for tinnitus. The fact that Whispeara hides this information suggests one of two things: either the formula is too weak to be impressive, or the vendor doesn’t want you to comparison-shop. Neither is a good look.
The refund guarantee: how it actually works
The landing page advertises a “90-Day Money Back Guarantee.” That’s longer than ClickBank’s standard 60-day refund window, and here’s the catch: ClickBank processes the refunds, not the vendor. ClickBank’s system won’t issue a refund after day 60, no matter what the vendor promises. The extra 30 days is a marketing claim with no enforcement mechanism. If you try to return the product on day 75, you’ll likely get silence or a runaround.
Within the 60-day window, the refund is real. You email ClickBank with your order ID, and the money comes back in a few business days. You don’t need to return the bottle. That means you could theoretically buy Whispeara, try it for two months, and get your money back if it doesn’t work. But you’re still out the $135 while you wait, and you’re gambling on a product with no disclosed ingredients. The refund policy is a safety net, not a reason to buy.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy Whispeara if you’re an affiliate looking for a high-payout recurring offer to promote — that’s who this product is built for. For everyone else, the value proposition is weak.
If you’re a consumer with tinnitus and you’ve exhausted other options, you could use the refund window to test it. But you’d be doing so blind, and you’d be paying $135 for the privilege. There are cheaper, more transparent supplements on the market that at least tell you what’s inside. Start there.
Skip Whispeara if you expect to see an ingredient label before you buy. Skip it if you can’t afford to float $135. And skip it if you’re looking for a clinically proven treatment — this is a supplement, not a drug, and the evidence for any tinnitus supplement is modest at best.
Bottom line
Whispeara is an overpriced mystery spray sold through a funnel that prioritizes affiliate payouts over buyer information. The refund policy is real but shorter than advertised, and the recurring billing hook is a liability. Until the vendor publishes a full ingredient list with doses, there’s no reason to take this product seriously.
— 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:
Whispeara - Brain, Hearing Support, Tinnitus 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 Whispeara a scam?
- No, it’s a real product that ships. But the sales page is designed to convert affiliates, not to give you a fair picture of what’s inside. You’ll get a bottle of spray and some PDFs, and you can get your money back within 60 days. The problem is the price and the missing ingredient label.
- What are the ingredients in Whispeara?
- We can’t tell you. The sales page doesn’t list them, the order form doesn’t list them, and the affiliate page is all about payouts. Until the vendor publishes a full label, you’re guessing. For a $135 supplement, that’s unacceptable.
- How does the refund work?
- ClickBank handles refunds, not the vendor. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days and you’ll get your money back in 3–7 business days. The vendor claims a 90-day guarantee, but ClickBank’s system won’t process refunds after day 60 — the extra 30 days is a marketing promise with no teeth.
- Will Whispeara cure my tinnitus?
- There is no cure for most tinnitus. Some ingredients used in other hearing supplements (like ginkgo biloba or magnesium) have modest evidence for reducing perception, but without knowing what’s in Whispeara, we can’t say whether it has any chance of helping. If you’re hoping for a cure, this isn’t it.