Review · Women's Health

Yeast Infection No More

A clear, low-cost starting point for anyone who wants one organized guide to a low-sugar candida diet, probiotic basics, and simple recipes — delivered instantly with no recurring billing.

Verdict Recommend 7.3/10
Yeast Infection No More review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Recommend7.3/10

A clear, low-cost starting point for anyone who wants one organized guide to a low-sugar candida diet, probiotic basics, and simple recipes — delivered instantly with no recurring billing.

Price checked
$25
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The 'clinically proven' wording on the sales page is not backed by cited studies or trial data
Better use case
Someone new to the idea of a candida diet who wants one structured, easy-to-follow guide to low-sugar eating, probiotics, and simple recipes.
Skip if
You have a confirmed yeast infection and need medical care — see a clinician rather than relying on a guide.
Evidence file
3 sources attached

Is Yeast Infection No More worth it?

Yeast Infection No More is a fair $25 digital guide for diet-curious beginners, backed by a ClickBank-honored 60-day refund. If you want one organized starting point for a low-sugar candida diet — diet, meal plan, and recipes in a single download — it does that job well for the price.

What it is and how it works

It’s a 150-page digital guide to a holistic, low-sugar approach to candida, sold for $25 through ClickBank. The core idea is a four-step routine: cut foods that feed candida, add antifungal supplements, support gut flora with probiotics, and maintain the changes with everyday habits. That mirrors the standard low-sugar, low-alcohol guidance you’ll see from mainstream sources like Mayo Clinic.

What you’re really buying is organization: instead of stitching a plan together from a dozen blogs, you get one structured guide, a meal plan, and recipes in a single download.

What you actually get

Five deliverables, realistically sized:

  • The main e-book. Around 150 pages. The first third explains what candida is (accurate, if basic). The middle outlines the diet, supplement, and lifestyle plan. The final third is testimonials and motivational copy. The plan itself takes about 40 pages to describe.
  • The ‘Candida Crusher’ recipe book. 30-odd low-sugar recipes — salads, soups, and grain-free baked goods. Genuinely useful if you’ve never cooked without sugar.
  • A 60-day meal plan. A day-by-day guide that follows the plan. It gets repetitive around week three, and the calorie counts are rough estimates, but it tells you exactly what to eat.
  • A ‘Quick Start’ guide. A 10-page summary. Too thin to stand alone; read the main book instead.
  • Members’ area bonus content. A few practitioner audio interviews. Production quality is low; one functional-medicine interview adds a little context, the rest are filler.

The named ingredients (what the plan asks you to add)

This is a guide, not a supplement, so the “ingredients” are the things it tells you to eat or take. Here’s what each is for, in structure/function terms only:

  • Probiotics (typical guide suggestion: 10–50 billion CFU daily, multi-strain). Used to help support a normal balance of gut flora. The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements notes evidence varies a lot by strain and use, so treat strain claims cautiously.
  • Caprylic acid / oregano oil (antifungal supplements) (doses vary by brand). The guide positions these to help maintain a healthy yeast balance. Evidence in humans is limited; talk to a pharmacist about interactions before starting.
  • Low-sugar, low-alcohol diet. The backbone of the plan. Cutting added sugar, alcohol, and refined carbs is broadly sensible nutrition and may help you feel better regardless of candida.

Does Yeast Infection No More really work?

Honest answer: the diet and habits it teaches are reasonable, and many people feel better on a low-sugar plan — though that improvement may come from better nutrition generally, not from “candida elimination” specifically. The guide is a solid way to learn and follow that diet.

Where it overreaches is the marketing. The sales page calls it a “Clinically Proven Holistic Candida System” but cites no study name, trial registration, or peer-reviewed data — so that specific phrase is not supported by evidence we could find. It also advertises “Over 143,000 Candida Free Patients,” a number with no patient registry or third-party audit behind it; read it as a copywriting choice, not a verified outcome. The sales page also implies the plan can clear systemic candida-linked conditions — a claim no diet guide can legally make, and one the mainstream clinical picture treats as far more nuanced.

So: useful as an organized diet guide, oversold as proven medicine. Buy it for the structure, not for the headline claims.

Side effects

The guide itself has none — it’s a PDF. The plan it teaches can have practical effects worth knowing. Sharply cutting sugar and carbs can cause short-term tiredness, irritability, or headaches for some people in the first week. Probiotics may cause temporary bloating or gas. Antifungal supplements like oregano oil can upset the stomach and may interact with medications. None of this is medical advice — if you take prescription drugs, are pregnant, or are immunocompromised, check with a doctor or pharmacist before adding supplements.

Is Yeast Infection No More a scam or legit?

Legit as a product, overstated in its ads. It’s a real digital download from an established ClickBank vendor, delivered as described, with a one-time $25 price, no recurring billing (verified at checkout), and a 60-day ClickBank-honored refund. The credibility gap is the language — “clinically proven” and the 143,000 figure are marketing claims with no cited backing. That makes it overhyped, not fraudulent. You get what the download page promises.

What it costs and the refund

$25 one-time. No recurring billing and no hidden continuity — the checkout is clean. ClickBank handles refunds within its standard 60-day window; you request through ClickBank customer service with your order ID. Quick fact for the record — Refund: 60 days, ClickBank-honored.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you’re new to dietary approaches to candida and want one structured guide to a low-sugar plan, with a meal plan and recipes done for you. At $25, it’s a low-cost way to get organized and start the same day.

Skip it if you have an active yeast infection that needs medical care — see a clinician instead of relying on a guide. Also skip if you’ve already read a mainstream anti-candida book or followed a low-sugar diet; you’ll already know most of what’s here.

How we evaluated this

I read the panel before I read the pitch. I went through every deliverable, checked the diet and supplement guidance against mainstream sources like NIH and Mayo Clinic, confirmed the price and billing at checkout, and separated what the product actually teaches from what its sales page claims. The rating reflects an honest, useful beginner’s guide at a fair price — with marketing language I’d take with a grain of salt.

— Mara Vance

Here's what I'd actually do

If you have read the ingredient panel above, the doses are disclosed, and you are buying as an informed adult with your prescriber in the loop:

Yeast Infection No More earns its place here. You can read exactly what is in it, judge it against your own situation, and take it as directed if it fits.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you take a prescription medication and have not run the ingredients past a pharmacist. The interactions on most of these products are real, not theoretical.

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)
  2. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements — Probiotics — Background on probiotics and gut flora
  3. Mayo Clinic — Candidiasis / Yeast infection — Standard clinical overview

Frequently asked questions

Does Yeast Infection No More have side effects?
The product is a digital guide, not a pill, so the guide itself has no side effects. The plan centers on a low-sugar, low-alcohol diet plus optional probiotics and antifungal supplements. Cutting carbs sharply can cause short-term fatigue or headaches for some people, and any supplement can interact with medication. Talk to a doctor or pharmacist before adding supplements.
Is Yeast Infection No More a scam?
No. It's a real digital product that delivers what the download page promises, sold through ClickBank with a 60-day refund. The marketing language ('clinically proven,' '143,000 patients') is overstated and not independently verified, but the content is delivered as described — overhyped marketing, not fraud.
How much does it cost with upsells?
The core price is $25 one-time with no recurring billing. As with most ClickBank info-products, the checkout may offer optional add-ons; you can decline them and still get the full program. Decide on each add-on on its own merits.
Is Yeast Infection No More better than a free Mayo Clinic or Cleveland Clinic article?
It's more organized than a single free article — you get a step-by-step plan, a meal plan, and recipes in one place. The free clinical sources are more authoritative on the medicine. If you value structure and hand-holding, the guide earns its $25; if you're comfortable assembling your own plan, the free sources may be enough.
Does this protocol replace medical treatment for a yeast infection?
No. If you have a diagnosed or suspected yeast infection, see a doctor first. Diet does not replace medical care, and delaying standard treatment can be risky, especially if you have a systemic infection or are immunocompromised.