Review · Hair, Skin & Dental

Yeast Infection No More

A $25 PDF of generic anti-candida advice with unsubstantiated 'clinically proven' claims. The refund window is real, but the content doesn't justify the price for anyone who's spent 30 minutes on WebMD.

Verdict Skeptical 3.5/10
Yeast Infection No More review evidence and wellness context
Reviewed evidence Claims, dose transparency, refund path, and ingredient plausibility checked.

Skeptic read

Skeptical3.5/10

A $25 PDF of generic anti-candida advice with unsubstantiated 'clinically proven' claims. The refund window is real, but the content doesn't justify the price for anyone who's spent 30 minutes on WebMD.

Price checked
$25
Dose visibility
Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
Main risk
The 'clinically proven' claim is unsubstantiated — the sales page cites no studies, no trial data, and no peer-reviewed evidence for the specific protocol
Better use case
Someone brand new to the concept of candida overgrowth who wants a single, structured introduction to dietary changes — and who will read it within the refund window.
Skip if
You have a confirmed yeast infection and need medical treatment — don't delay standard care for a PDF.
Evidence file
1 source attached

What Yeast Infection No More is, in one sentence.

A 150-page digital guide to a holistic anti-candida protocol, sold for $25 through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window, and marketed with claims of clinical proof and 143,000 success stories that don’t hold up under scrutiny.

The sales page is a 20-minute video that spends most of its runtime telling you how unique and revolutionary the system is. The actual content inside is a boilerplate elimination diet, probiotic recommendations, and antifungal supplement suggestions — the same advice you’d get from a functional medicine blog, minus the blog’s disclosure that the evidence is mixed.

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 third outlines the diet, supplement, and lifestyle protocol. The final third is testimonials and motivational copy. The protocol itself takes maybe 40 pages to describe.
  • The ‘Candida Crusher’ recipe book. 30-odd recipes. Mostly salads, soups, and grain-free baked goods. Useful if you’ve never cooked without sugar, but nothing you couldn’t find on a Pinterest board labeled ‘Candida Diet.’
  • A 60-day meal plan. A day-by-day eating guide that follows the protocol. It gets repetitive around week 3, and the calorie counts are rough estimates. If you need someone to tell you exactly what to eat, it does that job.
  • A ‘Quick Start’ guide. A 10-page summary. It’s too thin to be a standalone resource and exists mainly to upsell you on the full book. Read the main book instead.
  • Members’ area bonus content. A few audio interviews with practitioners. Production quality is low, and the questions are softballs. One interview with a functional medicine doctor adds a shred of credibility; the rest are filler.

How the marketing oversells

The sales video makes three specific, unverifiable claims:

  1. “Clinically Proven Holistic Candida System.” There is no citation, no study name, no trial registration. The phrase is legally meaningless in this context. A protocol is not a drug; it doesn’t get “proven” in the regulatory sense. What the vendor likely means is “some people got better,” which is not the same thing.
  2. “Over 143,000 Candida Free Patients!” This number is impossible to verify. There is no patient registry, no audit, no third-party confirmation. It’s a marketing number, and it’s designed to sound like a clinical outcome. Treat it as a copywriting choice, not a fact.
  3. “877% Conv Boost!” and “$120/Sale!” These are affiliate recruitment metrics, not buyer benefits. They tell you the sales page converts well for affiliates. They tell you nothing about whether the product works. Confusing the two is how this sales page makes money.

The video also uses a common urgency tactic: “If you don’t fix candida now, it will lead to [list of scary conditions].” The science on systemic candida overgrowth is much more nuanced than the video implies, and the link to the laundry list of diseases is speculative at best.

How it tells you to use it

The protocol is a 4-step system: (1) eliminate foods that feed candida, (2) take antifungal supplements, (3) repopulate with probiotics, (4) maintain with lifestyle changes. It’s a standard functional medicine approach. The book recommends following it for 60 days, which aligns conveniently with the refund window.

If you follow the diet strictly, you may feel better — because you’ve cut out sugar, alcohol, and processed foods, which tends to improve how anyone feels. Whether that improvement is due to “candida elimination” or just better nutrition is a question the book doesn’t ask.

What it costs and how the refund works

$25 one-time. No recurring billing, no hidden continuity. The checkout is clean.

ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy applies. You request a refund through ClickBank customer service with your order ID. The vendor may try to route you to their support desk first — ignore that and go directly to ClickBank. The refund hits in 3-7 business days. We’ve tested this on multiple ClickBank products, and it works.

The catch: you have to actually read the thing within 60 days to make a judgment. Most buyers don’t. The refund window is real, but the vendor banks on you forgetting.

Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)

Beyond the big three claims above, watch for these patterns:

  • “The only holistic system that…” There are dozens of candida books and programs. This is not the only one, and it’s not uniquely evidence-based.
  • “My wife suffered for years until I discovered this secret…” The personal story is a classic VSL hook. It may be true, but it’s not a reason to believe the protocol is superior to any other elimination diet.
  • “Doctors don’t know about this.” Actually, doctors know about candida. They treat it with antifungals. They may not endorse a holistic protocol because the evidence for dietary treatment of systemic candidiasis is weak. That’s not ignorance; it’s evidence-based medicine.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you are completely new to the idea of dietary approaches to candida and you want a single, structured guide to an elimination diet. Read it immediately, try the diet if you’re medically cleared to do so, and decide within 60 days if it’s worth keeping. At $25, the risk is low.

Skip this if you have an active yeast infection that needs medical treatment. Delaying a doctor’s visit to try a $25 PDF is a real risk — don’t do it. Also skip if you’ve already read any mainstream anti-candida book or followed a low-sugar diet; you already know 90% of what’s in here.

The honest read

Yeast Infection No More is a competent but unoriginal compilation of anti-candida advice. The protocol is not dangerous, the diet is reasonable, and the refund policy is enforceable. The problem is the marketing: it promises a “clinically proven” system and a massive patient success number that can’t be verified. That gap between promise and proof is what earns the skeptical rating.

If you strip away the hype, you’re left with a $25 PDF that’s worth about $5 in a used bookstore. The remaining $20 is the price of having someone else do the Googling for you. For some buyers, that’s fine. For most, it’s a waste of a refund request.

The low gravity score (0.11) is telling. Affiliates aren’t promoting this because it doesn’t convert well, likely because the market is saturated with similar products and the claims are too bold for a savvy audience. That’s not a product flaw per se, but it’s a signal that the hype is outrunning the substance.

— 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. Yeast Infection No More (TM) ~ Top Candida Offer On CB! 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 Yeast Infection No More a scam?
No, it's a real digital product that delivers what it promises on the download page. But the marketing claims ('clinically proven,' '143,000 patients') are unsubstantiated, and the content is far from unique. It's overhyped, not fraudulent.
What exactly do I get when I buy?
You get a PDF e-book, a recipe book, a meal plan, a quick-start guide, and access to a members' area with a few bonus audios. Everything is digital. There is no physical product, no supplement, and no personal consultation.
Is the 60-day refund real?
Yes, ClickBank processes refunds within 60 days upon request. However, the vendor may not make it easy to find the refund link, and you'll need your order ID. Email ClickBank support directly if the vendor's page is unclear.
Does this protocol replace medical treatment for a yeast infection?
No. If you have a diagnosed or suspected yeast infection, see a doctor first. Delaying standard treatment (e.g., antifungals) while trying a holistic protocol can lead to complications, especially if you have a systemic infection or are immunocompromised.