The guarantee is 90 days (not the 60 some ads promise). It's liquid drops (not the capsules some "reviews" describe). And the Amazon listing isn't the manufacturer's. Here's the full audit.
Tap anywhere on this box to check availability on the official site ›
Spend one evening in a tinnitus forum and you'll learn two things fast. First, the sound is not a small problem — "it affects your mental health", "couldn't sleep, couldn't function". Second, the people there have already tried the supplement aisle:
"Tried them all, nothing works. I've been trying ginkgo biloba for a couple of months… don't use supplements, they do nothing!"— recurring sentiment in tinnitus communities
So when an ad for Audifort shows up between YouTube videos, your skepticism is the correct response. Most hearing supplements disappoint. The ads around this one don't help either: we found paid ads promising the wrong guarantee, "reviews" describing a product that doesn't match the label, and a marketplace copycat problem.
So instead of writing another five-star "review", we audited the claims. What follows is what the ads say versus what the official Audifort site and order page actually show — then an honest look at whether the product itself is worth testing.
| What ads & "reviews" claim | Verdict | What the official site & order page show |
|---|---|---|
| "60-day money-back guarantee" | ✗ Wrong | The official FAQ says 90 days, "No Questions Asked 100% Money Back". Ads underselling the guarantee by a month tells you how carefully they read the product page. |
| "Take 2 capsules daily" (seen in a paid 'review') | ✗ Wrong | Audifort is a liquid — a dropper in the morning and one before lunch, under the tongue or in water. If a "reviewer" thinks it's capsules, they never opened a bottle. |
| "FDA Approved" | ✗ Red flag | No dietary supplement is "FDA approved." The FDA doesn't approve supplements — any ad claiming that is breaking advertising rules. (The official site itself carries the standard FDA disclaimer.) |
| "Audifort on Amazon — official" | ✗ Not covered | The manufacturer says it plainly: "Beware of imitators. We don't accept reviews or offer refunds for purchases on unauthorized sites." Amazon/eBay listings are third-party — outside the guarantee. |
| "Only $49 a bottle!" | ◐ Half-true | $49/bottle is the 6-bottle bundle price ($294 total). The smallest package (2 bottles) runs $79/bottle. There is no 1-bottle option. Details in the pricing section below. |
| "90-day guarantee" · "liquid drops" · "made in the US" | ✓ Checks out | These match the official site. Credit where due — not everything in the ads is wrong. |
Audit run July 2026 against audifort.com (product page, FAQ) and the official ClickBank order page. Claims quoted from live search ads and paid "review" pages; we don't name the advertisers.
Audifort is a liquid hearing-support supplement — drops, not pills — built on 20+ botanical ingredients. You take one dropper before breakfast and one before lunch, under the tongue or in water. Checkout runs through ClickBank, a US retailer that's processed direct-response orders for 25+ years and operates a standard refund system, which is what makes the 90-day guarantee more than a promise on a banner.
| Format | Liquid drops (dropper, 2× daily) — not capsules |
| Formula | 20+ ingredients; the six the maker highlights: Maca Root, Grape Seed, Green Tea, Capsicum Annuum, Gymnema Sylvestre, GABA |
| What it claims | "Supports healthy hearing" — support language, not treatment claims |
| Guarantee | 90-day money-back, "no questions asked", processed through the retailer |
| Where it's sold | Official website only — the manufacturer explicitly disowns Amazon/eBay listings |
| Packages | 2 bottles ($79/ea) · 3 bottles ($69/ea, +2 bonus guides) · 6 bottles ($49/ea, +2 bonus guides, free US shipping) |
| One-time payment | Yes — the FAQ states there are no rebills or subscriptions |
Ginkgo is the single most-tried tinnitus supplement — and the forums are full of people it did nothing for. Here's the nuance buried in those same threads: "It depends on what is causing the tinnitus. If it's caused by a lack of blood flow around the inner ear, then apparently ginkgo helps." One ingredient, one pathway — if that's not your bottleneck, you paid to find out it wasn't.
Audifort's bet is different in shape, not in miracle-ness: 20+ ingredients across several angles at once — circulation, antioxidant protection, inflammatory response, and the stress loop. More coverage raises the odds of hitting your bottleneck; it still guarantees nothing. Which is why the refund window matters more than the marketing.
Not silence in a week — anyone promising that is lying to you. Realistically, people who respond to this kind of formula report things like:
The maker's own FAQ says best results come at 4+ months of consistent use. Judge it inside the 90-day guarantee window with daily use — or don't start at all.
| Approach | The catch | |
|---|---|---|
| Audifort | Multi-ingredient drops: circulation + antioxidants + stress loop, gentle profile, 90-day refund | Online-only; ear-specific evidence is thin; no single-bottle option to "just try" |
| Ginkgo alone | The most-studied single herb for tinnitus | Mixed results — works for some (blood-flow cases), nothing for many |
| OTC "ear vitamins" | Cheap, in every pharmacy | Forums' verdict for the famous one: "didn't work for me… did get my $ back" |
| Sound therapy / habituation | Best non-drug evidence for coping | Takes months of discipline; manages the reaction, not the ear |
| Seeing an ENT / audiologist | The right first move — always | Not either/or: rule out treatable causes first (one forum user's "cure" was a tooth abscess) |
Two details the ads skip: the 3- and 6-bottle bundles include two digital guides (The Deep Sleep Activation Protocol and The Brainwire Regeneration Blueprint) — and more importantly, they cover the 4-month window the maker itself says the formula needs. Buying 2 bottles to "test" and judging at week 6 is the most expensive way to use this product.
Prices read off the official ClickBank order page in July 2026; the official website is the source of truth.
Run the worst-case math. You order, you take the drops daily, you keep a simple 1-10 note of how loud the ringing feels each night. If after 10-12 weeks nothing moved — the noise, your sleep, your stress around it — you contact support and the retailer's standard refund process returns your money. Worst case, you're out return postage. That's the entire downside.
The refund runs through ClickBank — the retailer — not through the vendor's goodwill. Keep your order email; that's your receipt for the whole process.
If none of that is you — you've seen a doctor, the verdict was "learn to live with it", and you want a low-risk thing to test alongside the sound-therapy homework — the 90-day window makes this a rational experiment.
It's a real liquid supplement with a disclosed ingredient label, sold through ClickBank's checkout — a US retailer with a 25+ year refund track record. "Legit" doesn't mean miraculous: it means the product, the guarantee and the seller are real. Expectations belong at "support", not "cure".
Payment is processed on ClickBank's secure order page (you'll see it in the address bar), not on a random supplement site — and refunds are handled through the same system.
One dropper in the morning before breakfast, one before lunch — under the tongue, or dissolved in water or juice. A full dropper is about 15 drops.
The maker's FAQ is unusually honest here: most people need weeks, and best results show at 4+ months of consistent use. Judge it inside the 90-day guarantee window — with daily use, not "when I remember".
The label ingredients are generally well tolerated at supplement doses and there are no harsh stimulants. If you take any medication — especially sedatives, blood thinners or blood-pressure drugs — clear it with your doctor first.
Official website only. The manufacturer explicitly disowns marketplace listings — no refunds, no authenticity promise. Whatever the Amazon listing contains, the 90-day guarantee doesn't cover it.
Audifort doesn't earn this rating on proof — the ear-specific evidence simply isn't there, and we've said so plainly. It earns it on the honest combination that's rare in this niche: a real botanical label with support-level claims, a one-time payment with no subscription trap, and the longest no-questions guarantee we've verified — 90 days, retailer-enforced. If you've done the doctor visit, you know the "learn to live with it" speech, and you want one more low-risk experiment: this is a rational one — if you buy from the official page and give it the full window.
Keep a nightly 1-10 loudness note. If nothing moves, the refund is the retailer's standard process — worst case, you're out return postage.
Try Audifort Risk-Free on the Official Site →90-day money-back guarantee · $49/bottle on the 6-pack · Free US shipping on 6 bottlesVerdict: 4.1/5 — worth a 90-day test because the guarantee makes it their risk, not yours.
See official bundle pricing →Audifort's 90-day money-back guarantee only covers orders placed on the official website — not the Amazon listing, not "discount" sites. If you're going to try it at all, try it covered.
Open the Official Site (with guarantee) →