Published July 6, 2026·Prices & guarantee terms verified against the official page
You've probably already seen the BBB page (1.11 / 5) and the Reddit "scam" threads. So did we. Instead of another 9.8/10 "review", here's what those complaints actually say, what the sales page claims — and which parts hold up.
Tap anywhere on this box to see today's pricing on the official site ›
Spend one night in a tinnitus forum and you learn two things fast. First, the ringing is not a small problem — it steals sleep, focus and, some nights, your mood. Second, the people there have already burned money on the supplement aisle:
"I have tried: Ginkgo Biloba, Magnesium, Calcium, Vitamin D3, Omega-3, Turmeric Curcumin. None of it helped."— recurring sentiment in tinnitus communities
So when a Quietum Plus ad shows up between YouTube videos and you go searching for "reviews" or "scam", you're doing exactly the right thing. The problem is what you find: a Better Business Bureau profile rating it 1.11 out of 5, Reddit posts calling it a scam going back years — and, on the other side, a wall of affiliate "reviews" that score it 9.8/10 and mention none of that.
So we did the boring work in between. We read the complaints. We read the sales page and the 50-plus studies in its footnotes. We checked the pricing and the refund fine print against the official page. What follows is a claim-by-claim verdict — the good, the overstated, and the genuinely unproven. We are affiliates, and there's a buy link at the bottom; the honest part is everything above it.
Here's the nuance the number alone hides. Reading through the complaints and reviews posted on the BBB profile, they cluster into two themes — and it matters which one you're worried about:
Theme 1 — "It didn't work for me."
Theme 2 — "The refund was harder than the ad implied."
What that proves, and what it doesn't. It proves two real things: the marketing sets expectations the capsule often doesn't meet, and the refund process trips people who wait until the last day or expect to phone someone. What we did not find was a dominant pattern of "they charged me and shipped nothing" — the failure people describe is disappointment plus a strict, email-only refund window. That's the difference between "a product that overpromises" and "an outright theft." We'll show you how to stay inside that refund window in the guarantee section.
Complaints and ratings quoted from the public Better Business Bureau profile for Quietum Plus and from tinnitus community threads, read on July 6, 2026. Ratings change over time; check the live BBB page yourself.
| What the sales page / ads claim | Verdict | What we found |
|---|---|---|
| "Scientists discovered the real root cause of ear ringing — a damaged 'wire' between ear and brain, nothing to do with loud noise." | ~ Plausible, not proven | There is real neuroscience showing tinnitus involves changes in the brain's auditory pathways, not just the ear. But "we found the one root cause and this capsule rebuilds the wire" is a marketing leap the research doesn't support. Plausible biology; unproven as the cause — or as something a supplement fixes. |
| "18 plant extracts backed by several dozen studies" (50+ references in the footnotes) | ✗ Misleading | We counted more than 50 references — and they're real papers. But the ones we spot-checked are neuroprotection and cognition studies (Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, memory in rodents), not tinnitus trials of the Quietum Plus formula. Real studies, pointed at the wrong question. As one Reddit user put it: "I cannot find any studies done on efficacy of Quietum Plus." |
| "Based on over 11,388 reviews" | ✗ No source | There's no link or breakdown behind that number. Meanwhile the independent record you can check — the BBB — sits at 1.11/5. When the only big number has no source and the sourced numbers are bad, weight the sourced ones. |
| "Manufactured in an FDA-approved facility" | ~ Needs context | Facilities can be FDA-registered and inspected; the FDA does not "approve" supplement facilities or supplements. No dietary supplement is "FDA approved." The official page itself carries the standard FDA disclaimer at the bottom. |
| "For 5 years it felt like a tea kettle inside my brain. Now it's all silence." | ✗ Overpromise | "All silence" is not the realistic outcome, and it's the kind of claim tinnitus forums tear apart. The few credible positive reports we found describe partial relief after months — see the honest expectations section below. |
| "This page could be taken down in hours" · "up to 9 months to resupply" · "while stocks last" | ✗ Manufactured urgency | Standard scarcity script. The page wasn't taken down, and there's no way to verify a resupply timeline. We don't repeat urgency we can't confirm — and neither should any "review" you trust. |
| "Sold through ClickBank" · "60-day money-back guarantee" · "natural, non-GMO, no stimulants" | ✓ Checks out | These match the official page. Checkout runs through ClickBank (a US retailer with a long refund track record), the 60-day guarantee is real (conditions below), and the label positions itself as a natural, stimulant-free blend. Credit where it's due. |
Claims quoted from the official Quietum Plus text sales page and its footnotes, captured July 6, 2026, and from live search ads and paid "review" pages we don't name. Ingredient research assessed at the ingredient level, not as evidence for the finished product.
Quietum Plus is a capsule hearing-support supplement built on a proprietary blend of 18 plant extracts plus vitamins A and B and zinc. Its whole pitch rests on one idea: that ringing comes from a damaged "wire" carrying signals from your ear cells to your brain — and that the blend can "feed, regenerate and rebuild" it. Checkout runs through ClickBank, which is what makes the 60-day guarantee more than a banner: refunds go through the retailer's system, not the vendor's goodwill.
| Format | Capsules — a "proprietary blend" (per-ingredient doses not disclosed on the label) |
| Formula | 18 plant extracts + Vitamins A, B and Zinc; named picks include Mucuna Pruriens, Maca Root, Dong Quai, Ashwagandha, Ginger, Zinc |
| What it claims | "Supports a healthy hearing" — support language, not a treatment or cure claim |
| Guarantee | 60-day money-back — real, but with conditions (see below) |
| Where it's sold | Official website only, via the ClickBank checkout — Amazon/eBay listings are outside the guarantee |
| Packages | 2 bottles ($79/ea) · 3 bottles ($69/ea) · 6 bottles ($49/ea, + bonuses, free US shipping) |
| Independent rating | BBB customer reviews 1.11/5 (37 reviews, at the time we checked) |
Because it's a proprietary blend, the label doesn't tell you how much of anything is in each capsule. So the fair question isn't "is there evidence for these plants?" (there's some, for some) — it's "is there evidence at a dose that matters, for hearing, in humans?" That's a higher bar, and most of these don't clear it.
Give the sales page this: its core idea isn't crazy. Modern tinnitus research really has shifted from "it's all in the ear" toward "it's also in the brain's auditory pathways" — the wiring that carries and interprets sound. So the framing that ringing can be a signal problem, not just an ear problem, has a foot in real science.
Here's where it overreaches. Going from "the brain's auditory pathway is involved" to "we isolated the one damaged wire and this proprietary capsule feeds, regenerates and rebuilds it" is a leap no published study on this product supports. The page even abandons its own idea — it never connects a single one of the 18 ingredients back to the "wire." So we treat the mechanism as what it is: plausible biology behind an unproven product. Believe the science; be skeptical of the capsule that borrowed it.
Not silence — anyone promising that is lying to you, and the forums know it. The only credible positive reports we found sound like this, and this is the ceiling worth expecting:
"Quietum Plus has finally started working for me after a couple of months of taking it. It's not completely gone…"— tinnitus community post, the most credible positive we found
"Doesn't eliminate it, but helps me forget it's there…"— tinnitus community post
So a realistic best case, based on real users rather than the sales page, is: the ringing becomes easier to ignore, sleep gets a little easier, the 3 p.m. stress spiral loosens — after months of consistent use, not days, and with no guarantee it happens for you at all. If that modest, uncertain outcome isn't worth the price and the effort of the refund process, this is an easy skip.
| Approach | The catch | |
|---|---|---|
| Quietum Plus | Multi-ingredient capsule, 60-day money-back safety net, one-time payment | Poor public reputation (BBB 1.11/5); no formula trial; proprietary blend hides doses; strict refund window |
| Ginkgo alone | The most-studied single herb for tinnitus | Mixed results — helps some blood-flow cases, nothing for many; a few report a spike |
| OTC "ear vitamins" (e.g. Lipo-Flavonoid) | Cheap, in every pharmacy | Forum verdict for the famous one: "took it 60 days with no results" |
| 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) |
These are the packages shown on the official Quietum Plus order page at the time we checked — we don't copy prices off ads. There is no 1-bottle option, and anything sold elsewhere (Amazon, eBay) is outside the guarantee.
Two honest notes on the pricing. First, the 6-bottle package is genuinely the lowest per-bottle price and it's the only one that covers the multi-month window users say the formula needs — but it's also the biggest bet on a product with a poor track record, so weigh the guarantee accordingly. Second, the "bonuses" (three digital guides the page anchors at "$109 each") are e-books; treat them as a nice-to-have, not $327 of value.
Prices reflect the official order page at the time we checked (July 6, 2026); the official website is the source of truth and pricing can change.
The guarantee is real: the page promises a full refund within 60 days. But this is the single most-complained-about part of Quietum Plus — people don't say the refund is fake, they say they missed the window or couldn't reach anyone by phone. The fine print matters more here than almost any product we've reviewed, so read this before you order, not after.
The clock starts at purchase, not at delivery — and it's email-only. Keep your order confirmation; that's your receipt.
If none of that is you — you've seen a doctor, you know the "learn to live with it" speech, and you want one more low-cost, low-risk experiment with a real refund window and clear eyes about the odds — then it can be a rational test, bought from the official page and judged inside the 60 days.
It's a real capsule supplement sold through ClickBank's checkout with a real 60-day refund process — so "scam" in the sense of "they take your money and ship nothing" isn't what the complaints describe. What they do describe is a product that often doesn't deliver the results the marketing promises, plus a strict refund window. That's a product to be skeptical of, not necessarily a theft. We read the BBB page (1.11/5) so you can judge with the details, not just the headline.
There is no clinical trial of the Quietum Plus formula for tinnitus. The footnote studies are about other conditions (Parkinson's, memory, general antioxidants), mostly in animals. The few credible positive user reports describe partial relief after a couple of months — "not completely gone… helps me forget it's there." Treat anything beyond that as marketing.
A refund within 60 days of purchase (not delivery), by email or the vendor/ClickBank support link — there's no phone number. Their terms require returning all bottles (even empty) plus the packing slip. Mark day 50 on your calendar and keep the box. See the guarantee section above for the step-by-step.
Payment is processed on ClickBank's secure order page (you'll see it in the address bar), not on a random site — and refunds are handled through that same system, which is the more reliable backstop if vendor email stalls.
Official website only, via ClickBank. The guarantee doesn't cover marketplace listings; Amazon or eBay "Quietum Plus" is third-party, with no authenticity or refund promise.
The label is a natural, stimulant-free blend, but it's a proprietary blend so doses aren't disclosed. Some botanicals affect circulation, blood pressure and mood. If you take any medication — especially blood-pressure drugs or blood thinners — clear it with your doctor first.
Quietum Plus doesn't earn a higher score, and we're not going to inflate it to sell a click. The public reputation is genuinely poor (BBB 1.11/5), there's no trial of the formula for tinnitus, and the sales page overpromises with borrowed science and manufactured urgency. What keeps it out of the bottom tier is that the fundamentals are real: a genuine product, a one-time payment, and a 60-day money-back guarantee processed through ClickBank. If you've done the doctor visit, you expect partial relief at best, and you'll actually track the refund window — it's a defensible, low-risk experiment. If you're hoping for silence, or you won't manage the refund, skip it. Either way, now you're deciding with the facts on the table.
Buy from the official page (the only place the guarantee applies), mark day 50 on your calendar, and keep the box. Worst case, you use the refund.
Check Quietum Plus on the Official Site →60-day money-back guarantee · $49/bottle on the 6-pack · Free US shipping on 6 bottlesVerdict: 3.2/5 — mixed. A real product with a poor track record; the 60-day guarantee is the reason it's testable at all.
See official package pricing →If you do try Quietum Plus, the 60-day guarantee only covers the official website — not Amazon, not "discount" sites. And the clock starts at purchase. If you're going to test it, test it covered.
Open the Official Site (with guarantee) →