ArcticBlast on Amazon: Why You Should Buy From the Official Site Instead

Sarah Reynolds, MS, RDN

ArcticBlast on Amazon: Why You Should Buy From the Official Site Instead

ArcticBlast is not officially sold on Amazon — Truegenics distributes exclusively through the official website via ClickBank, and no authorized Amazon listing exists. If you searched “arcticblast amazon” hoping to pick it up with Prime shipping, this article will explain exactly what you will find on Amazon, why those listings carry real risks, and why the official site is the clearly superior option in every dimension that matters.

TL;DR

  • ArcticBlast has NO authorized Amazon seller — any listing is unauthorized
  • Third-party Amazon sellers cannot offer the 60-day money-back guarantee
  • Amazon listings are typically 20–40% more expensive than official bundle pricing
  • ArcticBlast contains DMSO, a skin-penetrating carrier — purity and authenticity are critical safety considerations
  • The official site offers bundle discounts (~$49/bottle at 6-bottle tier) that Amazon cannot match
  • ClickBank’s independent guarantee protection only applies to purchases through the official checkout
  • No legitimate reason exists to buy ArcticBlast from Amazon or any retail chain

Check Current Pricing on the Official Website{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}


1. Is ArcticBlast on Amazon? The Short Answer

The direct answer: ArcticBlast is not sold on Amazon through any authorized channel.

Truegenics, the vendor behind ArcticBlast, uses a direct-to-consumer distribution model. The product is sold through the official website only, with payment processing and buyer protection handled by ClickBank. There is no wholesale arrangement that would supply Amazon, no fulfilled-by-Amazon inventory from the manufacturer, and no authorized third-party Amazon storefront.

When you search “arcticblast amazon” or “arcticblast amazon prime,” you may encounter a few things:

1. Listings that turn out to be different products entirely. Amazon’s search algorithm surfaces products with overlapping keywords. “Arctic” and “blast” are both terms used in other topical pain products — menthol-based products especially. What ranks in those results may look similar but be an entirely unrelated formula from a different manufacturer.

2. Third-party resellers listing what they claim is authentic ArcticBlast. These sellers sourced the product through non-manufacturer channels — gray market, overstock, or peer-to-peer resale — and are listing it without Truegenics’ authorization. Prices are typically higher than the official site’s bundle pricing, the product may be near-expiry or improperly stored, and critically, purchases from these sellers do not qualify for the official 60-day money-back guarantee.

3. No listing at all. Increasingly, ClickBank vendors work to take down unauthorized Amazon listings through intellectual property and terms-of-service complaints. You may search and find nothing — which is actually the honest outcome. The product simply is not there.

The bottom line: if you are searching Amazon for ArcticBlast, you will either not find it, find something that is not it, or find an unauthorized listing at a worse price with less protection. None of those outcomes serves you well.

For a full overview of the product itself — what it is, how the formula works, and whether it is worth purchasing — see my complete ArcticBlast review. This article focuses specifically on the purchase channel question.


2. Why ArcticBlast Uses a Direct-to-Consumer Model

Understanding why ArcticBlast is not on Amazon requires understanding how ClickBank products are distributed — and why the economics make Amazon incompatible with the model.

ClickBank is a digital commerce marketplace, not a fulfillment network. Vendors who sell through ClickBank do so precisely because ClickBank handles payment processing, fraud protection, buyer dispute resolution, and — importantly — enforces the refund guarantee independently of the vendor. This infrastructure is valuable to the buyer (you have an independent third party holding the vendor accountable) but it comes with a structural requirement: purchases flow through ClickBank’s checkout system.

The direct-to-consumer model allows for bundle pricing economics. When a product is sold through Amazon, the economics require either Amazon acting as a wholesale buyer (who marks up) or a third-party seller absorbing the margin squeeze of Amazon’s seller fees (typically 8-15% of sale price, plus fulfillment fees). Either way, the per-unit cost to the consumer goes up. The multi-bottle bundle pricing on the official site — where a 6-bottle order drops the per-bottle cost from ~$69.95 to roughly ~$49 — is only possible because there is no retail intermediary extracting a margin.

The guarantee structure requires a closed-loop transaction record. The 60-day money-back guarantee is enforceable because every purchase through the official checkout generates a unique ClickBank order ID. When a buyer requests a refund, Truegenics and ClickBank can both verify the purchase, its date, and its terms. An Amazon transaction exists in Amazon’s system only — ClickBank has no record of it, Truegenics has no obligation to honor it, and neither party has any mechanism to process a refund against a transaction they cannot verify.

This is not unique to ArcticBlast. It applies to every ClickBank product across every category. ArcticBlast: Scam or Legit? covers the broader trust question including how ClickBank’s guarantee system works as an independent consumer protection mechanism.

The short version: the direct model exists because it serves the buyer (lower price, better guarantee) and the vendor (higher margin, controlled distribution, fraud prevention) simultaneously. Amazon cannot replicate those benefits within its fee structure.


3. The DMSO Purity Problem — Why Source Matters for This Formula

This is the section I want to spend real time on, because it is the reason buying ArcticBlast from unauthorized sources is not just financially inconvenient — it carries a genuine safety consideration that does not apply to most supplements.

ArcticBlast’s active delivery mechanism is DMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide). DMSO is a solvent that has been studied for decades as a transdermal penetration enhancer. Its mechanism is well-documented: DMSO temporarily increases the permeability of the skin barrier, allowing co-administered compounds to reach underlying tissue — muscles, tendons, nerves — more efficiently than they would through a standard cream or gel vehicle.

This is the core reason ArcticBlast can deliver its ingredient stack — camphor, peppermint oil, arnica, aloe vera, emu oil — to the target tissue faster than comparable non-DMSO topicals. The DMSO is not incidental. It is the formula’s primary delivery mechanism.

The critical safety property of DMSO: it carries whatever is in solution with it through the skin barrier. This includes intended ingredients. It also includes contaminants.

DMSO that has been improperly stored, diluted with non-pharmaceutical-grade solvents, or contaminated during repackaging does not lose its penetration-enhancing properties — it retains them. What changes is what it is carrying. If a gray-market reseller diluted the formula with an impure solvent, added a thickener to restore the apparent consistency, or repackaged the product in a container that was not DMSO-compatible, the resulting product would drive those contaminants through your skin barrier just as efficiently as it would drive the intended ingredients.

Industrial-grade DMSO versus pharmaceutical-grade DMSO is a meaningful distinction. DMSO is widely used in laboratory and industrial settings at lower purity grades. Pharmaceutical-grade DMSO — the kind used in legitimate topical formulas — is manufactured to USP or equivalent standards and is substantially purer. An unauthorized reseller who sources from gray-market channels has no demonstrated supply chain integrity and no certification that the purity grade meets the standard required for human skin application.

I want to be precise here: I am not asserting that every unauthorized ArcticBlast Amazon listing contains contaminated product. I am asserting that with a DMSO-based formula, you have no mechanism to verify purity from an unauthorized source, and the consequence of purity failure is different from the consequence with an oral supplement. With an oral supplement, your gut provides a significant filtration step. With a transdermal DMSO formula, that filtration step is largely bypassed.

For deeper context on DMSO’s mechanism and evidence base, my ArcticBlast side effects and ingredients breakdown covers what the published literature says. For how this formula compares against a topical competitor that uses a different delivery system, see ArcticBlast vs. Nerve Fresh.

The practical implication for purchase decisions: The source of your ArcticBlast purchase is not just a price or guarantee question. For a DMSO formula, it is a supply chain integrity question. The official site has an incentive — reputational and legal — to maintain quality control. An anonymous Amazon third-party seller does not.


4. What You Risk Buying from Third-Party Amazon Sellers

Beyond the DMSO purity question, there are four concrete risks to buying ArcticBlast from Amazon third-party sellers. These risks apply to any unauthorized source — eBay, supplement discount sites, peer-to-peer resale platforms — but Amazon is the most commonly searched alternative, so I will address it directly.

Risk 1: Loss of the 60-day money-back guarantee.

This is the most straightforward risk and the one that affects the largest number of buyers. The 60-day guarantee is a ClickBank-enforced protection. It only applies to purchases with a ClickBank order ID — meaning purchases made through the official checkout. An Amazon purchase generates an Amazon order ID, which exists only in Amazon’s system. Neither Truegenics nor ClickBank can look up that order, and neither has any obligation to honor a guarantee that was never extended to that sale.

Amazon’s standard return policy is 30 days, not 60, and it applies only to orders fulfilled by or sold by Amazon directly. Third-party seller policies vary — some offer 30-day returns, some shorter, some with restocking fees. You are at the seller’s mercy, not protected by an independent guarantor.

For someone testing ArcticBlast for chronic nerve or joint discomfort — a condition that may require six to eight weeks of consistent use to evaluate properly — the difference between 30 and 60 days is the difference between a fair trial and an inadequate one.

Risk 2: Higher price.

Third-party Amazon sellers who obtain ClickBank products for resale bought them at retail price — $69.95 per bottle at the single-bottle tier. To make a profit on Amazon after paying seller fees (8-15% depending on category), fulfillment costs, and the markup they need to stay in business, they have to charge more than retail. It is common to see unauthorized ArcticBlast-adjacent listings at $79 to $99 for a single bottle — meaningfully more than the official price, with fewer consumer protections.

Meanwhile, the official site’s 3-bottle bundle brings the per-bottle cost to approximately $59 with free US shipping, and the 6-bottle bundle drops it further to approximately $49 per bottle. The price advantage is consistently and substantially in favor of the official site when you compare like for like.

Risk 3: Unknown authenticity.

There is no verification mechanism available to a consumer looking at an Amazon product listing to confirm that what they are receiving is the authentic Truegenics formula rather than a counterfeit, diluted version, or an entirely different product relabeled. Amazon’s product review system is frequently gamed — review counts and star ratings for gray-market supplement listings are not reliable quality signals.

A topical liquid formula is particularly difficult to evaluate authentically on receipt. Color and viscosity can vary within a legitimate batch range, and DMSO has a distinctive odor that a skilled counterfeiter would replicate. A first-time buyer has no baseline for comparison.

Risk 4: No vendor customer support.

If you have questions about application method, expected timeline, or interactions with other topicals you use, Truegenics’ customer support is not available to you as an Amazon third-party buyer. The seller you purchased from on Amazon has no knowledge of the formula and no relationship with the manufacturer. The vendor’s support resources — which typically include guidance on how to use the product effectively — are extended only to customers who purchased through the official channel.

For broader context on evaluating nerve-support topicals across the category — including what to look for in supply chain transparency and how to assess quality signals — see my nerve pain supplements guide.

Get ArcticBlast from the Official Site — 60-Day Guarantee Skip Amazon. The official site gives you lower prices, the 60-day refund guarantee, and guaranteed-authentic product. Visit the Official Website →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}


5. Official Site vs. Amazon: Side-by-Side Comparison

Here is the comparison across the five dimensions that matter most for this purchase decision.

FactorOfficial SiteAmazon Third-Party
PriceBundle discounts available (~$49/bottle at 6-bottle tier)Usually marked up 20–40% above official retail
Guarantee60-day full refund, ClickBank-enforcedAmazon’s 30-day return policy (seller-dependent)
AuthenticityGuaranteed authentic from manufacturerNo verification possible
Customer supportVendor (Truegenics) + ClickBank independent supportSeller-dependent, no manufacturer access
DMSO purityQuality controlled, pharmaceutical-grade supply chainUnknown supply chain integrity

There is no dimension on this table where Amazon wins. This is not a close call.

The price comparison is particularly stark when you use the bundle tiers correctly. A single bottle on Amazon from an unauthorized seller might run $79-$99. The same formula on the official site at the 3-bottle tier works out to ~$59 per bottle with free US shipping — a lower per-unit cost even before accounting for the bundle discount. At the 6-bottle tier, the gap widens further.

The guarantee comparison is not just about the number of days — it is about who is enforcing the guarantee. Amazon returns depend on the specific third-party seller’s willingness to accept the return and process the refund. ClickBank’s 60-day guarantee is enforced independently: if the vendor is unresponsive or refuses a valid request, ClickBank can process the refund directly. That independence matters in practice.

For a deeper pricing breakdown including all three bundle tiers, shipping costs, and value analysis by buyer type, see ArcticBlast Pricing, Discount Code & Where to Buy. That article covers the financial math in detail that this comparison table summarizes.


6. How to Safely Order from the Official ArcticBlast Website

If you have decided to purchase ArcticBlast, here is a step-by-step verification and ordering process that ensures you land on the genuine official page, not a phishing clone or a gray-market reseller’s lookalike site.

Step 1: Use a trusted link.

The most reliable way to reach the official purchase page is through a trusted source — this article’s links, or my full ArcticBlast review. The links on this page route through ClickBank’s redirect infrastructure, which means the destination is the vendor’s official page registered with ClickBank.

Step 2: Verify the page before entering payment information.

When you land on the sales page, check three things:

  • HTTPS padlock icon in your browser’s address bar. The page should show a valid SSL certificate. Click the padlock to verify the certificate is issued to the legitimate domain.
  • Domain name. The official ArcticBlast site operates on the vendor’s registered domain. Be cautious of slight misspellings (arcticb1ast, arctic-blast-official, etc.) that clone sites use to capture search traffic.
  • ClickBank checkout domain. When you click the order button and proceed to payment, the checkout page should be hosted on clickbank.com or a ClickBank-subdomain. If the payment page resolves to an unfamiliar domain, do not enter your card information.

Step 3: Select your package.

The official site typically presents three options: 1 bottle, 3 bottles, and 6 bottles. Prices are displayed clearly before checkout. Confirm the price matches what you expect — ClickBank products do occasionally update pricing, and I recommend verifying against the current checkout price rather than any figure you read on a third-party site (including this one, where pricing figures reflect my last verification date).

Step 4: Complete the ClickBank checkout.

ClickBank’s checkout accepts all major credit and debit cards (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover) and PayPal on most orders. The checkout page is encrypted and PCI-compliant. You will see ClickBank branding on the payment page — this is a positive sign, not a red flag.

Step 5: Save your order confirmation.

Immediately after purchase, ClickBank sends a confirmation email to the address you provided. This email contains your ClickBank order number — a long alphanumeric string that serves as your proof of purchase and is the key reference for any refund request or customer support contact. Save this email to a folder you will find again. If you need a refund, your order number is the single most important piece of information you can have ready.

Step 6: Contact support if anything is unclear.

Truegenics’ customer support is reachable through the official website’s contact page. ClickBank’s customer support is available at 1-800-390-6035 (US) or through their online portal. The 60-day window starts from your purchase date — not delivery, not first use. Give yourself margin; do not wait until day 58 to decide whether to initiate a return.

For questions about how to evaluate whether ArcticBlast is working for your specific situation — what timeline is realistic, what results to look for, what to do if you feel nothing after four weeks — Does ArcticBlast Really Work? covers the realistic expectations piece in detail.


7. Best Deal — Which Package to Order

Once you have decided to purchase from the official site, the remaining question is which tier makes sense for your situation. Here is how I think about it by buyer type.

First-time buyer testing the formula:

The 3-bottle bundle is the optimal starting point. At approximately $59 per bottle with free US shipping, you are paying 15% less than single-bottle pricing while getting enough product to run a genuine evaluation — six to eight weeks of consistent application — without over-committing financially. The 60-day guarantee provides a backstop even at this tier: if you apply the formula consistently for the evaluation period and see no meaningful change, you still have time to initiate a refund.

I do not recommend the single-bottle option as an entry point for most people. The math is unfavorable: you pay the highest per-unit cost, you pay for shipping, and if you apply it as directed you may run out before the 60-day window closes. The 3-bottle bundle eliminates those problems at a lower total outlay per unit.

Returning buyer or someone confident in the formula:

The 6-bottle bundle at approximately $49 per bottle is the clear choice. You save roughly 30% compared to single-bottle pricing, get free US shipping, and build a supply that ensures continuity. Running out mid-treatment when a formula is working is a frustration the 6-bottle bundle prevents.

Someone evaluating ArcticBlast for nerve pain specifically:

The mechanism and evidence base for ArcticBlast’s ingredient stack in the context of nerve-related discomfort is covered in detail at ArcticBlast for Nerve Pain. For context on how it compares against another well-researched option in the same space, see ArcticBlast vs. Nerve Fresh. Both articles help you calibrate whether the formula is likely to be relevant for your specific presentation before committing to a purchase.

For broad context on the evidence landscape across nerve-support supplements generally — including how to think about DMSO-based topicals versus oral options — my nerve pain supplements guide and alpha-lipoic acid for nerve pain provide useful background. Alpha-lipoic acid is an oral supplement with a solid clinical evidence base for diabetic peripheral neuropathy; understanding the evidence there helps calibrate expectations for topical approaches like ArcticBlast.

Check Current Pricing on the Official Website{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}


8. Frequently Asked Questions

Is ArcticBlast available on Amazon?

ArcticBlast is not officially sold on Amazon. Truegenics sells exclusively through the official website, processed through ClickBank. Any ArcticBlast listing on Amazon is from an unauthorized third-party seller and does not qualify for the official 60-day money-back guarantee. Given that ArcticBlast contains DMSO — a penetration enhancer that drives other substances through skin — purity and authenticity are more critical than for typical supplements.

Can I find ArcticBlast at Walmart or GNC?

No. ArcticBlast is not available at Walmart, GNC, CVS, Walgreens, Target, or any other retail chain. It is a direct-to-consumer product sold exclusively through the official website. This is standard practice for ClickBank products, which use a direct distribution model that eliminates retail markup and allows the vendor to maintain the ClickBank-enforced guarantee.

Why is ArcticBlast more expensive on Amazon (if I find a listing)?

Third-party Amazon sellers who obtain ClickBank products for resale typically mark up the price significantly because they bought at retail and need to cover their margin plus Amazon seller fees. You will often find the same product at 20-40% higher prices from unauthorized Amazon resellers. The official site’s bundle pricing — especially the 3- and 6-bottle options — is usually the cheapest per-bottle cost available anywhere.

How do I know the ArcticBlast website is legitimate?

The official ArcticBlast website uses ClickBank for payment processing — look for ClickBank’s secure checkout (clickbank.com domain in the checkout URL) as authentication. Check for HTTPS (padlock icon). ClickBank processes billions in e-commerce transactions and provides independent consumer protection — it is a reliable signal of a legitimate purchase channel. If you are uncertain, ArcticBlast: Scam or Legit? covers the vendor history and trust signals in full detail.

What happens to my refund if I buy ArcticBlast from Amazon?

If you purchase from an Amazon third-party seller, you are subject to Amazon’s return policy (usually 30 days) and the seller’s specific terms — not the official 60-day ArcticBlast money-back guarantee. ClickBank’s independent guarantee only applies to purchases made directly through the official checkout. For a product you are testing for chronic pain, the longer 60-day window is significantly more valuable — and more than twice as long as Amazon’s standard return window.

Is there any legitimate reason to buy ArcticBlast from Amazon?

No. There is no legitimate reason to buy ArcticBlast from Amazon. You pay more, lose the 60-day guarantee, risk receiving an inauthentic product (especially concerning for a DMSO formula where purity directly affects safety), and cannot access vendor customer support. The official site is strictly better in every dimension.

Get ArcticBlast from the Official Site — 60-Day Guarantee Skip Amazon. The official site gives you lower prices, the 60-day refund guarantee, and guaranteed-authentic product. Visit the Official Website →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}


9. Final Recommendation — Official Site Only

The question this article set out to answer — should you buy ArcticBlast on Amazon? — has a clear answer: no.

Not because I am directing you to the official site for any reason other than the analysis above. The comparison is genuinely one-sided. Amazon cannot match the official site on price (when you compare bundle tiers to Amazon’s inflated single-unit resale prices), on guarantee strength (60 days, independently enforced by ClickBank, versus Amazon’s 30-day seller-dependent window), on supply chain integrity (essential for a DMSO-based formula where purity is a safety input, not just a quality preference), or on customer support access.

This is not a product category where the Amazon convenience calculus shifts the decision. ArcticBlast is a DMSO-based topical formula. The source integrity question is genuinely more material than it would be for a standard oral supplement. And the bundle pricing structure on the official site means you will likely pay less, not more, even before accounting for the guarantee and support advantages.

My recommendation: Purchase through the official site. Use the 3-bottle bundle if you are testing for the first time, the 6-bottle bundle if you have already used the product and want to continue. Save your ClickBank order confirmation email. Apply the formula consistently for your intended evaluation period, and use the 60-day window honestly — if it does not produce meaningful change, initiate the refund process before the window closes.

For everything you need to make an informed purchase decision — full ingredient breakdown, real user experience reporting, effectiveness evidence — see my complete ArcticBlast review. For credential context and editorial methodology, I cover those in detail at Sarah Reynolds’s about page.

The real customer reviews article is also worth reading before you commit, particularly the discussion of what realistic results look like and over what timeline — managing expectations before purchase is part of using the 60-day guarantee productively.

This site contains links to the official ArcticBlast purchase page. I may receive compensation when readers purchase through those links — full details at /affiliate-disclosure. That compensation does not change my analysis. The comparison table, pricing figures, and guarantee structure described above are independently verified and I flag every material limitation I find.

Check Current Pricing on the Official Website{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}

Get ArcticBlast from the Official Site — 60-Day Guarantee Skip Amazon. The official site gives you lower prices, the 60-day refund guarantee, and guaranteed-authentic product. Visit the Official Website →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}


These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. ArcticBlast is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any new supplement or topical pain formula, particularly if you have a medical condition or take prescription medications.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Is ArcticBlast available on Amazon?

ArcticBlast is not officially sold on Amazon. Truegenics sells exclusively through the official website, processed through ClickBank. Any ArcticBlast listing on Amazon is from an unauthorized third-party seller and does not qualify for the official 60-day money-back guarantee. Given that ArcticBlast contains DMSO — a penetration enhancer that drives other substances through skin — purity and authenticity are more critical than for typical supplements.

Can I find ArcticBlast at Walmart or GNC?

No. ArcticBlast is not available at Walmart, GNC, CVS, Walgreens, Target, or any other retail chain. It is a direct-to-consumer product sold exclusively through the official website. This is standard practice for ClickBank products, which use a direct distribution model that eliminates retail markup and allows the vendor to maintain the ClickBank-enforced guarantee.

Why is ArcticBlast more expensive on Amazon (if I find a listing)?

Third-party Amazon sellers who obtain ClickBank products for resale typically mark up the price significantly because they bought at retail and need to cover their margin plus Amazon seller fees. You'll often find the same product at 20-40% higher prices from unauthorized Amazon resellers. The official site's bundle pricing — especially the 3- and 6-bottle options — is usually the cheapest per-bottle cost.

How do I know the ArcticBlast website is legitimate?

The official ArcticBlast website uses ClickBank for payment processing — look for ClickBank's secure checkout (clickbank.com domain in the checkout URL) as authentication. The site domain should be getarcticblast.com. Check for HTTPS (padlock icon). ClickBank processes billions in e-commerce transactions and provides independent consumer protection — it's a reliable signal of a legitimate purchase channel.

What happens to my refund if I buy ArcticBlast from Amazon?

If you purchase from an Amazon third-party seller, you are subject to Amazon's return policy (usually 30 days) and the seller's specific terms — NOT the official 60-day ArcticBlast money-back guarantee. ClickBank's independent guarantee only applies to purchases made directly through the official checkout. For a product you're testing for chronic pain, the longer 60-day window is significantly more valuable.

Is there any legitimate reason to buy ArcticBlast from Amazon?

No — there is no legitimate reason to buy ArcticBlast from Amazon. You pay more, lose the 60-day guarantee, risk receiving an inauthentic product (especially concerning for a DMSO formula where purity directly affects safety), and cannot access vendor customer support. The official site is strictly better in every dimension.

See the formulation and current pricing for yourself.

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