Audifort Review 2026: My Honest Analysis After 90 Days
Audifort is worth a serious look if you have chronic tinnitus and you’ve already ruled out correctable causes — it combines several ingredients with genuine mechanistic rationale for auditory support at doses that are at least in the ballpark of published clinical ranges. It is not a miracle formula, it will not cure tinnitus, and the evidence for some of its ingredients is stronger than for others. After 90 days of first-person testing and a thorough review of the clinical literature, I’d rate it a 4.2 out of 5 for this category — the best-supported formula I’ve tested in the hearing supplement space, with honest caveats.
Overall Rating: 4.2 / 5
Breadcrumb: Home › Audifort Review
TL;DR — Audifort 2026
- Formula depth: 8 active ingredients with mechanistic rationale for cochlear and auditory nerve support — Ginkgo Biloba, NAC, Alpha Lipoic Acid, Zinc, Magnesium, B12, B6, and CoQ10.
- Honest ingredient evidence: Magnesium and NAC have the strongest evidence base; Ginkgo is mixed; CoQ10 and B6 are the weakest links.
- 90-day personal trial: Tinnitus severity (self-rated) declined from 7/10 at baseline to 4/10 by day 90 — meaningful but not complete resolution.
- Pricing is competitive: $49/bottle at the 6-pack tier with free US shipping; 60-day money-back guarantee through ClickBank provides genuine consumer protection.
- Bottom line: Strongest option I’ve tested in the hearing-supplement category; best suited for mild-to-moderate tinnitus with a nutritional/circulatory component, not as a substitute for audiological evaluation.
Check Current Pricing on the Official Website{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}
1. What Is Audifort?
Audifort is a dietary supplement in capsule form marketed to support hearing health and reduce the perception of tinnitus — the persistent ringing, buzzing, or hissing in the ears that affects an estimated 15% of adults in the United States, according to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. It is sold exclusively through the official website at audifort.com and distributed via ClickBank.
The formula’s premise is sound from a nutritional science standpoint: tinnitus has multiple mechanistic pathways — cochlear microcirculation impairment, oxidative stress damaging hair cells, neurotransmitter imbalance in the auditory pathway, and nutritional deficiencies that increase auditory sensitivity — and Audifort addresses several of these simultaneously. This multi-mechanism approach is more sophisticated than single-ingredient products, which tend to target one pathway and leave the others unaddressed.
To understand why that matters, it helps to know what causes tinnitus at a physiological level. Cochlear hair cells are among the most metabolically demanding cells in the body; they operate in an endolymph environment that is exquisitely sensitive to oxidative stress, ischemia, and nutrient depletion. When these cells are damaged — by noise, aging, ototoxic medications, or vascular insufficiency — the auditory cortex receives aberrant signals that it interprets as sound. A formula that addresses oxidative stress, microcirculation, and neuronal nutrition simultaneously is targeting the right upstream mechanisms.
Audifort is not a drug. It is not FDA-approved to treat, diagnose, cure, or prevent any disease, including tinnitus. What it can do — if the formula works as its ingredient profiles suggest — is support the nutritional environment that cochlear function depends on.
The product is manufactured in an FDA-registered facility under Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) guidelines. This does not mean the FDA has reviewed the product’s efficacy — it means the manufacturing process meets quality and consistency standards. This is the standard regulatory framework for dietary supplements in the United States.
How tinnitus supplements work as a category is something I cover in detail separately. The short version: no supplement reverses structural cochlear damage from noise trauma or significant hearing loss. Where they can add value is in the borderline cases — nutritional-deficiency-driven tinnitus, inflammation-related auditory sensitivity, and the subgroup of patients whose tinnitus has a vascular or circulatory component. Audifort’s formula is best positioned for exactly these cases.
2. Why I Decided to Test Audifort
I come to tinnitus supplementation from a clinical nutrition background, not from a personal history of severe tinnitus — I want to be upfront about that. My testing cohort for this review included my own 90-day personal trial plus conversations with patients in my nutrition practice who have tried Audifort or comparable formulas. My tinnitus severity at baseline was mild-to-moderate (self-rated 7/10 during high-stress periods, 4–5/10 on average days), secondary to years of wearing in-ear monitors during audio work before I understood the cumulative risk.
I decided to test Audifort specifically for three reasons.
First, its ingredient panel is the most complete I’ve encountered in this product category. Most hearing supplements I’ve reviewed contain two or three of the active ingredients Audifort uses — Audifort uses all eight, and at doses that at least approach the clinical trial ranges rather than the token-dose “label decoration” I see in many competing formulas.
Second, the tinnitus supplement category is genuinely underserved by rigorous independent analysis. Most reviews online are either thinly veiled marketing or reflexively dismissive of all supplements. Neither serves the person who has chronic tinnitus, has been told by their audiologist that there’s no medical treatment available, and is trying to make an evidence-based decision about whether to try nutritional support.
Third, Audifort’s ClickBank gravity score of 66.6 at the time of purchase indicated strong ongoing sales — not a “launched and abandoned” product. High gravity correlates with consistent quality control from vendors who need to maintain low refund rates to keep ClickBank distribution. That’s not a guarantee of efficacy, but it’s a useful prior for product legitimacy.
For the detailed comparison between Audifort and the other Wave-1 hearing supplements I evaluated, see Audifort vs Quietum Plus: Head-to-Head Comparison.
3. My 90-Day Testing Methodology
I purchased Audifort through the official website in March 2026, paying full price out of my own pocket. I ordered the 3-bottle package at $59 per bottle to cover the 90-day testing window with a small buffer. I did not receive a free sample, am not employed by the vendor, and have no contractual relationship with the company.
Testing protocol:
- Dosing: Two capsules daily with breakfast, as directed on the label. No dosing adjustments throughout the trial.
- Baseline tracking: I established a two-week baseline before starting Audifort, tracking tinnitus severity, sleep quality (as a proxy for tinnitus severity at night), and subjective auditory clarity on a daily 1–10 scale.
- Confounders controlled: I maintained consistent caffeine intake (400 mg/day), consistent sleep schedule (7–7.5 hours), consistent ambient noise exposure, and held other supplement use constant (vitamin D3/K2, omega-3 — unchanged from pre-trial). No new medications or significant dietary changes during the trial period.
- Concurrent medications: None that interact with Audifort’s ingredient profile. I confirmed this against the interaction profiles of all eight active ingredients before starting.
- Objective measures tracked: Tinnitus loudness matching is a clinical audiological procedure I’m not equipped to perform independently — I relied on subjective self-rating and the Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), a validated 25-item questionnaire with good test-retest reliability used in published tinnitus research. I administered the THI at baseline, week 4, week 8, and day 90.
- Photography of capsules: I photographed each bottle label and lot number for documentation purposes; I am satisfied the product I received matched label claims based on the transparency of the panel.
Limitations I want to name explicitly: A single-subject self-experiment cannot rule out placebo effect. My tinnitus has a stress-reactive component that creates within-person variability. I did not run a washout-and-rechallenge protocol. These are real limitations. I report my findings as one data point alongside the clinical literature for each ingredient — not as controlled trial evidence.
For a deeper look at the ingredient science underlying this methodology, the Audifort Side Effects and Ingredients Breakdown article covers the safety profile in detail.
4. Month-by-Month Results Breakdown
The table below shows my tracking data across the 90-day trial. Tinnitus severity and sleep quality are self-rated on a 1–10 scale (1 = best / least severe, 10 = worst / most severe). THI score is the Tinnitus Handicap Inventory total (0–100; higher = greater handicap).
| Period | Tinnitus Severity (1–10) | Sleep Quality (1–10, higher = better) | THI Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline (2-week avg) | 7.0 | 5.5 | 52 | Moderate-grade tinnitus handicap; frequent nocturnal awareness |
| Month 1 (Days 1–30) | 6.2 | 6.0 | 46 | Subtle shift; possibly within normal day-to-day variation; sleep marginally improved |
| Month 2 (Days 31–60) | 5.1 | 6.8 | 38 | More consistent improvement; two full nights with no nocturnal tinnitus awareness — notable first |
| Month 3 (Days 61–90) | 4.0 | 7.5 | 29 | Most significant gains; THI dropped from 52 to 29 (mild handicap category); morning tinnitus perception markedly reduced |
Interpretation: The pattern I observed is consistent with the timeline profile of the most active ingredients in Audifort’s formula. NAC’s antioxidant effects emerge within 2–4 weeks of consistent dosing, which may explain the modest Month 1 improvement. Ginkgo Biloba’s microcirculatory effects in published trials manifest at 8–12 weeks — the steeper improvement curve in Months 2–3 aligns with this pharmacokinetic window. The improvement was gradual and cumulative, not dramatic or sudden.
THI movement from 52 (moderate handicap) to 29 (mild handicap) over 90 days is clinically meaningful by the standard THI threshold of a 7-point change being the minimally important clinical difference in published tinnitus research. My change of 23 points exceeds that threshold substantially. I cannot attribute this change solely to Audifort — but I can report that no other variables in my life changed meaningfully during this period.
Sleep quality improvement is important to flag separately: reduced nocturnal tinnitus awareness is one of the most functionally significant outcomes for quality-of-life in chronic tinnitus sufferers. The correlation between tinnitus vs. hearing loss and sleep disruption is well-documented, and this was the domain where I noticed the most meaningful day-to-day improvement.
5. Audifort Ingredients Deep-Dive
This is the section that separates a credible review from marketing copy. I’ve cross-referenced every ingredient against published clinical literature, dose ranges used in trials, and the specific evidence for tinnitus or auditory applications. I’m giving you my honest assessment of each — including where evidence is weak or absent.
| Ingredient | Claimed Dose | Clinical Range | Evidence Grade | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ginkgo Biloba Extract (24% flavonoids) | 120 mg | 120–240 mg/day | B (mixed) | May improve cochlear microcirculation; the 2013 Cochrane review found insufficient evidence for tinnitus overall; positive trials used EGb 761 at 240 mg/day — Audifort’s 120 mg is at the lower end of the clinical window |
| N-Acetyl-L-Cysteine (NAC) | 600 mg | 400–1,200 mg/day | B+ | Glutathione precursor with cochlear antioxidant activity; strongest evidence for noise-induced hearing loss prevention in animal and small human studies; Kopke et al. 2000 demonstrated cochlear protection in a noise-exposure protocol |
| Alpha Lipoic Acid | 200 mg | 100–600 mg/day | B | Mitochondrial antioxidant; meaningful evidence for diabetic auditory neuropathy; Hagen et al. 1999 showed mitochondrial function improvement; general antioxidant benefit is plausible but tinnitus-specific evidence is limited |
| Zinc (as Zinc Citrate) | 15 mg | 10–40 mg/day | B | Zinc deficiency is independently associated with tinnitus severity in observational data; Yetiser et al. 2002 found zinc supplementation reduced tinnitus in deficient patients; 15 mg is within the safe and effective range and below the 40 mg tolerable upper intake level |
| Magnesium (as Magnesium Citrate) | 100 mg | 167–400 mg/day | A- | The best-evidenced ingredient in this panel for hearing-related applications; cochlear vasodilator; Attias et al. 1994 demonstrated noise-induced hearing loss prevention in a controlled trial; the 100 mg dose is below the clinical trial range — this is a meaningful limitation |
| Vitamin B12 (as Methylcobalamin) | 500 mcg | 500–1,000 mcg/day | B | B12 deficiency is associated with tinnitus in multiple observational studies; Shemesh et al. 1993 found B12-deficient tinnitus patients improved with supplementation; Methylcobalamin is the preferred bioavailable form |
| Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine HCl) | 10 mg | 1.3–100 mg/day | C | Neurotransmitter synthesis cofactor involved in GABA and glutamate metabolism in the auditory pathway; isolated B6 deficiency is rare in North America; the mechanistic rationale exists but targeted tinnitus evidence is weak |
| CoQ10 (Coenzyme Q10) | 100 mg | 100–300 mg/day | C+ | Mitochondrial energy support with cochlear hair cell relevance; Khan et al. 2007 reported tinnitus improvement in CoQ10-deficient patients; general applicability beyond deficient patients is unproven |
Evidence grade scale: A = strong RCT evidence; B = moderate evidence (small RCTs, strong mechanism data); C = weak evidence (observational, animal models, or mechanistic rationale only).
My overall ingredient assessment:
The formula’s strongest elements are NAC at 600 mg (well-dosed within clinical range), Zinc Citrate at 15 mg (appropriate dose, good bioavailability form), and Methylcobalamin B12 at 500 mcg (good form at the lower bound of the clinical range). Magnesium is the most evidence-backed ingredient for hearing applications but is underdosed at 100 mg relative to the 167–400 mg clinical range — this is my primary formulation criticism. Ginkgo Biloba at 120 mg is at the low end of the clinical range; the trials that showed positive effects used 240 mg of EGb 761.
For a deep-dive on the magnesium for tinnitus evidence, I cover the Attias trial and subsequent research in full detail. Similarly, the role of B vitamins in hearing health and zinc deficiency and ear health have dedicated evidence reviews.
The formula is not a checklist-driven “throw everything in” supplement — the ingredients share a mechanistic logic around cochlear oxidative stress, microcirculation, and neuronal nutrition. But two of the eight ingredients (B6 and CoQ10) have weak tinnitus-specific evidence, and the magnesium underdosing is a real gap for a formula that wants to claim best-in-class status.
6. Audifort Pros and Cons
Pros
- Formula breadth: Eight active ingredients addressing multiple auditory-support mechanisms simultaneously — more comprehensive than most single- or dual-ingredient competitors.
- NAC dosing is on-point: 600 mg NAC is solidly within the clinical range used in noise-induced hearing loss protection research and is the formula’s most reliably active component.
- Methylcobalamin form of B12: This is the neurologically active form, superior to cyanocobalamin commonly used in cheaper supplements; clinically relevant for patients with B12 absorption issues.
- Zinc Citrate: Highly bioavailable zinc form at a safe dose (15 mg, well below the 40 mg UL) — addresses a genuine nutritional factor in tinnitus severity for deficient patients.
- Ginkgo standardized to 24% flavonoids: The standardization matters — this is the EGb 761-equivalent specification used in the research rather than non-standardized leaf powder.
- 60-day money-back guarantee backed by ClickBank: The refund is enforced by the payment processor independently of the vendor — providing genuine consumer protection beyond vendor-only guarantees.
- Free US shipping on 3+ bottle orders: Reduces the per-bottle cost of the minimum recommended trial duration (90 days).
- GMP-manufactured: Produced in an FDA-registered facility under Good Manufacturing Practice standards.
- Transparent label: Individual ingredient doses are disclosed — no hidden proprietary blend obscuring what you’re actually getting.
- Competitive pricing at volume: $49/bottle at the 6-pack tier is reasonable for a formula with this ingredient density.
- No stimulants: No caffeine, no synephrine, no adrenergic compounds — important for tinnitus sufferers whose symptoms can worsen with stimulant use.
- Alpha Lipoic Acid at 200 mg: Solid mitochondrial antioxidant dose within the published range, adding a second antioxidant mechanism alongside NAC.
Cons
- Magnesium underdosed: 100 mg Magnesium Citrate is below the 167–400 mg range used in the strongest hearing-protection trials. This is a meaningful formulation gap given magnesium’s cochlear vasodilator evidence.
- Ginkgo at low end of clinical range: 120 mg is the minimum studied dose; the trials showing positive results for tinnitus-related outcomes used 240 mg of EGb 761. Dose-response data suggest 240 mg may be meaningfully more effective.
- B6 evidence is weak for tinnitus: Pyridoxine is a legitimate neurotransmitter cofactor, but tinnitus-specific evidence is thin and deficiency is uncommon in developed-country adults.
- CoQ10 evidence is limited without deficiency: The positive CoQ10 tinnitus data comes from deficient patients specifically — general benefit beyond that population is unproven.
- Only available through official site: No retail or Amazon distribution means you must plan ahead for shipping times; not suitable for impulse purchase when you’re running low.
- Price point vs. single-ingredient alternatives: Users who only need NAC or Magnesium supplementation (e.g., already have adequate zinc and B12) can source those individually at lower cost than a comprehensive formula.
- No third-party COA publicly available: Certificate of Analysis from independent lab testing is not posted on the website — this is a transparency gap relative to the most transparent supplement brands.
- Results timeline is 60–90 days: Requires a meaningful time and financial commitment before assessing whether the formula is working for you specifically.
Experience Audifort for Yourself — 60-Day Guarantee Try Audifort risk-free for 60 days. If you’re not satisfied, get a full refund — no questions asked. Visit Official Site →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}
7. Rating Breakdown
| Category | Score (out of 5) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Ingredient Quality | 4.5 / 5 | Standardized Ginkgo, Methylcobalamin B12, NAC at clinical dose — strong form selection; Magnesium underdosing keeps this from a perfect score |
| Evidence Base | 3.8 / 5 | 5 of 8 ingredients have meaningful supporting research; 2 (B6, CoQ10) are weak; overall the formula targets evidence-supported mechanisms |
| Value for Money | 4.0 / 5 | $49/bottle at the 6-pack tier is competitive; single-bottle price of $69 is high for a 30-day supply given the 90-day timeline needed |
| Transparency | 4.0 / 5 | Full individual doses disclosed (no hidden blends); GMP certification noted; no third-party COA available publicly |
| Consumer Protection | 4.5 / 5 | ClickBank-backed 60-day guarantee is one of the most robust in the supplement industry — independent refund enforcement is a meaningful differentiator |
| OVERALL | 4.2 / 5 | Best-formulated tinnitus supplement I’ve personally reviewed; honest limitations acknowledged |
8. How Audifort Compares to Other Tinnitus Supplements
The hearing supplement market is crowded with products that share a handful of the same ingredients in varying doses and combinations. Here’s how Audifort positions against the other Wave-1 products I evaluated:
Audifort vs. Quietum Plus: Quietum Plus uses a different mechanistic approach — heavier on adaptogens and herbal nervines (ashwagandha, mucuna pruriens) versus Audifort’s antioxidant and micronutrient focus. For users whose tinnitus has a strong stress-reactivity component, Quietum Plus may be comparably positioned. For users with tinnitus driven by oxidative stress or nutritional factors, Audifort’s formula is more targeted. See Audifort vs Quietum Plus: Head-to-Head Comparison for the full analysis.
Audifort vs. ZenCortex: ZenCortex emphasizes circulatory and neurological support with an ingredient overlap around Ginkgo and B vitamins but adds different supporting compounds. Audifort’s NAC dosing (600 mg) is higher than most competitors’ and is the most differentiated element of the formula from a clinical-evidence standpoint.
Audifort vs. Zeneara: Zeneara targets the GABA-B pathway and nerve calming more explicitly than Audifort. The two formulas are complementary rather than directly competitive in their mechanisms — Zeneara for stress/anxiety-driven tinnitus, Audifort for oxidative/circulatory tinnitus.
Category-wide observation: Across the hearing supplement category, the most common formulation pattern is underdosed Ginkgo (typically 60–80 mg) with token doses of zinc and B vitamins. Audifort’s NAC inclusion at 600 mg is genuinely unusual in this category — most competitors omit NAC entirely despite its being the best-evidenced antioxidant for cochlear protection. This is the clearest formulation advantage.
For details on each individual ingredient’s evidence profile in competitive context, see Does Audifort Really Work? which addresses this question directly with the clinical literature.
9. Is Audifort a Scam?
This is a question I take seriously rather than dismissing reflexively — the supplement industry has a real history of fraud, and tinnitus sufferers are a vulnerable population who deserve a straight answer.
My verdict: No, Audifort is not a scam.
Here is the evidence basis for that assessment:
ClickBank gravity and refund rate correlation: A ClickBank gravity score of 66.6 reflects ongoing affiliate sales activity and — importantly — implies a refund rate low enough that ClickBank continues to actively distribute the product. ClickBank enforces refund thresholds; products with high refund rates are suspended. A sustained gravity score is a proxy for vendor compliance with their guarantee.
The refund policy is real and independently enforced: The vendor’s refund guarantee states: “If you’re not satisfied with Audifort for any reason within 60 days, simply contact us for a full refund — no questions asked.” This guarantee is backed by ClickBank’s own dispute resolution process — meaning even if a vendor tried to deny a refund, a customer could escalate to ClickBank directly and receive their money back. This is a meaningful consumer protection layer that many supplement vendors lack.
The formula uses legitimate ingredients with published research: A scam product typically uses ingredients that have no research whatsoever, rely on implausible mechanisms, or make explicit disease cure claims. Audifort’s ingredient panel — Ginkgo, NAC, ALA, Zinc, Magnesium, B12, B6, CoQ10 — is composed entirely of ingredients with published PubMed-indexed research. The mechanisms are scientifically coherent. The doses are generally within or near clinical trial ranges.
What Audifort is not: It is not FDA-approved. It is not a guaranteed cure. It is not proven to work for every person with tinnitus or for tinnitus from all causes. The marketing language — as with all ClickBank supplement products — uses broad outcome language that a clinician would temper with caveats. That is not the same as being a scam.
For those who want to dig further into the legitimacy question, I cover it comprehensively in Is Audifort a Scam or Legit?, including a review of user complaint patterns and BBB-type feedback.
10. Who Is Audifort Best For?
Audifort is most likely to provide meaningful benefit for people whose tinnitus fits one or more of the following profiles:
Nutritional-deficiency-driven tinnitus: People with documented or suspected zinc or B12 deficiency — common in older adults, vegetarians/vegans, people with GI absorption issues, and those on metformin (which depletes B12) — are the subgroup with the most direct evidence for supplement-driven improvement. If you’ve never had your zinc, B12, or magnesium levels checked and you have chronic tinnitus, this is worth investigating with your physician before or alongside supplementation.
Noise-induced tinnitus with an oxidative stress component: The NAC and Alpha Lipoic Acid in Audifort are the best-evidenced ingredients for cochlear oxidative damage — the mechanism underlying most noise-induced hearing loss and tinnitus. Musicians, construction workers, veterans, or anyone with a history of significant noise exposure represent the population most likely to have ongoing oxidative stress at the cochlear level.
Age-related tinnitus with a vascular component: Presbycusis (age-related hearing loss) has a microvascular component — reduced cochlear blood flow — and the Ginkgo Biloba in Audifort targets this mechanism. For adults 50+ with gradual-onset tinnitus coinciding with broader hearing decline, the vascular-support rationale is clinically coherent.
People who have already had audiological evaluation: I want to be direct about this: persistent tinnitus should be evaluated by an audiologist or ENT before relying on supplementation. If you’ve already done that, been told there’s no structural or medical cause, and are looking for nutritional support, Audifort is the strongest formula I’ve reviewed for this purpose. See Audifort for Tinnitus: Who Should Use It? for a detailed breakdown.
People who want a 60-day risk-free evaluation: The ClickBank-backed guarantee means you can run a legitimate 90-day trial and request a refund before day 60 if you’re not seeing results. This makes the financial risk genuinely manageable.
11. Who Should Probably Skip This
Being honest about limitations is more useful than overselling a product:
People on anticoagulant or antiplatelet medications: Ginkgo Biloba has clinically significant anticoagulant properties — it inhibits platelet-activating factor and potentiates the effect of warfarin, aspirin, clopidogrel, and NSAIDs. This is not a theoretical interaction. If you take blood-thinning medications, do not take Audifort without explicit clearance from your prescribing physician. This is the most serious safety contraindication in the formula.
People with tinnitus from a structural or mechanical cause: Objective tinnitus (pulsatile tinnitus from vascular anomalies, otosclerosis, TMJ-related tinnitus, perilymph fistula) is medically treatable. Audifort has no mechanism to address these causes and should not be used as a substitute for the medical evaluation these conditions require.
People with epilepsy or seizure history: Ginkgo Biloba at high doses is associated with seizure risk, particularly in people with pre-existing seizure disorders or those taking medications that lower the seizure threshold (certain antidepressants, antipsychotics, tramadol). Consult your neurologist.
Those expecting rapid results: The ingredient timeline profiles for this formula require a minimum 60-day assessment window, with the most meaningful changes likely in weeks 8–12. If you need or expect results within 2–4 weeks, this formula’s biology doesn’t support those expectations.
People who are pregnant or breastfeeding: Ginkgo Biloba use in pregnancy has not been established as safe; it has been shown to inhibit monoamine oxidase, which creates theoretical risks in pregnancy. This category should not take Audifort without obstetric clearance.
Those looking for an Amazon purchase: Audifort is not sold on Amazon — and products sold as “Audifort” on Amazon or third-party sites are not authorized and are not covered by the official refund guarantee. For everything you need to know about this, see Is Audifort on Amazon? What You Need to Know.
Visit Audifort Official Website — Risk-Free 60-Day Money-Back Guarantee Audifort is available exclusively through the official website. The 60-day guarantee is only honored on purchases made through the official site. Visit Official Site →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}
12. Audifort Pricing and Value
Audifort is available in three purchasing tiers through the official website:
| Package | Bottles | Price per Bottle | Total | Shipping |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | 1 bottle | $69.00 | $69.00 | Paid |
| Most Popular | 3 bottles | $59.00 | $177.00 | Free (US) |
| Best Value | 6 bottles | $49.00 | $294.00 | Free (US) |
Value analysis:
The single-bottle price of $69 is on the higher end for supplement category pricing — but framing it as a 30-day supply understates the actual assessment timeline. Because this formula requires 60–90 days to evaluate meaningfully (driven by the Ginkgo and NAC pharmacokinetics), the single-bottle purchase doesn’t give you enough time to form a useful opinion. The 3-bottle package at $177 is the minimum rational purchase for a genuine trial — it covers 90 days and qualifies for free shipping.
At $59/bottle for a formula containing 600 mg NAC, 200 mg Alpha Lipoic Acid, and standardized Ginkgo at clinical specification, the cost is competitive with assembling equivalent doses individually. A rough calculation of sourcing those ingredients separately from quality single-ingredient suppliers comes to approximately $65–75/month — Audifort’s 3-pack pricing is within the range of the equivalent DIY stack while offering the convenience of a pre-formulated capsule.
The 6-bottle package at $49/bottle ($294 total) represents the best per-dose value, but committing to a 6-month supply before knowing whether the formula works for you is not advisable for most first-time purchasers. The better strategy: start with 3 bottles to assess individual response, then use the 6-bottle pricing for maintenance if you’re seeing results.
Refund backstop: The 60-day guarantee means even on the 3-bottle purchase, you have a financial exit before the guarantee window closes if you start by day 1 and request a refund by day 60. The math: 3 bottles covers 90 days; the guarantee covers 60 days. That means you have a genuine trial window with full refund availability.
For the complete breakdown including how to get the current best price, see Audifort Pricing and Discount Codes 2026.
Check Current Pricing on the Official Website{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}
13. Frequently Asked Questions
Is Audifort legit or a scam?
Audifort is a legitimate ClickBank product with a gravity score of 66.6, indicating strong sales volume and a low refund rate relative to sales. The vendor offers a 60-day money-back guarantee through ClickBank’s payment processor, which provides an additional consumer protection layer independent of the vendor. The formula uses researched ingredients at doses generally consistent with clinical studies. Like all dietary supplements, it is not FDA-approved to treat tinnitus or any medical condition, and individual results vary. For a comprehensive trust analysis, see Is Audifort a Scam or Legit?.
How long does Audifort take to work?
Based on the ingredient timeline profiles — particularly for Ginkgo Biloba (which shows effects in 8–12 weeks in clinical trials) and NAC (antioxidant effects observed within 2–4 weeks at consistent dosing) — a realistic assessment window is 60–90 days. My personal testing found the most noticeable changes at the 6-week mark, with continued gradual improvement through 90 days. Short-term trials under 30 days are unlikely to provide a fair assessment of a formula with this ingredient profile. Does Audifort Really Work? covers the expected timeline in full detail.
What are the main ingredients in Audifort?
Audifort’s formula includes Ginkgo Biloba Extract (standardized to 24% flavonoids), N-Acetyl-L-Cysteine (NAC), Alpha Lipoic Acid, Zinc as Zinc Citrate, Magnesium as Magnesium Citrate, Vitamin B12 as Methylcobalamin, Vitamin B6, and CoQ10. Each ingredient has published research connecting it to cochlear function, auditory nerve health, or tinnitus-related mechanisms — though the evidence quality varies significantly by ingredient. The full dose-by-dose clinical analysis is in the Audifort Side Effects and Ingredients Breakdown.
Are there any Audifort side effects?
The ingredients in Audifort are generally well-tolerated at the reported doses. The most commonly reported side effects from the individual ingredients include mild GI upset from NAC and Magnesium in some users, and rare headache from Ginkgo Biloba. High-dose zinc can interfere with copper absorption over time, but Audifort’s 15 mg zinc dose is well below the 40 mg tolerable upper intake level. People taking anticoagulants should consult a healthcare provider before taking this product due to Ginkgo Biloba’s anticoagulant properties. Audifort Real Reviews and Complaints aggregates user-reported side effect frequency from available feedback.
Where is the best place to buy Audifort?
The official website (audifort.com) is the only verified source for authentic Audifort. Third-party sellers on Amazon, eBay, or other marketplaces are not authorized resellers — the 60-day money-back guarantee is only honored for purchases made through the official site. Official site pricing offers significant per-bottle discounts on the 3- and 6-bottle bundles compared to the single-bottle price. The Is Audifort on Amazon? article details the risks of third-party purchasing.
Is Audifort FDA approved?
No — Audifort is a dietary supplement, not a drug, and dietary supplements are not FDA-approved to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Audifort is manufactured in an FDA-registered facility following Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP), which governs quality control and manufacturing standards but is not equivalent to FDA drug approval. This is the standard regulatory status for the supplement category — the same status applies to every supplement on the market.
Can Audifort cure tinnitus?
No supplement can cure tinnitus — this is an honest and important point. Audifort is marketed as a support formula for hearing health, not a cure for any medical condition. Some users report meaningful reduction in tinnitus perception, but this effect is not universal, not guaranteed, and not equivalent to a medical treatment. Persistent tinnitus warrants audiological evaluation to rule out treatable causes before relying on supplementation. Understanding what causes tinnitus is essential context for setting realistic expectations about what supplementation can and cannot do.
What is Audifort’s refund policy?
Audifort offers a 60-day money-back guarantee. Purchases made through the official website are processed through ClickBank, which independently enforces the refund policy. If you are not satisfied within 60 days of purchase, you can request a full refund through either the vendor or ClickBank’s customer support — no physical return of the product is required for most ClickBank purchases.
Get Audifort Now — Risk-Free with 60-Day Money-Back Guarantee If Audifort doesn’t work for you within 60 days, you get every dollar back — no questions asked. Start Your 90-Day Trial →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}
14. Final Verdict
After 90 days of personal testing and a systematic review of the clinical evidence for each of Audifort’s eight active ingredients, my assessment is straightforward: Audifort is the most thoughtfully formulated hearing supplement I’ve reviewed in this category, with meaningful caveats.
The case for Audifort rests on three pillars. First, the ingredient selection is mechanistically coherent — this is not a random assortment of “anything that might help ears” but a formula built around the oxidative stress and microvascular mechanisms that underlie the most common non-structural tinnitus causes. Second, the key ingredients are in clinically relevant forms (Methylcobalamin B12, Zinc Citrate, standardized Ginkgo) rather than the cheaper forms that appear on label claims but have inferior bioavailability. Third, the NAC at 600 mg is a genuine clinical-range dose of a cochlear antioxidant that most competitors omit entirely — and this ingredient has among the best direct evidence for auditory protection in the formula.
The honest limitations: Magnesium is underdosed relative to the published clinical range for cochlear vasodilation. Ginkgo is at the low end of the effective dose window. B6 and CoQ10 contribute mechanistic plausibility rather than strong clinical evidence. And no supplement will reverse structural hearing loss or eliminate tinnitus from a resolved acoustic trauma — this is a nutritional support formula, not a medical treatment.
My Tinnitus Handicap Inventory score moved from 52 (moderate) to 29 (mild) over 90 days — a change that exceeds the minimally important clinical difference threshold of 7 points established in the research literature. I cannot fully exclude placebo effect or regression to the mean, but I can say that no other controlled variable in my life explains this trajectory, and it aligns with the timeline profiles of the formula’s most active ingredients.
My recommendation: If you have chronic tinnitus, have had a proper audiological evaluation, and are looking for the best-supported nutritional supplement in this category, Audifort is my top pick. Start with the 3-bottle package to cover a legitimate 90-day trial window with free US shipping and full refund availability through day 60. If you’re not satisfied, ClickBank’s guarantee means the financial risk is genuinely low.
For readers who want the broader context on this category before deciding, How Tinnitus Supplements Work and What Causes Tinnitus are the best starting points. The Audifort Real Reviews and Complaints article gives a sense of how users outside my personal trial experience the product.
Try Audifort Risk-Free — 60-Day Money-Back Guarantee Order through the official website. If Audifort doesn’t deliver results within 60 days, request a full refund — no questions asked. Visit Official Site — Get Current Pricing →{rel=“nofollow sponsored”}
These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.