Quietum Plus is one of the most heavily marketed tinnitus supplements online, which is exactly why it deserves a careful, evidence-first look rather than another testimonial. The short version: it is a real product with a refund policy, but nothing in the published evidence shows it does what its marketing promises.
The short answer
Quietum Plus is a proprietary supplement sold mainly through a long video sales letter that promises to address the root cause of tinnitus. There is no published independent randomized controlled trial demonstrating that it reduces tinnitus. It is not a scam in the narrow sense, you receive a genuine product and a 60-day money-back guarantee, but the gap between what the marketing claims and what the evidence supports is wide. The guarantee, not the science, is what limits your risk.
What Quietum Plus claims
The marketing positions Quietum Plus as a blend of herbs, vitamins, and minerals that supports ear and nerve health and quiets ringing. Claims to silence, reverse, or cure tinnitus appear throughout the funnel. It is worth knowing that no supplement has cleared the bar of an independent trial for tinnitus, so a confident cure claim is a marketing decision, not a research finding. The American Tinnitus Association is explicit that the magic-pill promise is the wrong thing to trust.
What the evidence actually shows
Quietum Plus is a proprietary blend, so the exact doses are not disclosed, which already makes it impossible to line up against the amounts used in studies. What we can say is that the ingredient classes typically used in these formulas have unimpressive individual evidence for tinnitus:
- Ginkgo biloba, one of the most studied, showed no benefit over placebo in the Cochrane review.
- Magnesium and B vitamins have limited, inconsistent evidence in people who are not deficient.
- Zinc helps mainly in people who are genuinely zinc-deficient, not as a general remedy.
A blend of ingredients with weak individual evidence does not become strong evidence by being combined, especially without a trial of the finished product.
Is it a scam?
Calling Quietum Plus a scam is too strong and too simple. You get a real supplement, and the official store offers a refund window. The honest criticism is narrower and more useful: the product is sold on promises (silencing or curing tinnitus) that no evidence backs. That is a reason to be skeptical of the claims, not a reason to assume fraud.
What to do instead of relying on a pill
If your tinnitus is affecting your life, the higher-value moves are not supplements at all:
- Get evaluated to rule out treatable causes such as earwax, a medication effect, or a deficiency.
- Try the interventions with real evidence: cognitive behavioral therapy, sound therapy and white noise, and hearing aids if you have hearing loss.
- See an audiologist rather than self-treating an unknown cause.
Bottom line
Quietum Plus is a real, refundable product wrapped in marketing claims that the evidence does not support. If you decide to try it or any similar formula, lean on the money-back guarantee, keep your expectations modest, and put your real effort into the evidence-based options. A supplement that promises to cure tinnitus is promising something nothing has been shown to do.
Related notes
Frequently asked
Questions readers ask
- Does Quietum Plus actually work for tinnitus?
- There is no published independent randomized controlled trial showing Quietum Plus reduces tinnitus. It is a proprietary herbal and vitamin blend, and the individual ingredients commonly used in such formulas, such as ginkgo and magnesium, have weak or negative evidence for tinnitus in their own trials. Some users report feeling better, but tinnitus has a high placebo response, so personal improvement is not proof the product caused it.
- Is Quietum Plus a scam?
- Not in the sense of taking your money and shipping nothing. You receive a real supplement and it carries a money-back guarantee. The concern is the marketing: the promise to silence or cure tinnitus goes far beyond what any evidence supports. Treat the product as real but the cure claims as unproven.
- What are the ingredients in Quietum Plus?
- Quietum Plus is marketed as a proprietary blend of herbal extracts, vitamins, and minerals. The exact amounts in a proprietary blend are not fully disclosed, which makes it impossible to compare doses against the levels used in clinical studies. The ingredient classes overlap with other tinnitus supplements whose individual evidence is weak.
- Where can I buy Quietum Plus and is the guarantee real?
- It is sold mainly through its official website via a video sales letter, and is also listed on some third-party marketplaces where counterfeits are a risk. The official funnel typically offers a 60-day money-back guarantee, which is the main thing that limits your financial risk if it does not help.
Primary sources
Where this comes from
- ◆ The Allure of the Magic Pill: Tinnitus Supplements · American Tinnitus Association
- ◆ Ginkgo biloba for tinnitus - Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews · Cochrane Library
- ◆ Clinical Practice Guideline: Tinnitus - AAO-HNS · American Academy of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery
- ◆ Tinnitus - NIDCD · National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
Educational use only.
If your symptoms persist or change, see a licensed audiologist or otolaryngologist. Sudden hearing loss is a medical emergency, see a clinician within 72 hours.
TEL—R03 · The Ear Lab · earlabs.app