Honest Assessment
Is MoveWell Daily a Scam?
Short answer: MoveWell Daily isn't a "take your money and disappear" scam, it's a real product from Nutraville with a genuine 365-day refund. But it's the most misleadingly marketed product we've reviewed, and that deserves a frank explanation. The fluoride "joint petrification" story is fringe, and the hero ingredient the whole pitch depends on isn't even in the bottle. Here's how to tell the real product from the story.
The verdict on "scam"
MoveWell Daily is a legitimate product from Nutraville (the maker of JointVive), sold through the trusted retailer ClickBank with a real 365-day money-back guarantee and a fully disclosed label. You'll get a real bottle of real joint ingredients. But the marketing is misleading: it's built on a fringe "fluoride petrifies your joints" theory, and it heavily promotes a "fluoride-removing" tamarind ingredient that doesn't appear on the Supplement Facts at all. So: not a fraud in the criminal sense, but not honest marketing either.
What's legitimate
- A real product and company. Nutraville is an established seller that ships product and processes refunds through ClickBank.
- A disclosed label. Every ingredient and dose is printed, no hidden proprietary blend, so you can see exactly what you're buying.
- Real joint ingredients. Glucosamine, chondroitin, MSM, turmeric, eggshell collagen and BioPerine are all legitimate (if lightly dosed) joint nutrients.
- An excellent guarantee. 365 days, money back, honored through ClickBank.
What's misleading (and why it matters)
- The fluoride premise is fringe. "Joint Petrification Syndrome" isn't a real diagnosis, and there's no good evidence that normal fluoride exposure is turning people's joints to stone.
- The hero ingredient is missing. The video is built around tamarind "removing" fluoride, but tamarind isn't on the label. Neither are several other ingredients it name-drops (chlorella, pine bark, lion's mane, bacopa).
- The doses are low. The ingredients that are included sit below their researched amounts.
- The narrator is unverifiable. "Former NIH researcher Peter Thompson" is a direct-response persona, and the "Amish secret / government cover-up" framing is a marketing device.
- One bonus is anti-fluoride advocacy. "The Truth About Fluoride" pushes the same contrarian public-health message; treat it skeptically.
"Why is there a ClickBank charge on my card?"
A common question: a charge reading "CLKBANK*COM" instead of "MoveWell Daily." That's normal. The product is sold through ClickBank, which processes the payment, so it shows under their name. If you ordered MoveWell Daily, the charge is legitimate. If you didn't order anything and see a ClickBank charge, contact ClickBank support directly; they can identify the order and issue a refund.
So should you be worried?
Not about being defrauded, you'll get a real product and can get your money back for a full year. The thing to be clear-eyed about is the marketing: this is an ordinary, lightly-dosed glucosamine/chondroitin supplement sold as a fluoride-flushing breakthrough it isn't. If you want to try it as a basic joint blend with a long guarantee, that's a defensible choice. Just don't buy it believing the fluoride story, or expecting the tamarind formula the video sells.
Check the Official Site & Guarantee 365-day money-back guarantee · prefer to read it?
For the full picture, read our complete MoveWell Daily review and the ingredient & dose breakdown.
Statements about this product have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. MoveWell Daily is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. This content is opinion and analysis for information only, and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.


