Spirituality, New Age & Alternative Beliefs › General

Spiritual Salt Review 2026: Does It Work?

Approach with skepticism: A $59 bag of salt with a spiritual story and a hidden subscription. Worth testing inside the 60-day refund window only if buyers who enjoy spiritual rituals and want a tangible.

Skeptical 3.8/10

You're here because something promised a shift and you want to verify it before you reach for your card.

Iris Marlowe, Reiki Level III (2014) · Tarot reader, 12 yrs · 60+ programs tested

Fair place to start. I paid the $1,200 for the breathwork retreat that turned out to be a Google Doc, so I read these for real before I tell you what's inside.

Reading the receipts

Three observable signals. Each one updates what's reasonable to believe — nothing more.

  1. Market traffic Gravity 5.2

    Modest signal. A small affiliate base is making sales — enough to call it a working offer, not enough to call it a viral one.

  2. Vendor split $58.93 · 75%

    Vendor keeps a thin margin (75% to the affiliate). They're optimizing for affiliate enrollment over per-customer profit. The work might still be good — the math is just calibrated for scale.

  3. Rebill Yes

    Recurring billing is on. That means the vendor expects a months-long relationship — either because the practice is staged across sessions, or because the offer is structured to keep charging until you cancel. Worth knowing before you click.

Bottom line

A $59 bag of salt with a spiritual story and a hidden subscription. The salt is real; the claims aren't. Buy only if you value the ritual more than the price tag.

Visit official sales page →

Affiliate link — we earn a commission if you buy. How links work.

What works

  • 60-day ClickBank refund window applies, but you'll likely have to return the physical product to get your money back
  • The salt itself is edible and usable — it's not a fake product, just an overpriced one
  • Ritual instructions can provide a placebo effect that some buyers genuinely find calming or motivating
  • Single purchase gets you a tangible item, not just a PDF
  • Recurring billing is disclosed (though poorly) — you can cancel before the next charge

Where it fails

  • $59 for a bag of salt that costs $5 at any grocery store is a 1,000% markup
  • The recurring subscription is easy to miss at checkout; many buyers report unexpected second charges
  • No evidence that the salt has been 'charged' or 'activated' beyond the label on the bag
  • The sales page is written for affiliates, not buyers — full of EPC and ROAS jargon that means nothing for your experience
  • Refunding a physical product is more hassle than a digital one: you pay return shipping, and the clock starts when you receive it

Best for

  • Buyers who enjoy spiritual rituals and want a tangible focus object — and who are comfortable paying a premium for convenience and narrative
  • People who will read the refund terms carefully and cancel the subscription before the second charge if they don't want monthly refills

Avoid if

  • You expect the salt to actually manifest money, love, or health — it's sodium chloride, not a spell
  • You're on a tight budget — the same salt costs a few dollars at a grocery store, and free manifestation guides exist online
  • You dislike high-pressure affiliate funnels — this one is built for 'MAX Conversions,' not your well-being

What Spiritual Salt is, in one sentence.

A $59 bag of coarse salt (usually pink Himalayan) sold through a ClickBank funnel with a recurring monthly refill plan, wrapped in manifestation and energy-clearing language. The salt is real; the spiritual claims are marketing.

The sales page you land on isn’t written for you. It’s written for affiliates — the people who will send traffic to it. That’s why it talks about EPCs, ROAS, and conversion rates. Those are affiliate-network metrics. They tell you the funnel is good at extracting money, not that the product is good at anything else.

What you actually get

When you order, a box arrives. Inside:

  • A bag of salt. About 1 lb, coarse grain, usually pink. It’s the same stuff you can buy in bulk at any health food store. The vendor doesn’t claim it’s a unique mineral composition; the claim is that it’s been ‘charged’ or ‘programmed’ — a claim that can’t be tested.
  • A ritual guide. A small printed booklet or a link to a PDF. It tells you how to use the salt: place it in corners of your home, carry a pinch in your pocket, add it to bathwater, etc. The instructions are generic and match what you’d find in any free online article about salt rituals.
  • Sometimes a bonus item. A wooden spoon, a tiny crystal, a candle. These are low-cost items added to make the box feel more substantial and to give affiliates something new to promote.
  • The recurring part. Unless you uncheck a box during checkout (and the box is easy to miss), you’ll be charged $59 again next month and receive another bag of salt. This is the ‘recurring’ flag in the ClickBank listing. It’s not a hidden scam — it’s disclosed — but the disclosure is designed to be overlooked.

How the marketing oversells

The vendor page (spiritualsalt.co) is a masterclass in affiliate recruitment, not product description. Let’s decode the actual claims:

  • “Higher AOV & ROAS” — Average Order Value and Return on Ad Spend. These are metrics for people running Facebook ads, not for you. They mean the product is priced high enough and the funnel is persuasive enough that affiliates make money sending traffic to it.
  • “A New ID & improved CVRs in 2025” — A new vendor ID and improved conversion rates. Again, this is affiliate-speak. It tells you the vendor has tweaked the funnel to sell more effectively. It says nothing about whether the salt does anything.
  • “MAX Conversions” — The entire offer is engineered to get you to click ‘buy’ and not think too hard. The language about manifestation, law of attraction, and energy clearing is chosen because it converts well with certain audiences, not because anyone tested the salt in a lab.

The mismatch between what the sales page promises (spiritual transformation) and what you receive (a bag of salt) is the core of this review. If you go in knowing you’re paying for a ritual prop, fine. If you go in expecting the salt to change your life, you’ll be disappointed.

How you’re supposed to use it

The ritual guide gives you several methods: sprinkle salt in doorways to ‘block negative energy,’ add it to a bath for ‘aura cleansing,’ place a bowl of it in your workspace to ‘attract abundance.’ These are folk practices that exist in many cultures. They can have a placebo effect — if you believe they work, you might feel calmer or more focused. That’s real, but it’s not the salt; it’s the ritual.

There is no scientific evidence that commercially sold salt retains or transmits human intention. The vendor does not provide any. If the salt were truly ‘programmed,’ there would be a way to measure that programming. There isn’t.

What it costs and how the refund works

$59 for the first bag, then $59/month until you cancel. The recurring charge is processed through ClickBank, so you’ll see it on your statement as ‘CLICKBANK*SPIRITUAL’ or similar.

Refunds are covered by ClickBank’s 60-day policy, but here’s the catch: for physical products, you must return the item. You pay return shipping. The vendor must receive it before the refund is issued. That process takes time and effort, and most people don’t bother. If you’re inside the 60 days and you haven’t opened the bag, you can get your money back — but you’ll be out the return postage.

If you want to cancel the subscription, you need to contact the vendor or ClickBank support directly. There’s no one-click cancel button in most cases. This is a known pain point.

Who should buy, who should skip

Buy this if you enjoy spiritual rituals, want a physical object to focus on, and are comfortable paying $59 for the convenience of a curated box. Understand that you’re paying for the experience, not the salt. Cancel the subscription immediately if you only want one bag.

Skip this if you’re looking for a proven method to manifest anything. The salt won’t do it. A free meditation app and a $5 bag of sea salt from the grocery store will give you the same ritual at 1/12th the cost.

Skip this if you’re sensitive to high-pressure marketing. The funnel is built to squeeze every dollar, and the recurring charge is a trap for the inattentive.

The honest read

Spiritual Salt is a physical product with a digital marketer’s soul. The salt is real; the story is not. The recurring billing is the dark pattern that turns a one-time curiosity into a $118 mistake.

If you want a bag of pink salt and a little booklet of rituals, buy it once, cancel the subscription, and enjoy the experience for what it is — a prop. If you want spiritual growth, put the $59 toward a book on meditation or a session with a therapist. The salt won’t do the work for you.

— House Editor

Here's what I'd actually do

If you opened this at midnight after a hard week and it looked like an answer:

Close this tab. Spiritual Salt is one of the products I would actively redirect a friend away from. The refund exists, but the hope you'll spend reading it doesn't come back.

Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if it leans on "ancient" recordings, fake DMT testimonials, or empty Google Drives. Those are the patterns to walk away from immediately.

Iris Marlowe

Questions, briefly answered

FAQ

Is Spiritual Salt a scam?

No, in the strict sense: you receive a physical product. But the marketing promises manifestation and energy clearing that the salt cannot deliver. It's a $59 bag of salt with a story, and the story is what you're really buying.

What's in the box?

Typically a 1 lb bag of coarse salt (often pink Himalayan), a small instruction card or booklet, and sometimes a wooden spoon or a tiny crystal. The exact contents vary because the vendor changes the 'bonus' items to keep the offer fresh for affiliates.

How does the refund work for a physical product?

ClickBank's 60-day policy applies, but you must return the product in resalable condition. You cover return shipping, and the refund is processed after the vendor receives it. This is a real friction point — most buyers don't bother.

Why is there a recurring charge?

The checkout includes a subscription for monthly salt refills, typically at the same $59 price. It's disclosed in the cart, but the language is easy to skim past. Cancel by contacting the vendor or ClickBank before the next billing date.

Sources

  1. Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)

How this works

This isn't sponsored. I don't take money from vendors. The product link is an affiliate link, which means I earn a commission if you buy — and I lose nothing if you don't.

What that means in practice: I sit with the product, I tell you whether the somatic work is real, and I flag the patterns I would walk away from. The refund window is real. The rating is what I'd tell a friend after a long phone call.

Visit official sales page →

While you're here

Three more on the bench.