3 Amazing Spells eKit is the top pick by affiliate gravity — the most purchased entry point for buyers new to spell work, a low-cost practical guide to candle magic, love spells, and sigil-writing that lets you test whether the hands-on ritual practice resonates before spending on a more expensive course.

Spell guides, witchcraft training, and occult courses: what’s actually inside.

This category splits between practical craft (books and courses that teach you somatic work — how to build an altar, write sigils, lead a ritual) and frequency/energy work (programs claiming that visualization or binaural beats can do the magical work for you).

The practical craft programs assume you’ll do the physical and somatic labor. They teach method, not miracles. Most are priced $20–$50 and delivered as PDFs or video courses.

The frequency/energy programs ask you to listen to audio or hold an intention while the vendor’s technology does the work. These are priced $50–$150 and often include recurring billing.

What separates real witchcraft study from marketing

Real craft programs will tell you:

  • The mechanism: what you’re doing (candle magic, sigil work, spoken intention) and how it functions.
  • The labor: that you have to show up, do the ritual, and sit with the result. No app required.
  • The uncertainty: that magic is a language, not a law. The results depend on your clarity of intention and your willingness to act.

Marketing-heavy programs will tell you:

  • The promise: instant wealth, instant love, instant healing.
  • The shortcut: you don’t have to do anything but listen or believe.
  • The upsell: buy more levels, get faster results.

Inside a spell guide

Most witchcraft PDFs follow the same structure:

  • Introduction: “Magic has been hidden from you” or “This ancient wisdom was lost.”
  • Love spells: Typically visualization, candle work, or spoken incantations.
  • Money spells: More elaborate, often involving writing, timing, and ritual objects.
  • Protection spells: Visualizations, spoken words, or physical talismans.

The spells themselves are drawn from public-domain grimoires (Key of Solomon, etc.) or repackaged from free online forums. You can find 90% of the content free if you search “love spell” + “candle.”

The value, if there is one, is in the structure — someone has curated and organized it, taken away the decision-making. That curation costs $20–$45.

Ceremonial magic and “illuminati” programs

These promise access to secret knowledge or techniques used by the wealthy and powerful. They’re positioned as forbidden or esoteric.

In reality, they’re typically:

  • Repackaged Law of Attraction (manifesting through intention)
  • Sigil magic (drawing symbols for intent and releasing them)
  • Visualization and scripting (already sold under different names in the wealth category)

The “illuminati” angle is marketing, not content.

The quiz funnels (“Personality Test for Magick”)

These programs start with a ten-question quiz (“Are you a natural witch?” “What’s your magical archetype?”) and generate a “personalized” result. Then they upsell you to a $39–$97/month subscription for “deeper readings.”

The quiz is real. The personalization is not. Everyone with your archetype gets the same recommendations.

Where to start if you’re curious

Buy a $20 spell guide if you want to see whether the practical work resonates with you. The 60-day refund means you can try it risk-free. If you spend the two hours doing a single ritual and something shifts in you, you’ve found your practice. If you don’t feel called to do the work, you’ll get your money back.

Don’t buy the $150 “complete system” without testing whether you actually want to practice. Most people who buy witchcraft courses are buying the idea of being a witch, not the work of doing witchcraft.

The ones in this catalog are ranked by gravity — sales volume — not by depth of practice or honesty of instruction.