aerilite.com

1.2
1.2 Based on 10 reviews

...

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Mark Simpson
Scam, fake marketing, fake trustpilot reviews, fake everything

Scam. Do not buy. My mother got scammed. The company misleads and outright lies in multiple ways.1. Aerilite advertises via Facebook using bunk claims, with a completely unsourced "4.9/5 star" rating. The data is not open. It's not sourced. You can't see it. It's made-up.2. My mum is convinced that she saw a high trustpilot rating, and that's why she bought the plugs. No such rating exists. Guess what Aerilite has on one of their own marketing pages on aerilite.com? A fake trustpilot picture with 4.6 stars. 3. The marketing literature is full of pseudoscientific bunk that is pitched at people who are worried about their health and, in particular, whether they have cognitive decline or dementia. It's scummy. In their own marketing material, you cannot select the text (presumably to make it more difficult to search the web for any of the terms) and "Dr. Sarah Ward" is apparently a veteran neurologist with 22 years of experience in one article, but 32 years in the other. So which is it? Where's Dr. Sarah Ward's credentials? Where does she practise medicine? What papers has she published? 4. The product itself is flimsy and I'm 99.99% sure if someone did a teardown, they'd see that it's just a blue light that might set your house on fire.I'm going to write to whatever UK agency regulates these people, as they need to be stopped.

1
Date of experience: Jan 23, 2026

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