Freedom Affiliate Formula Review — Commission Hero Funnel Exposed (2026)

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If you’ve seen an ad for something called the Freedom Affiliate Formula — promising thousands of dollars a day with zero technical skills — I need you to pause before you buy anything. Because that page isn’t a new system at all. It’s a funnel for a course you might already know: Commission Hero, by Robby Blanchard. And in the next twelve minutes, I’m going to show you exactly what happens after you click buy — the real pricing, the refund policy nobody shows you upfront, and the upsell chain that turns a $997 course into a five-figure spend for some students. Stick around, because the ending of this video might be more valuable than the course itself.

Let’s clear this up first. Freedom Affiliate Formula is a landing page. It’s not a standalone product. It’s a rebrand, or a fresh split-test, funneling traffic into Commission Hero — the affiliate marketing course created by Robby Blanchard and sold through his company, Blanchard Media, on ClickBank and Digistore. This kind of rebranded landing page is really common in this industry. Same course, new headline, new curiosity angle, testing what gets more clicks. So from here on, I’m going to talk about it by its real name: Commission Hero.

The pitch itself is straightforward. You pick a high-commission product on a network like ClickBank — Robby’s method looks for offers paying fifty percent or more per sale. You build a landing page using done-for-you templates. And then you run Facebook ads to send traffic to it. No product creation. No website in the traditional sense. No email list required to start. Sounds simple. It’s not quite that simple, and we’ll get to why.

Before we go further, let’s be fair about who’s behind this, because it matters. Robby Blanchard is a real person with a real, documented history — not an anonymous face slapped on a sales page. He started as a CrossFit gym owner in Massachusetts. When he struggled to get members through the door, he taught himself Facebook advertising to market the gym. That worked well enough that he applied the same skill to promoting ClickBank affiliate offers directly — and he’s been publicly recognized by ClickBank itself as one of the platform’s top-performing affiliates.

So here’s an important distinction for anyone who’s watched my other videos on this channel. This is not the same category as the deepfake celebrity crypto platforms or the fake BBC-branded investment scams I’ve covered before. This is a real teacher, teaching a real method he’s actually used. The problems with this offer aren’t about whether the man is legitimate. They’re about pricing transparency and what happens to your wallet after you’re already a customer. Let’s get into it.

Let’s give credit where it’s due. There are real strengths here.

Number one — the strategy itself is a legitimate, decades-old corner of affiliate marketing. Paid traffic to affiliate offers is a genuine business model, not something invented for a sales page.

Number two — the feedback loop is fast. Because you’re paying for traffic instead of waiting months for SEO or YouTube to rank, you can find out whether an offer converts within days.

Number three — the done-for-you templates for landing pages and ad creative do lower the technical barrier, which appeals to genuine beginners who don’t want to touch code or design software.

And number four — multiple independent reviews, even critical ones, note that the private community and coaches inside the program are active and genuinely helpful once you’re in.

Those are real positives. But here’s where it gets more complicated.

Con number one — this entire method runs on a single traffic source, and it’s a paid one. There’s no meaningful organic component here. No SEO. No YouTube. No Pinterest. If you can’t afford ads, or if your ad account gets restricted, your business stops completely.

And that second scenario isn’t rare. Facebook is well known for shutting down ad accounts with little warning, and it’s a common complaint among Commission Hero students specifically. Robby’s own training tells students to set up multiple ad accounts to work around this — which tells you how frequently it happens.

Compare that to a strategy built on free organic traffic, where a platform algorithm change might dent your numbers for a while, but it doesn’t zero out your income overnight the way an ad account ban does.

Con number two, and this is the big one — the advertised price is not the real price. The course itself costs $997 upfront, or two payments of $597. That number is what’s on the sales page. What’s not on the sales page is your ad testing budget — the money you’ll spend running campaigns while you figure out which offers actually convert. Multiple independent reviewers put that figure realistically in the thousands of dollars before most beginners find a single profitable offer.

So when the ad says ‘zero technical skills required,’ what it doesn’t say is that the real requirement isn’t technical — it’s financial. You need spare capital you can afford to lose while you’re learning, plus the emotional discipline to keep going through a losing streak. That’s a very different pitch than the one on the landing page.

Con number three — the refund policy has gotten progressively worse over time, and this is where I’d urge real caution. It started as what’s called an action-based policy, meaning you had to prove you’d engaged with the course material before you could even request a refund. It later shifted to a twelve-month window. And based on recent buyer complaints, some customers have been told the policy changed again to no refunds at all.

One documented complaint describes a buyer who was told they had a full year to decide, then denied a refund because they’d opened the course material, and then told the refund option had been removed entirely. Whether or not that reflects every buyer’s experience today, it’s a pattern serious enough that you should read the current refund terms word for word before you buy — not the ad, the actual terms and conditions page.

  1. “Commission Hero — $997”
  2. “Inner Circle — ~$297/month”
  3. “Hero+ — Price hidden until webinar”
  4. “1-on-1 Coaching — Sold by phone, high-ticket”

Here’s the part most reviews skip entirely, and it’s the part that decides whether this is worth it for you. Once you’re a paying customer, you’re not done. You’re now inside a four-stage funnel.

Stage one is the $997 core course you already saw on the sales page.

Stage two is an Inner Circle membership, running around $297 a month, recurring.

Stage three is called Hero+, and the pricing for this one isn’t published anywhere public — it’s revealed only after you sit through a separate webinar.

And stage four is a one-on-one coaching program, sold by phone, at a high-ticket price that varies by buyer.

None of this is hidden exactly — it’s disclosed once you’re already inside as a customer. But it’s nowhere on the landing page that got you here. One independent review documented a buyer who spent over twenty thousand dollars across the course, the coaching, and the upsells combined before stepping away from the program. Add your ongoing Facebook ad spend on top of that, and you can see why the real cost of this method sits well above the number in the ad.

So — is Freedom Affiliate Formula a scam? No. And I want to be precise about that, because that word gets thrown around too loosely in this space. This is a real course, teaching a real method, from a real and verifiable person with an actual track record. Students have made money with it. That’s very different from saying it’s a good fit for everyone who clicks the ad.

The honest criticism here isn’t fraud — it’s transparency and risk. A refund policy trending in the wrong direction. A true cost that’s only revealed after you’ve already paid. And a method that’s structurally risky if you don’t have spare capital to lose while you learn.

Here’s my honest verdict. If you already have a dedicated ad-testing budget — money set aside separately from rent, bills, and savings that you can afford to lose while you learn — and you go in understanding that ad accounts get banned, that clawbacks eat into commissions, and that the real all-in cost sits well above $997, then Commission Hero is a legitimate way to learn paid-traffic affiliate marketing from someone who’s genuinely done it at scale. In that situation, it can be worth trying.

But if you’re a broke affiliate — starting out with little or no spare cash for ad spend — this is not where you start. Losing your test budget to the Facebook ads learning curve, stacked on top of a refund policy that isn’t in your favour, is one of the fastest ways to end your affiliate journey before it really begins.

That’s exactly why I built the AI Powered Affiliate 2026 System — a completely free, twelve-week email course that teaches you to build an affiliate business using organic traffic, like SEO, YouTube, and Pinterest, instead of paid ads. It’s designed so you can land your first commissions without risking money you genuinely can’t afford to lose.

If you’re starting out with a limited budget, go there first. Build some traction, some cash flow, and some real marketing fundamentals organically. Then, if you later decide you want to add paid traffic to your toolkit, you’ll be doing it from a position of strength — not desperation.

And to be fair to Robby Blanchard — if you do reach that point, his track record is genuinely one of the more legitimate ones out there compared to a lot of the noise in this space. The same goes for any respected teacher with a real, verifiable history of results. Track record and transparency should always be your filter — whoever the course is from.

The link to the free course is here. If this article saved you from clicking buy before you were ready, save this website — because I break down offers like this every week, so you don’t have to find out the hard way.

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