An image shows the Hyper Charge Pro charger in an outer space-like setting next to an image of AI chip technology.
The scammers behind the Hyper Charge Pro charger device attempt to defraud consumers in two very different ways.

In April 2026, online users searched for Hyper Charge Pro charger reviews. The query pertained to the alleged phone-charging device with advertisements’ claims of being able to restore consumers’ mobile devices to feel brand new with original battery life, as well as generally operate faster and cooler — all thanks to advanced AI technology. Users looked for Hyper Charge Pro reviews regarding whether the purported charger really works, after watching marketing videos in TikTok ads and on websites showing various people supposedly promoting the product. The ads featured testimonials from people who allegedly reviewed the product.

In short, the Hyper Charge Pro charger device is not legit. It is a scam, and a double scam at that. First, the product does not have any AI technology, or generally any technology to restore users’ phones to a brand-new state. Scammers created AI-generated depictions of various people, alleging they provided positive Hyper Charge Pro reviews involving a special way to make phones operate in a miracle-like manner. Second, the people behind clariohome.com, the website domain selling the charging device, secretly charged Hyper Charge Pro buyers subscription charges of $49.99 per month. Such business practices could potentially constitute fraud.

An investigation of this product appears below in a YouTube video from Jordan Liles, titled, “Hyper Charge Pro Charger Review Legit or Scam Check (2026).” After that, look for a transcript from my Hyper Charge Pro charger YouTube video. I advise victims of this scam to report fraud to the FTC and to read up on the Better Business Bureau’s toolkit on avoiding falling for scams.

Transcript from my Hyper Charge Pro charger YouTube video

The following is a word-for-word transcript from the above Hyper Charge Pro charger YouTube video. Please note some of the quoted material originated with scammers’ AI-generated depictions and does not constitute me speaking positively about this scam:

Transcript From Video (Click To Expand)

If you’re looking around online for Hyper Charge Pro reviews about a Hyper Charge Pro charger, I have all the information you need, more information you’re going to find anywhere else; this is a scam that scams you twice. Not only does this product not do what you want, it’s not amazing. It doesn’t have miracle properties to be able to like change your phone or whatever is going to be claimed in this TikTok ad here.

Also, on the back end, you’re going to be charged subscription charges after you make a purchase of like, let’s say, $49.99 a month for something you did not know about. Does that make you happy? No, of course it is not. So, Hyper Charge Pro, I previously made a video about this and they’ve added on this layer of subscription charges, hidden subscription charges since then.

So, let’s take a look at the the ad right here that I saw on TikTok. “Why you should never plug your phone into a charger overnight. This MIT grad just discovered a secret loophole that makes your phone run like it’s brand new, so you never have to buy a new one again. David graduated from MIT with a degree in software engineering, but struggled to find a job during the economic downturn in 2020. With so much time on his hands, he spent hours every …” Let’s go ahead here. Yeah, something about planned obsolescence and the battery’s draining. Oh no! “… and broke deeper into the phone software system and found that greedy smartphone companies …” Ugh! Greedy phone companies, right? “… couple hours. Within seconds, apps started loading instantly. The phone stayed cool and the battery lasted more than three full days on a single charge.”

So, what they’re claiming here is Hyper Charge Pro is going to do that for your phone. And guess what? It’s not. What this will do, it will then take you to another website, which is gadgetfocusdaily.com. It’ll claim there to have a “Trust Score” of 4.7 out of five with Trustpilot green squares with white stars. They’re lying to you. It doesn’t have a good score at all. That’s made up. They’ll claim it has a money back guarantee and a bunch of other stuff that sounds great and by the very end it’ll go to the final page and this is where they scam you the second time.

Not only does the product not do what they say, it is a very basic charger that you can buy on like Amazon or AliExpress or wherever for very cheap. I’m talking like $3, $5, some something like really $2 maybe. And they’ve made it—they buy it up in bulk, the scammers have. And they’ve called it Hyper Charge Pro. They’ve attached that there for marketing purposes to make you think it’s special when it’s not at all. That’s the first part of the scam.

The second part on clariohome.com which has AI-generated images of fake review people, and under the complete purchase button, way under that, they will finally reveal to you—but you won’t see it ’cause it’s way under the like checkout button that you’re that you’re going to hit. You’re not going to see this, but it says this under “Clario Home Member”: “By taking advantage of this offer, you will be signed up for our exclusive Clario Home Member program. It’s an exclusive program that provides you with access to exclusive pricing on all website products, access to hundreds of trending products through the Clario Home Portal, lowest price guarantee on all portal orders, and priority 24/7 customer support,” which is probably not true. You’ll be billed $49.99 monthly until cancellation. That’s—that’s what they’re—they’re just trying to like scam you by getting money out of you.

The cancel membership form, if anyone needs that or information about it: clariohome.com/pages/vip-unsubscribe and Clario is C-L-A-R-I-O, Clario. There’s also a support@clariohome.com email address. So that’s what Hyper Charge Pro is. It’s a garbage product you can buy for like—you probably buy five of them for $10 total on Amazon. It’s just like a charger with four ports. It’s not going to be special at all. It’s normal. It’s whatever. And it’s not going to do anything different to make your phone run better.

That’s the lie. And the the story in the TikTok ad was fabricated and on and on. Like, comment, subscribe. The join button is down below. And thank you so much for watching.

By Jordan Liles

Jordan Liles is a seasoned journalist working weekdays as Senior Reporter for the fact-checking website Snopes.com, as well as nights and weekends helping consumers by publishing scam-busting articles and videos. Based in California, Liles seeks to protect consumers from thousands of predatory scams through the posting of primary-source reporting on his personal website, JordanLiles.com.

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