Is Relationship Magic Worth It? (2026 Review)
The Relationship Magic Bundle is worth $18 for couples in a routine slump who want three practical guides on connection, desire, and intimacy. Cancel the monthly membership before it rebills. Skip it if you want licensed therapy or already own a relationship course.
The short version
- The Relationship Magic Bundle is three short PDFs for $18: one on connection, one on rekindling desire, one on physical intimacy. Each ends with plain action steps you can try the same week.
- The front-end price is $18, but a monthly membership auto-bills after a short trial (typically $37 to $47 per month). Cancel before the next charge using your ClickBank order number.
- No licensed therapist or doctor is credited. These are self-help guides, not clinical advice.
- Best for couples in a routine slump who want a structured, inexpensive weekend read. Not a substitute for counseling.
- 60-day ClickBank-honored refund applies to the initial $18. Canceling the monthly plan is a separate step.
The Relationship Magic Bundle is worth $18 for couples in a routine slump who want a structured, quick read on connection, desire, and intimacy — and who will cancel the monthly membership before it rebills. It is not worth $18 if you want licensed therapy, are working through serious relationship problems, or already own a structured couples course covering the same ground.
The reason the price works is simple: three organized guides with action steps at the end of each, for under $20, with a 60-day refund. The reason to be careful is equally simple: the $18 starts a monthly plan that bills $37 to $47 after a short trial. Most buyers miss it.
What the Relationship Magic Bundle actually is
Three short PDFs and a membership area. The PDFs are the product. The membership area is where the monthly billing lives.
- Relationship Magic. The broadest guide — connection, communication, and keeping emotional closeness alive. Written for any relationship, dating or married. Short sections with conversation starters and small daily habits. A good first read because the other two guides work better once you have the connection foundation.
- Revive Her Drive. Aimed at husbands whose wives have lost interest. It walks through common libido-killers (stress, resentment, routine) and suggests what a husband can address directly. The tone stays practical. The guide is honest that technique does not substitute for emotional connection, which is rare for this genre.
- Keep Her Coming. An anatomy-based guide to physical intimacy. Clear instructions, practical framing, consistent reminder that consent and connection come first. Used with a willing partner, the steps are useful and easy to follow.
Each guide is roughly 30 to 50 pages, formatted for quick phone reading — short sections, bullet points, and some dialogue scripts you can borrow directly.
The billing situation, explained plainly
You pay $18 at checkout. That starts a trial membership, typically 7 to 14 days. After the trial, the plan rebills monthly, usually $37 to $47, until you cancel.
The sales page is built to sell and the monthly plan is easy to miss. Here is what to do: after purchase, read the three PDFs. Then contact ClickBank with your order number and cancel the monthly plan before the next charge. You keep the PDFs. The refund on the initial $18 is 60 days, ClickBank-honored, but that covers the front-end purchase — the monthly charges are a separate billing.
Set a calendar reminder the day you buy. That is the practical protection against an unintended $40 charge.
What the guides do not cover
These are self-help PDFs, not clinical resources. No licensed therapist or doctor is credited. The guides work best when the relationship is fundamentally respectful and both partners are willing to try the steps.
If you are dealing with trauma, infidelity, deep resentment, or a situation where one partner has ever felt unsafe, a couples therapist will take you further than any PDF. The guides say as much in their own framing.
The advice echoes mainstream relationship books — much of Relationship Magic overlaps with what you would find in a library copy of a John Gottman or Gary Chapman title. What the bundle adds is the packaging: three short guides in a logical order, with action steps at the end, ready to read this weekend.
Is Relationship Magic worth it?
Yes, for the right buyer: the Relationship Magic Bundle is worth $18 as a low-cost, structured starting point for couples who want to read something practical together this week.
For $18 and a weekend, you get three organized guides with plain action steps and a 60-day refund. The entry price is low enough that the downside is one wasted evening. The upside is a structured read that gives you and your partner something concrete to discuss and try.
The one condition is managing the billing. Cancel the monthly plan as soon as you have the guides. If you forget, a $40 charge follows. That is the main reason buyers leave negative reviews — not the content, but the surprise rebill.
Who this is best for
- Best for: Couples in a routine slump who want a fast, inexpensive, structured read on connection, desire, and intimacy — and who will remember to cancel the monthly membership.
- Skip if: You want licensed therapy or medical guidance; you are working through trauma or infidelity; or you already own a structured relationship course that covers the same territory.
For a side-by-side look at this bundle alongside other intimacy and connection guides — including Language of Desire, 5-Minute Chemistry, and others — see our best intimacy guides for couples 2026 roundup.
If you are weighing broader relationship programs including ex-back, marriage repair, and dating courses, our best relationship programs of 2026 covers the full range.
Read all three guides in order. Try the action steps with your partner. Then cancel the membership.
— Joanne “Jo” Mercer
Our picks
Relationship Magic Bundle
Couples in a routine slump who want a low-cost conversation starter they can read together
Language of Desire
Women in stable, respectful relationships who want structured words for sexual desire.
Mend The Marriage
Couples who are both still invested but stuck in a communication rut and want a structured way to talk
His Secret Obsession
Women in a long-term relationship that has gone quiet, who want a clear picture of what's happening before they decide what to do