Orivelle Fungus Pen Pricing — Bundles, Bonuses, and Value
A practical breakdown of the three Orivelle packages, cost per day, included bonuses, and which bundle makes sense for which buyer.
In This Article
Edited by Michael Anderson, Editor-in-Chief
Updated
Quick Answer
Orivelle has three packages: 1 pen at $19.99 (50% off regular $39.99, paid shipping), 3 pens at $13.99/pen ($41.97 total, 60% off, free shipping, buy-2-get-1 free), and the featured 6 pens at $9.99/pen ($59.94 total, 70% off, free shipping, buy-3-get-3 free). The 6-pen bundle drops cost per day to $0.36 and covers the full 18–24 weeks the formula realistically needs — it is the smartest value for any serious treatment attempt.
1. Current Orivelle Fungus Pen Pricing
| 1 Pen | 3 Pens | 6 Pens ⭐ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supply | 3–4 Week Supply | 9–12 Week Supply | 18–24 Week Supply |
| Per Bottle | $19.99 | $13.99 | $9.99 |
| Cost per Day | $~$0.71 | $~$0.50 | $~$0.36 |
| Shipping | +Shipping | Free | Free |
| Bonuses | — | +1 FREE Pen (Buy 2 Get 1) | +3 FREE Pens (Buy 3 Get 3) |
| Savings | 50% OFF | 60% OFF | 70% OFF |
| Shop Now → | Shop Now → | Shop Now → |
Pricing reflects the official manufacturer website at time of writing. Orivelle Fungus Pen is sold only through the official site — not on Amazon, Walmart, or retail stores.
2. Which Bundle Is the Best Value
The honest answer: the 6-pen bundle at $9.99/pen is the right call for anyone serious about clearing nail fungus. Here's why.
The tea tree oil clinical evidence base — Buck 1994 and Syed 1999 — runs from 12 to 16 weeks of consistent daily application, and real-world nail replacement takes 12–18 months as healthy nail grows out. The 6-pen bundle covers the first 18–24 weeks of active treatment without any gaps — no need to reorder mid-protocol and no risk of stopping early. At $9.99/pen it drops cost per day to $0.36, which is among the cheapest daily costs in the topical antifungal category.
The 3-pen bundle ($13.99/pen) is a reasonable starting point for buyers who want to evaluate the formula before committing to the full 6-month protocol. It covers 9–12 weeks — enough to reach the Buck-trial endpoint where most real users report their first clear "this is working" moment. It also includes free shipping and the buy-2-get-1 structure. See the benefits page for what those endpoints feel like in practice.
The 1-pen trial ($19.99) is the most expensive per-pen option and covers only 3–4 weeks. It's fine if you just want to test your skin's tolerance before committing to a larger order, but it's not enough application time to judge whether the formula is actually working on the fungus. We generally recommend going straight to the 3- or 6-pen bundle if you've already decided to try the product.
3. What's Included With the Bundles
Both the 3-pen and 6-pen packages include free US shipping and bonus pens as part of their structure:
- 3-pen bundle: buy 2 pens, get 1 FREE. You pay for 2 pens at $13.99 each, the third is included at no additional cost. Total: $41.97 for a 9–12 week supply, free shipping.
- 6-pen bundle: buy 3 pens, get 3 FREE. You pay for 3 pens at $9.99 each, the other 3 are included at no additional cost. Total: $59.94 for an 18–24 week supply, free shipping. Best value by a significant margin.
The bundle structure is Orivelle's main discount mechanism — there are no additional downloadable bonuses to worry about. What you're paying for is the extra pens themselves, which makes the economics easy to evaluate.
4. The 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee — Honest Context
Orivelle offers a 30-day money-back guarantee on unused and unopened product. Return the unopened bottles within 30 days of purchase for a full refund minus shipping and handling.
The honest context: a 30-day guarantee is shorter than most other supplement categories, and it's worth being clear-eyed about what it does and doesn't cover. It's sufficient to protect you if the product arrives damaged, if you have a skin reaction within the first few applications, or if you decide you don't like the format — but it won't let you evaluate whether the formula actually worked on your nails, because 30 days is too short for any topical antifungal to show meaningful change.
This is why the bundle recommendation matters more than the guarantee length: commit to the 6-pen bundle only if you've already decided the formula fits your situation (mild-to-moderate fungus, healthy circulation, no allergies), patch test first, and plan to give it a fair 8–12 week trial. For the full scorecard of how the guarantee factors into the rating, see the pros & cons page.
Pricing Options for Orivelle Fungus Pen
Orivelle Fungus Pen is available in multiple package options designed to support different usage timelines. Many users choose multi-bottle packages because consistent daily use typically delivers the best results. Longer supply options also reduce the cost per unit.
1 Pen
3–4 Week Supply
- 30-day Money-Back Guarantee
- Secure Checkout
50% OFF
Shop Now6 Pens
18–24 Week Supply
- 30-day Money-Back Guarantee
- 3 FREE Pens (Buy 3 Get 3)
- Free USA Shipping
- Secure Checkout
70% OFF
Shop Now3 Pens
9–12 Week Supply
- 30-day Money-Back Guarantee
- 1 FREE Pen (Buy 2 Get 1)
- Free USA Shipping
- Secure Checkout
60% OFF
Shop NowEvery order is backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee. Only available through the official website.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Orivelle actually cost?
The 6-pen bundle drops to $9.99/pen ($59.94 total), which is roughly $0.36/day. The 3-pen bundle is $13.99/pen ($41.97 total), or roughly $0.50/day. A single pen is $19.99 plus shipping, or roughly $0.71/day. All prices are 50–70% off the regular retail price of $39.99/pen.
Is shipping really free on the bundles?
Yes, for US orders on the 3-pen and 6-pen bundles. The 1-pen order has paid shipping. International orders may incur customs fees and additional shipping charges that the manufacturer does not control — check with your local customs department before ordering.
Is a single pen enough to tell if Orivelle works?
No. A single pen lasts 3–4 weeks with twice-daily application, and 3–4 weeks is too short for any topical antifungal to show meaningful results. The tea tree oil clinical trials ran for 12–16 weeks, and real nail improvement takes at least 8–12 weeks of consistent use. If you're committed to giving the formula a fair trial, the 3-pen or 6-pen bundle is the realistic starting point.
Research & Transparency
This review is based on publicly available research on the core antifungal and nourishing botanicals in Orivelle Fungus Pen, with a focus on topical application, real human trials where available, and the limits of what a plant-based formula can realistically do for nail fungus. No claims here replace a conversation with a dermatologist.
Topical antifungal action (Tea Tree Oil)
Tea tree oil (Melaleuca alternifolia) is the most evidence-backed natural antifungal in the formula and the one with actual human trials in onychomycosis. Buck et al. (J Fam Pract, 1994) ran a double-blind, multicenter trial comparing 100% tea tree oil against 1% clotrimazole in 117 patients with toenail fungus and found comparable clinical improvement between the two. Syed et al. (Trop Med Int Health, 1999) later combined tea tree oil with butenafine in a 16-week trial and reported an 80% cure rate versus 0% in the vehicle group. Carson et al. (Clin Microbiol Rev, 2006) reviewed the antimicrobial mechanism — primarily through terpene disruption of fungal cell membranes. The evidence puts tea tree oil in a defensible place for mild-to-moderate nail fungus, though none of the human trials used the specific Orivelle formulation.
Skin healing and barrier repair (Aloe Vera + Vitamin E)
Aloe vera has decades of dermatological research behind it for wound healing, skin hydration, and anti-inflammatory effects on damaged skin around the nail bed. Surjushe et al. (Indian J Dermatol, 2008) reviewed the clinical and mechanistic evidence and concluded aloe vera's polysaccharides stimulate fibroblast activity and reduce irritation — useful for skin damaged by fungal infection. Vitamin E (tocopherol) is a lipophilic antioxidant that protects membranes from oxidative damage; Keen & Hassan (Indian Dermatol Online J, 2016) reviewed its role in nail and skin health, noting it conditions damaged tissue and supports the barrier around compromised nails. Neither is an antifungal in the strict sense — they support the recovery environment after tea tree oil does the primary work.
Complementary antimicrobials (Peppermint Oil + supporting oils)
Peppermint oil has demonstrated modest antimicrobial activity in vitro; Iraji et al. (Phytother Res, 2006) documented its broad-spectrum effects against common skin pathogens. It also provides a cooling sensation that some users find soothing during the early weeks of treatment. The remaining oils in the formula — jojoba, rosehip, grape seed, avocado, macadamia, almond, camellia, and shea butter — function primarily as emollient carriers rather than active antifungals. Their role is to keep the nail bed and surrounding cuticle hydrated, flexible, and protected from secondary irritation, which indirectly supports the antifungal work the tea tree oil is doing.
Honest framing — what topicals can and cannot do
Topical nail antifungals face a genuine pharmacokinetic challenge: the nail plate is a tough keratin barrier that most compounds struggle to penetrate. Orivelle's pen format with its brush-tip applicator is designed to improve contact time and coverage, which is reasonable, but no topical formula can match the tissue levels that oral antifungals (terbinafine, itraconazole) achieve. The research on topical tea tree oil supports its use for mild-to-moderate surface fungal involvement — not for severe, subungual, or deeply nested infections. Anyone with diabetes, circulatory disease, or a nail that looks significantly thickened, black, or painful should see a dermatologist rather than rely on any topical product — prescription or over-the-counter.
Honest note on doses
The formula is designed to work as a combination: tea tree oil and peppermint provide the antimicrobial action, aloe vera and vitamin E support tissue repair, and the 13 remaining oils serve as a nourishing delivery base that keeps the nail flexible and the surrounding skin intact. Twice-daily application for 8–12 weeks is the realistic window most topical antifungals need to show meaningful change, and the 6-pen bundle covers that window cleanly. Higher concentrations of isolated tea tree oil exist in the literature but can cause skin irritation at full strength — the formulated dilution in Orivelle is safer for daily use. Anyone who wants a more aggressive concentration should talk to a dermatologist rather than layering isolated oils on their own.
(a) Buck DS et al. Comparison of two topical preparations for the treatment of onychomycosis: Melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree) oil and clotrimazole. J Fam Pract 1994
(b) Syed TA et al. Treatment of toenail onychomycosis with 2% butenafine and 5% Melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree) oil in cream. Trop Med Int Health 1999
(c) Carson CF et al. Melaleuca alternifolia (Tea Tree) oil: a review of antimicrobial and other medicinal properties. Clin Microbiol Rev 2006
(d) Surjushe A et al. Aloe vera: a short review (skin healing and barrier support). Indian J Dermatol 2008
(e) Keen MA & Hassan I. Vitamin E in dermatology. Indian Dermatol Online J 2016
(f) Iraji F et al. Efficacy of topical peppermint oil as an antimicrobial. Phytother Res 2006
About the Author
Sarah Thompson is a contributor at The Supplement Post and a research collaborator with the Smart Guide editorial group. Her work covers skin, hair, and aging supplements, and evidence-aware supplement analysis. She is not a medical doctor — she analyzes publicly available research to provide consumer-friendly summaries for adults exploring beauty and aging support options.
Disclosure
All content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Each product reviewed is a dietary supplement, not a prescription drug. Results may vary based on individual health status, consistency of use, and lifestyle. This page may contain affiliate links — if you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. Read our Editorial Policy.