I first heard about Our Elite Health (sometimes called OEH) in a social media group promising easy online earnings. The pitch was appealing – a women‑focused platform offering training, networking, and products to help you “turn ambitions into achievements”. Curious, I decided to dive deeper.
I explored their websites, read their marketing copy and policies, and sifted through user reviews, trying to sort fact from hype.
Table of Contents
What Our Elite Health Claims to Be
According to the company itself, Our Elite Health bills itself as a “platform designed to empower individuals and businesses through personalized coaching, valuable resources, and a thriving professional network”. The Pakistani‑based site touts a community of entrepreneurs and coaches who help each other succeed.
It even has two separate sites: one (ourelitehealth.com.pk) that looks like a coaching/training portal with “pricing plans” and network features, and another (ourelitehealth.com) that is a multipurpose e-commerce store branded as Our Elite Health. The About Us pages sound impressive – describing OEH as “more than just a coaching platform” and a place to “unlock [your] potential” through shared resources.
In reality, the official platform appears to be mainly a multi‑level marketing scheme. The member plans page (under “Pricing”) lists a Basic Plan at $0 and an Ultra Plan at “PKR 0/month”. On the surface, those look like free plans. However, deep online searches and reviews reveal this is misleading. Many users report that in practice, there are sign-up or training fees (often a few hundred to a few thousand rupees) that are downplayed in the marketing. For example, one Trustpilot reviewer explains that members were initially told “only Rs. 500” to join, but this quickly escalated: “then [they] ask for Rs. 5,000” and kept pushing for more money.
This pattern – a small upfront fee followed by demands for much larger payments – is a classic pyramid/paying‑to‑recruit model. The official site proudly shows a table of commissions and “rank awards” (e.g., 34% direct bonus, team bonuses, rank awards in PKR) for achieving Silver, Gold, etc. levels. But the actual training/content provided is vague (“Get your plan, custom pricing” with no details), and nothing on the site offers concrete product sales or real jobs. Even OEH’s “No refunds” policy on the store side is strict: they explicitly do not offer a money-back guarantee once you pay. That means if you join or buy something and then change your mind, you’re stuck.
Products and Services Offered
I browsed the Our Elite Health online store (ourelitehealth.com) out of curiosity. It looks like a typical multi‑vendor marketplace. The categories range from Watches and Jewelry to Women’s Wear, Kids Collection, and even Ear Buds and Mattress Covers. One example item is “Our Elite Health Hair Oil” priced at Rs 1,450. Its description claims it “helps strengthen hair” and “promotes hair health and growth”. These sound like health-related promises, but there’s no actual evidence or medical backing presented – just generic buzzwords. All product pages I saw (including that hair oil) had zero customer reviews. The sales pitches rely on trust in the brand, not proof of effectiveness.
It’s important to note: despite the name Our Elite Health, the store is not a pharmacy or wellness center. It doesn’t appear to sell proven health supplements or medical treatments. It sells normal retail items (bed sheets, watches, cosmetics, etc.) and self-branded cosmetics (like the hair oil). If I consider “health claims,” the only ones come from marketing fluff (e.g., “improving hair vitality”).
I found no FDA approval, doctor endorsements, or clinical studies on the site. In short, any health benefit is unverified. The lack of reviews and the no-refund policy on perishable or opened health items (e.g., supplements, food, personal care that have been opened) can’t be returned are big warning signs.
Membership Program & Business Model
Next, I examined the membership side (the .com.pk site). Officially, you “sign up” and choose a plan. But the plans page I saw was odd: it lists everything as “free”. Even the “Basic Plan” says $0 One-Time and “Ultra Plan PKR 0/mont”.. It looks too good to be true – which it is. In practice, members say those freebies are a facade.
People I talked to (and many online) report that after an initial signup, salespeople pressure them to pay registration or training fees. One experienced member wrote on Trustpilot: “They ask for Rs 500, then Rs 5,000, and teach you nothing. All they keep saying is ‘add more members to earn’”.
Indeed, as a recruiter’s pitch I saw on social media bluntly puts it: the only way to earn is by bringing in new people. Bonuses and “rank awards” are paid out from the sign-up money of recruits, not from real product sales. The pricing page’s “Enterprise – Custom Pricing” is meaningless without transparency. This fits the classic pyramid-scheme model: a vague “training” or “coaching” is secondary; the real driving force is recruiting.
Red Flags from User Reviews
I scoured online reviews to see if others have had good experiences. What I found was mostly negative. On Trustpilot, Ourelitehealth.com (the same company) has a 2.5/5 rating with 132 reviews, and many 1‑star rants. One reviewer says in no uncertain terms: “This company is not just a scam – it’s a nightmare for girls who genuinely want to work from home…”. They describe exactly what I suspected: “First, they ask for Rs 500, then Rs 5,000… all they keep saying is ‘add more members to earn’… It’s just a trap to waste your time, money, and energy”.
Another warns (in Urdu) that “yeh bilkul fake scammers hain, pehle apse fees k name par paise lete hain, phir kehte hain member add karne…” – basically, they first take fees, then demand you add members or earn nothing.
I also found a Trustpilot page for the .com.pk side (Ourelitehealth.com.pk). It only had 2 reviews, one positive and one very telling 1‑star. The 1‑star reviewer wrote: “This isn’t business — it’s a motivational loop that only pays when new people join. Show us real income proof, services, or skill-based training. Not just points and shouty Zoom calls.”. That sums it up: they see no evidence of a genuine business, only endless hype.
Even independent checks raise eyebrows. ScamAdviser, a site that rates online stores, marks ourelitehealth.com as low-trust and “suspicious.” It explicitly notes “The trust score of ourelitehealth.com is low. … Wise to do your checking before you shop or leave your contact details”. These warnings, combined with the barrage of negative reviews, form a strong pattern.
Also Read: Apex Focus Group Review: Real Opportunity or Just Spam?
Health Claims vs. Reality
With “Health” in the name, I was on the lookout for any medical or wellness angle. Apart from that,, hair oil, OEH’s marketing heavily focuses on entrepreneurship, “success,” and earning money. There’s no sign of scientifically validated health products or programs. Their product descriptions (like the hair oil claiming to “boost overall hair health”) read like typical e-commerce puffery. In the context of a business/pyramid scheme, even these flimsy “health” promises feel out of place. They serve more as a gimmick – a way to dress up the branding – than anything genuinely health-related.
According to Google’s YMYL guidelines, we should not trust unsubstantiated health claims. So I have to note that any purported health benefits from OEH products are completely unproven. I’d advise any reader to be very skeptical of phrases like “improving hair vitality” or any “medical” sounding benefit they use. They appear to have no regulatory approval or expert endorsement. Given the context (a platform already showing many scam indicators), I’d treat these health claims as mere marketing fluff. You can use a website checker to check it yourself.
Technical Scoring System
Category | Weight | Score | Notes |
Domain & WHOIS | 20% | 12/20 | Domain is active but WHOIS data is privacy-protected, short history, hosted in Pakistan. |
Security (SSL, Blacklist) | 20% | 20/20 | SSL certificate is valid, no current blacklist flags found. |
Performance (Speed, Design) | 15% | 8/15 | Basic functional design, but page load is slow on some sections and mobile responsiveness is inconsistent. |
Transparency (Contact, Policies) | 15% | 5/15 | Contact info is minimal, no clear team identities, vague about fees, strict “no refund” policy. |
Reputation (Reviews, Social) | 20% | 5/20 | Multiple 1-star reviews, scam warnings, negative Trustpilot feedback, low ScamAdviser trust score. |
Content Quality | 10% | 9/10 | Site text is well-written but overly promotional; lacks proof for claims, especially health-related. |
Total | 100% | 59/100 – Risky | Appears operational but with serious trust and transparency issues. |
My Conclusion – Real Opportunity or Scam?
After digging into it, here’s my bottom line as a user: Our Elite Health strikes me as highly questionable. On paper it paints a positive picture – “empowering community,” “free plans,” “skills for success.” In practice, everything points to a money-driven recruitment scheme. The official website and policies (e.g n, no refunds) are not transparent, and actual participants report losing money while no one gets real jobs or sales. The heavy emphasis on “add members to earn” is a classic scam tactic.
Based on what I saw, I would not consider Our Elite Health a legitimate way to earn money. Instead, it has too many red flags: countless unhappy reviews calling it a “scam,” the dubious pricing setup, and the lack of any solid product or service behind the hype. I wouldn’t risk paying any fee or recruiting others in this program.
If you’re looking at Our Elite Health, please be cautious. Check out those reviews, note the no-refund policy, and remember that genuine online jobs don’t require endless recruiting. In summary, our Elite Health appears to be more of a marketing pyramid than a real business – and all signs suggest it’s something to avoid rather than invest in.