The 2.5-Inch Guarantee
2.5 inches off your waist — or we keep treating you free. Still not there after 6 sessions? Full refund.
We can make this promise because the clinical data supports it. Published studies of our combined protocol consistently show 2 to 3.3 inches of circumferential reduction across four sessions. The 2.5-inch threshold is in the lower half of that range.
How It Works
Three Checkpoints
The guarantee runs through three clearly defined checkpoints. You know exactly where you stand at each stage, and so do we.
Step 01
Before Your First Session — Baseline Measurement
We establish your baseline using the exact Navy-standard waist measurement protocol at the navel. The measurement is documented, photographed (optional), and signed by both you and your clinician. Nothing estimated. Nothing rounded.
Step 02
Four Weeks After Your Final Session — Re-Measure
Four weeks after session four, we re-measure using the same technique, at the same site, with the same clinician. If you have lost at least 2.5 inches from your baseline, the protocol has delivered. If you haven’t, you receive two additional combined sessions at no cost — extending the protocol to six total sessions.
Step 03
After Six Sessions, No 2.5 Inches — Full Refund
If you have completed all six sessions and still have not lost 2.5 inches from your documented baseline, we issue a full refund of your protocol fee. No questions. No fine print. No fighting. This is a written guarantee.
Terms
Guarantee Conditions
So that the guarantee is honored in good faith on both sides, there are a small number of conditions:
- You must complete all four sessions on schedule (rescheduling for military orders is allowed).
- You must maintain your starting weight within ±5 pounds across the protocol period.
- You must follow the simple at-home guidance provided (hydration, basic activity).
- You must be present for the follow-up re-measurement at week 8.
- The guarantee applies to the BCA Ready Guaranteed tier ($3,300).
These are the same conditions any honest clinic would require. We’re not asking you to do anything unusual — we’re asking you to not do anything that would invalidate the measurement.