Does Signal Relief patch really work for pain? Well, I – a postpartum mom of 3 bought into the hype. Here’s my honest review after 1 month of using the patches.

I kept seeing ads for the Signal Relief Patch as seen on TV and like the curious cat, I had to try it.

But was it worth it? Let’s dive into my no-fluff, brutally honest experience.

What is Signal Relief Patch?

Signal Relief Patch is a reusable, drug-free patch marketed as a high-tech pain reliever. The company claims it works by interacting with your body’s electrical signals to alleviate pain in minutes — no pills, no creams, no side effects. It’s hyped for back pain, arthritis, headaches, cramps — basically any discomfort you can think of.

The bold promises?
✔️ Instant relief
✔️ Reusable for up to a year
✔️ Backed by “cutting-edge science”

Spoiler: the only cutting it does is cutting into your wallet.

Why I Bought It

Between my lower back pain and shoulder soreness from holding my baby for hours, I was desperate. Late-night TikTok and Facebook reels made this patch look like a miracle. People were sticking it on and instantly smiling, flexing, and claiming their pain vanished. I figured — if it works, it’s worth the money.

My 2 Weeks Experience Using Signal Relief Patch

Day 1:
I stuck it on my lower back before bedtime. I waited… nothing. No tingling. No warmth. Not even a placebo-induced “I think it’s working” moment. I kept it on overnight. Woke up stiff as ever.

Day 2:
Moved it to my left shoulder. Did a full school run, cooked dinner, did laundry — still felt sore. Maybe I wanted to believe it was working, but deep down I knew it wasn’t.

Day 3:
Tried it on my wrist for a nagging ache. Nothing changed. At this point, I started wondering if I was missing a key step, but nope — it’s just a patch.

After 2 weeks of trying different positions and situations, there was zero noticeable pain relief. If anything, the only thing I felt was annoyed I fell for another gimmick.

Is Signal Relief Patch FDA Approved?

No — it is not FDA-approved for pain relief or any medical condition. While it’s marketed as a “drug-free alternative,” it hasn’t gone through any official safety or effectiveness evaluations by the FDA.

If a product claims to manage or treat pain without FDA oversight or real clinical trials, that’s always a red flag for me.

Is This Pain Patch a Scam?

From my experience, Signal Relief Patch rides on placebo effect marketing. The “military-developed technology” claim sounds fancy, but there’s no published research or peer-reviewed evidence backing it. And those glowing testimonials? Most are probably incentivized or cherry-picked.

Pros

✔️ Reusable
✔️ Sticks well

Cons

❌ Doesn’t relieve pain
❌ Expensive for what’s essentially a sticker
❌ Overhyped marketing
❌ No real science to back the claims

Better Alternatives

If you’re dealing with pain, these products on Amazon.com ACTUALLY help:

Final Verdict

Rating: 2/10
Signal Relief Patch is an overpriced placebo sticker dressed up with buzzwords. Save your money and stick with treatments that actually work.

By Lilian Davidson

I’m a stay at home mom of 3, a dedicated product reviewer with a passion for testing viral TikTok finds. From skincare to household items, I personally buy, test, and provide honest, long-term reviews so you don’t have to waste money on trends that don’t deliver. My reviews are based on real experiences, not just first impressions, and I always give a balanced take on what works, what doesn’t, and what’s worth your time.

19 thoughts on “Is Signal Relief Patch a Scam? I Tried it for 2 Weeks – Here’s my honest review”
  1. Thank you for this clear, detailed, informative and concise review. As someone who has severe chronic pain, I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your thoughtful comments, and especially your honesty, so incredibly refreshing!!!

    1. Get the LIDOCAIN patches. THEY WORK I have a painful knee (bone on bone) and someone turned me on to them. Each patch lasts about 4 hours. And they are inexpensive

      1. Lidocaine patches are effective, get them prescribed by your doctor and if your insurance covers it it will be cheaper plus you get RX dosage. Wear 12 hours on and 12 hours off.

        1. Hello,

          Is there a brand name associated with Lidocaine patches?
          Are they only available by prescription?

          Thank you!

          S Ettinger

  2. Thank you for your honest review. I am so desperate for pain relief that I almost tried it. So far, nothing I’ve tried has given me permanent relief & what little relief I get from a few products lasts only a couple of hours, if that long. A person could go broke trying all the gimmicks.

  3. So glad I read this review before buying. I am in a lot of sciatic nerve pain. I will stick with reapplying icy hot as it helps for several hours. Alieve also helps but this can have a negative effect with some medications. Read warnings on bottle before using.

    1. I had sciatica pain. I had an osteopathic treatment which alleviated it. The doctor told me to lie on my side opposite the pain site ,hook my top ankle behind the lower knee lying as straight and body vertical and relaxed as I could for 20 minutes to a half hour if it returned. That actually helped me. Don’t know if it will help you, but it is worth a try.

      1. I appreciate your suggestion. After reading all the Negative reviews there were a few extremely positive ones. I will try your suggestion.

  4. I tried this SignalRelief patch. 1. It did NOT adhere well at all. 2. I tried it for several weeks, it had ZERO effects on my pain.
    I tried it on my lower back, both shoulders, lower legs, again, no effects. My wife, a retired nurse, tried it and it had no effect on her, either. It did not adhere well with her, either. I used a lot of tape to get the thing to stay in place. It is GARBAGE in our experiences.

  5. I bought 4 of the signal relief patches. For me, this is A TOTAL SCAM. I paid around $150 for EACH patch. The adhesive they use is terrible. In two-days I lost one while at the store and I didn’t even know it. The patches are a little STIFF so they only really stay put on FLAT surfaces. I returned the patches and they only gave me a little over HALF my money back. Do not believe them when they say you have NOTHING TO LOOSE. In my opinion, they are scam artists and they are crooked. They also ask you to rate the patches but they WILL NOT ALLOW YOU TO GIVE THEM A BAD REVIEW. I know, I sure tried to give them a one star but each time got an error. One rotten company. Purchase at your own risk.

  6. With the (health industry) leaving us on our own when it comes to chronic pain, we are all having to be subjected to bogus scams that don’t care about truth and taking our (not even enough to live on) Disability checks, your honest review just kept the relief patch company from stealing from me so I THANK YOU, from my whole heart. I have had a jeep switched at an auto repair, (SWITCHED) with a duplicate, and a laptop gutted and passed off as my original at an electronic shop. ARRRGH !!! The money it cost me, but mostly the years and emotions and all the stresses we go through, GREATLY, appreciate you being there to help the battle in this fight. (Salon Pas gel patch is the only thing I have found that aids pain so far).

  7. I was thinking about buying this product but was glad I read the reviews, I will not be buying. When I saw it on TV I thought it was the answer to my pain

  8. I don’t think this reviewer has any electro-magnetic impulses in her body. I use the patch, two of my friends who have extreme sciatica now use the patch and my sister who has cerebral palsy, degenerative disc disease and sciatica after being hit and dragged by a very elderly driver, just started using the Signal Patch. I understand not everyone will feel relief, but I think this reviewer is definitely in that small minority and should not be so harshly biased. Every product she reviews she reports as negative. Post-partum negativity.
    My relief for hamstring pull, lower back strain (had it for years from running) and recent tension-neck extreme pain radiating down arms with golf-ball sized nerve knot at neck-back (per licensed therapeutic massage) was almost instantaneous and lasting, even after patch was removed after several days. Everyone I know who has used these patches has experienced dramatic pain relief.

  9. For what it’s worth, I too have severe lower back pain. Have had chronic migraines, neck surgery removing two discs and fusing vertebrae. The surgery worked for several years but I’ve been dealing with constant neck, back, arm, and headache pain for most of my adult life. I just figured that’s what I have to deal with for the rest of my life. I’m now 72 years old. My wife, who is now 80, bought one large and one small patch about 5 years ago. She swears by them. I resisted for years to even try them. I recently started using one for my lower back pain. I was totally surprised to find my lower back and leg pain was GONE within minutes. Everyone that my wife has introduced these to say the same. I do not personally know anyone that these have not worked for. I have only tried it so far on my lower and mid back, with positive and near instant relief. I just came on to buy some of my own so my wife could have hers back when I noticed this review page. I was and still am dumbfounded that there are people that say this doesn’t work. I guess maybe it just doesn’t work for everyone. But it works for my wife and I, and our family.

  10. The “Signal Pain Patch” is just like the products sold to audiophiles promising immediate improvement in their sound system.
    I’ve been doing electronic repair for 55+ years, and every now-and-then some product promises miraculous results—but at a cost.
    1: Some products are $250,000 turntables that require a $75,000 cartridge and equally expensive pre-amp.
    2: Other items are little wooden towers to elevate your speaker cables from the floor.
    3: Cryogenically treated wire to supposedly “align the electrons” to reduce noise.
    4: $500/per foot audio interconnect cables from source to amplifier.
    5: $200/per foot speaker wire that makes all kind of claims in that it somehow knows what kind of music is playing and makes some kind of compensation.
    6: $200+ duplex electrical outlets that work miracles on your household electrical service. Miracles in that it can correct your 120VAC 60Hz service after its traveled hundreds of miles over aluminum wire, and through countless transformers wound with aluminum wire

    This is only a small example of what I’ve come across in my 55+ years of doing electronic repair. People will tend to believe whatever they think will make their system sound better. Even with our $10,000s of thousands of test equipment we cant tell a customer what their system will sound like. All we can tell them is if each piece meets manufactures published specifications.
    We’ve done “blind tests” where we used 50-cent per/foot 18/ga lamp cord on one channel, and $50/foot on the other channel and asked the listener to tell us which sounded best. It was generally a 50/50% accuracy rate. Once they saw the set-up, they’d make the excuse the results were swamped because the crimp-on terminals on one channel were different than the other.

    If the claims about the signal relief patch were true, then one stuck to the “pate” of a bald person should relieve all pain. I for one wish something like this to be true as I’ve suffered from advancing stenosis for years. I’ve had surgery years ago that helped, but it’s not advised I go through it again. If they worked, I’d order a case of them.

    Another possibility would be to purchase adhesive-backed copper foil sheets and make my own. These are the same type of copper sheets used in printed circuit boards. A few sheets of foil, a few rolls of resist tape, and a quart of Ferric Chloride etchant one could lay out a pattern like the “Signal Patch” and make your own for cheap.

    Another DIY option is to buy foil tape like used in stained glass layout and apply it directly to the skin, or to a permeable membrane that could be applied to the skin. Don’t be alarmed if you suddenly start receiving a nearby AM radio station through your skin.

  11. In one of the first commercials, it showed an amputee placing the patch on the outside of his prosthetic leg !!!!! I have had 7 back procedures, I take different meds that have actually given me a good part of my activity back. I asked my Doctor about this product, he basically said “I’ll open the window and you throw your money out of it”. Not a fan of it, waste of money and I’m surprised how often it’s played on TV stations.

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