If you’ve been scrolling TikTok or Facebook lately, there’s a good chance you’ve seen it.
A guy claiming to be an electrician. A quick story about a house with surprisingly low electricity bills. Then a small device, called the Electrify Card, plugged into a utility box, supposedly cutting energy costs in half.
It’s one of those ads that makes you stop for a second and think, wait… is that actually possible?
I looked into it properly. Not just the ad, but the entire funnel behind it. And it’s a lot worse than it looks on the surface.
What the Electrify Card Claims to Do
The pitch is simple and very appealing:
- Plug the Electrify Card into your home setup
- Instantly reduce electricity usage
- Cut your utility bills dramatically
No installation, no real effort, just plug it in and save money.
That’s the hook.
The TikTok Ad Is Not What It Seems
The ad usually features a guy introducing himself as an electrician, “Daniel from a local electrical service.”
Here’s the thing.
There’s a strong chance that person isn’t real, at least not in the way the ad presents him. The voice, the delivery, even parts of the visuals show signs of being AI-generated or heavily manipulated. Even the product itself looks off. The card shown in the video includes strange text like “Originol Version” and “12000ions,” which doesn’t exactly scream quality or legitimacy.
It feels rushed, artificial, and not something you’d expect from a real electrical product.
The Fake Review Page (This Part Is Sneaky)
If you click through, you land on a site that looks like a review page.
It shows something like a “TrustScore” of 4.7 out of 5, with thousands of reviews. It even uses green squares and star ratings that look a lot like Trustpilot.
But it’s not Trustpilot.
It’s a copy. A visual imitation designed to trick you into thinking the product has real, verified reviews.
The testimonials on that page? Also fake. Stock images, AI-generated photos, made-up names. It’s all there to build trust quickly so you don’t question what comes next.
The Real Problem: The Hidden Subscription
This is where things go from misleading to straight-up predatory.
Once you move past the fake review page, you’re taken to the final checkout site, Aviroo Home.
That’s where the actual trap is.
When you buy the Electrify Card, you’re not just making a one-time purchase. Hidden in the fine print is a subscription, around $49.99 per month. And it’s not clearly presented. You won’t see it front and center. It’s buried in a small, easy-to-miss section labeled something like “Aviroo Home Member.”
Most people won’t notice it until the charges start hitting their account.
Does the Electrify Card Actually Work?
Short answer: no.
There’s no credible evidence that a small plug-in device like this can reduce your electricity bill in the way it claims.
Electricity usage doesn’t work like that. You can’t just attach a card to a utility box and magically cut costs in half.
Products like this have been circulating for years under different names. Same concept, same claims, same result.
Who’s Behind It?
The checkout site lists a company tied to Hong Kong, with limited contact information and no clear customer support system.
No phone number. Just an email address.
That alone makes it difficult for anyone trying to get help, cancel charges, or request a refund.
So, Is Electrify Card a Scam?
Yes. This one is pretty clear.
You’ve got:
- AI-generated ads and fake “electrician” endorsements
- A fake review page designed to mimic real platforms
- A product that doesn’t do what it claims
- A hidden subscription charging $49.99 monthly
That combination isn’t just misleading, it’s designed to catch people off guard.
What I Think
The idea of cutting your electricity bill in half with a simple device is obviously appealing. That’s why these ads spread so quickly.
But when you break it down, nothing about this holds up. There is no real product validation, legitimate reviews and also no transparency about pricing. It is just a funnel built to convert quickly before you have time to think twice.
Conclusion
The Electrify Card isn’t some clever energy-saving hack. It’s a well-packaged scam that uses AI-generated ads, fake reviews, and hidden subscription fees to pull people in.
If you’ve been considering it, don’t, and if you’ve already bought it, check your bank statements as soon as possible and take action if you see unexpected charges.
Sometimes the simplest rule still applies: if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Check out the Frownies Patch I reviewed earlier.