Income Society X Review: Legit Community or Repackaged Funnel?
A $47 members-only 'society' promising automated daily income to anyone who joins. I paid, poked around the members area, and cross-referenced it against two other products my readers had already flagged.
A reader asked whether Income Society X was the 'real one' after a friend told them the earlier scam-flagged versions had been fixed. I bought a seat under a fresh email so nothing carried over from my previous audits and treated it like a first-time buyer would.
The honest alternative is the low-drama local model that actually survives the calculator, and that's the piece I'd steer any friend toward before they ever touched this.
Verdict: Skip it. The 'society' framing is a paint job on the same funnel template I've already documented under two other names, the members area contains generic affiliate marketing content that has nothing to do with the automated income pitch, and no verifiable operator sits behind any of it. The word 'community' is doing all the work the product itself can't.
The "Society" wrapper
Most products in this bucket lead with speed or urgency. Income Society X leads with belonging - you're not buying, you're joining. That's a smarter hook than a countdown timer because it targets a different lever: people don't want to be sold to, but they'll say yes to being included.
The problem is that "society" is a word, not a structure. There's no member directory, no verifiable community metrics, no forum where actual buyers talk to each other. The activity feed on the dashboard is a client-side script - I checked it in DevTools, and the "member earnings" ticker cycles through a fixed array of first names and dollar amounts. Real payment processors don't allow you to broadcast individual user payouts like that. The ticker is decorative.
Same funnel, different name
I've now bought and worked through this template three times under different brand names in the last four months. Same entry price band ($37 to $47). Same "three-step" language. Same anonymous spokesperson archetype. Same upsell ladder immediately after checkout. The generic affiliate-marketing content inside the members area is almost verbatim to what I found inside Income Team X and 3 Step Payday.
This is a rebranding cycle, and it's the exact deceptive-marketing playbook I break down in the handbook. When a product name accumulates enough warnings in search, the operators retire the domain and launch a fresh one with clean SERPs. The funnel keeps running. The name over the door swaps.
What buyers actually get
Members area contains: a dashboard with hardcoded "accumulated earnings" figures, six or seven video modules on affiliate marketing basics, and a "next steps" module that's a soft pitch for the upsell tier. None of that content is inherently worthless - affiliate marketing is a real business model - but it has zero mechanical connection to the automated income promised on the sales page. You paid for A. You got B. That's the whole misrepresentation.
Upsells cascade immediately: $67, then $197, then a "1-on-1 coaching" call priced above $300. The logic at each stage is the sunk-cost fallacy in its purest form.
What I'd point someone toward instead
If the appeal was the community angle, join a real one for free - the affiliate subreddits, or one of the ecommerce Discords tied to a specific tool. If the appeal was recurring income, the model I build for my own clients is a lot less exciting on the sales page and a lot more boring in real life: rank a local service page, rent the leads. Same monthly-check outcome. No dashboard theater.
If you already paid
Bank dispute today, framed as misrepresentation - the automated income system on the sales page doesn't exist in the members area. Log each upsell as a separate line item on the dispute. Report to ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Watch your statement for a recurring charge under a different business name in the next 30 days - that pattern has shown up on two of the three sibling products I've tracked.
The bottom line
Skip it. The 'society' framing is a paint job on the same funnel template I've already documented under two other names, the members area contains generic affiliate marketing content that has nothing to do with the automated income pitch, and no verifiable operator sits behind any of it. The word 'community' is doing all the work the product itself can't. If you want the straight answer on what I'd do with the time and money you'd otherwise pour into Income Society X, every affiliate course sells the same funnel diagram. here is the stripped-down version that actually pays writers i know.
If you're pressed for time, the honest one-line summary is that the boring local version I actually run for clients is where the real math works out - the rest of this piece is why.