Infoceuticals are NES Health's proprietary liquid remedies imprinted with bio-information, costing $30 to $50 per bottle with ongoing monthly expenses. Digital bioresonance platforms like ResoField offer a similar frequency-based approach for free.
Infoceuticals Explained: What They Are, What They Cost & Digital Alternatives
If you have explored the world of bioenergetics or bioresonance, you have likely come across infoceuticals, the proprietary liquid remedies at the heart of the NES Health system. They are one of the more distinctive products in the complementary health space, and they come with both strong advocates and legitimate questions about cost and accessibility.
We used NES Health infoceuticals in our practice for about two years. The scanning system is impressive, and the drops themselves are easy for clients to use at home. The cost adds up though. At roughly 25 euros per bottle and 5-7 recommended per protocol, clients were looking at 125-175 euros per month on top of session fees.
This article provides an overview of what infoceuticals are, how they fit into the NES Health system, what they cost, and how digital alternatives are offering practitioners a different path toward similar goals.
What Are Infoceuticals?
Infoceuticals are liquid remedies developed by NES Health, a bioenergetics company founded on the research of Peter Fraser, a former professor and acupuncture practitioner. Fraser spent decades studying what he called the human body-field, a theoretical information and energy structure that he believed underlies physical health.
According to NES Health's framework, infoceuticals are mineral water solutions that have been imprinted with specific bio-information using proprietary technology. The idea is that each infoceutical carries corrective information patterns designed to address distortions in the body-field, theoretically helping the body restore optimal energetic function. The concept shares some philosophical ground with homeopathy, though the manufacturing process differs.
The body-field concept and the mechanism by which infoceuticals are said to work are not part of mainstream scientific consensus. NES Health's framework draws on concepts from quantum physics, traditional Chinese medicine, and bioresonance therapy, and opinions within the scientific and practitioner communities vary widely.
The NES Health System: How Infoceuticals Fit In
NES infoceuticals are one component of a broader NES Health ecosystem that typically includes:
- A body-field scan: performed using NES Health's scanning software and hardware, this assessment maps the client's body-field and identifies areas that may need support.
- Infoceutical recommendations: based on the scan results, specific NES infoceuticals are recommended in a particular sequence.
- The miHealth device: a handheld PEMF (pulsed electromagnetic field) device used for additional bioenergetic support.
- Follow-up scans: periodic rescans to track changes and adjust infoceutical recommendations.
For practitioners, this creates a structured protocol: scan, recommend NES infoceuticals, follow up. For clients, it means recurring purchases of infoceutical products alongside practitioner consultation fees.
Types of Infoceuticals
NES Health offers several categories of infoceuticals, each designed to address different aspects of the body-field:
Energetic Drivers (ED): These are said to support the energy fields associated with specific organs. There are multiple Driver infoceuticals, each linked to a different organ system (heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, etc.).
Energetic Integrators (EI): These target what NES Health describes as information pathways in the body-field, loosely related to the meridian system in traditional Chinese medicine. There are multiple Integrators addressing different pathways.
Energetic Terrains (ET): These are designed to address the energetic environment that may allow certain health challenges to develop. They are often recommended for more persistent or deep-seated concerns.
Feel Infoceuticals: A more recent product line designed for emotional and mental well-being, with names like "Peace," "Love," and "Sleep" that indicate their intended application.
Each infoceutical is taken as drops in water, typically following a specific sequence and schedule recommended by the practitioner based on scan results.
How Do Infoceuticals Supposedly Work?
According to NES Health, infoceuticals work by delivering corrective information to the body-field. The concept is that mineral water can be imprinted with specific electromagnetic patterns, and that when ingested, these patterns interact with the body's own energetic systems.
Peter Fraser's research proposed that the body-field operates as an information control system, a master blueprint that directs the body's physical processes. When this information becomes distorted (through stress, toxins, injury, or other factors), health may be affected. Infoceuticals are said to provide the correct information patterns that help restore the body-field to its optimal state.
This is a theoretical framework. While NES Health points to clinical observations and client testimonials, the mechanism has not been validated through conventional scientific methods such as double-blind placebo-controlled trials. Practitioners should be transparent with clients about the theoretical nature of this approach.
What Do Infoceuticals Cost?
One of the most common questions about infoceuticals is their cost. Here is a general overview of the expense structure for clients working with a NES Health practitioner:
Individual infoceuticals: Typically priced between $25 and $35 USD per bottle. A standard recommendation after a scan might include 3 to 5 infoceuticals, bringing the per-session infoceutical cost to roughly $75 to $175.
Body-field scans: Practitioners set their own fees for scans, but these typically range from $50 to $150 per session, depending on the practitioner and region.
Follow-up frequency: NES Health generally recommends rescans every 3 to 4 weeks, meaning infoceutical purchases and scan fees recur monthly.
Annual cost estimate: A client following the standard NES Health protocol might spend $1,500 to $3,500+ per year on infoceuticals and scan fees combined, not including any additional costs for the miHealth device, which retails for several hundred dollars.
Practitioner investment: NES Health practitioners must purchase the scanning system, maintain a subscription for the software, and typically stock infoceuticals for resale. Initial setup costs can run into the thousands.
These costs can add up quickly, which is one reason practitioners and clients alike have begun exploring whether digital alternatives can provide similar bioenergetic support at a lower ongoing cost.
Where to buy infoceuticals
NES infoceuticals are not sold in retail stores or through general online channels. They are available exclusively through licensed NES Health practitioners. The process works like this: a practitioner purchases the NES Health scanning system and maintains a software subscription, then stocks infoceuticals to recommend and sell to clients following body-field scans.
For clients, this means you cannot simply order NES infoceuticals directly. You need to find a licensed NES Health practitioner in your area, schedule a body-field scan session, and then receive recommendations and purchase accordingly. The NES Health website provides a practitioner directory for this purpose.
The cost of NES infoceuticals through a practitioner is typically $25 to $35 per bottle. A standard post-scan recommendation of 3 to 5 infoceuticals runs $75 to $175 in product alone, before adding the practitioner's session fee. Ongoing monthly costs for an active protocol typically fall in the $125 to $325 range. The subscription model, built on recurring scan fees and product purchases, is built into how the NES Health system works.
This practitioner-only distribution is one of the main reasons some practitioners and clients look for alternative approaches that don't require ongoing product purchases.
Infopathy: digital infoceuticals
Infopathy is a digital wellness platform that takes a software-based approach to the infoceutical concept. Rather than imprinted liquid remedies, Infopathy delivers what it calls "GIE fields" (General Imprinting Effect) digitally, through audio files that users listen to, or through a hardware device called the IC Hummer.
How Infopathy compares to NES Health:
| Factor | NES Health infoceuticals | Infopathy |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery | Physical liquid drops | Audio files or IC Hummer device |
| Cost | $75–$175 per session in products | From ~$10/month (subscription) + hardware if using IC Hummer |
| Practitioner required | Yes | No, self-directed |
| Scan/assessment | NES body-field scan | Optional, user-selected |
| Scientific validation | Limited | Limited |
Infopathy's platform hosts a large library of digitally formulated wellness signals that users can access by subscription. The IC Hummer device, which is optional, costs a few hundred dollars and is used to amplify the imprinting effect.
The Infopathy model is considerably more affordable than NES Health for ongoing use. A monthly subscription runs around $10 compared to the $125–$325 monthly cost of a full NES Health protocol. The tradeoff is the absence of a practitioner-guided scan and personalized protocol. Both approaches operate outside mainstream scientific validation, and neither should be used as a substitute for medical care.
The Digital Alternative: Bioresonance Software
The core idea behind infoceuticals, that specific informational patterns can support the body's energetic systems, is not unique to NES Health. The broader field of bioresonance and radionics has explored similar concepts for decades, and digital platforms have emerged that approach bioenergetic support through software-based broadcasting rather than physical products.
Digital bioresonance platforms work on the principle that specific frequencies or informational patterns can be transmitted digitally, without requiring a physical medium like imprinted water. While this concept is equally outside mainstream scientific validation, it offers several practical advantages:
- No recurring product costs: there is no physical product to manufacture, ship, or restock
- Instant access: digital broadcasts can be started immediately after assessment
- Broader flexibility: software-based systems can incorporate multiple modalities (homeopathy, Rife frequencies, affirmations) within a single platform
- Lower client costs: without physical products in the chain, the ongoing expense for clients is significantly reduced
Comparing Physical Infoceuticals vs Digital Broadcasting
| Factor | NES Health Infoceuticals | Digital Bioresonance |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery method | Physical liquid drops | Software-based broadcasting |
| Recurring cost | $75–$175 per session | Platform subscription only |
| Requires physical inventory | Yes | No |
| Customization | Limited to available products | Highly customizable |
| Scientific validation | Limited | Limited |
| Practitioner overhead | High (stock, shipping, storage) | Low (software-based) |
| Client experience | Tangible product to take | Digital, less tangible |
Both approaches operate in a space that is largely theoretical and outside conventional medical science. Neither should be presented as a proven medical treatment. The difference is primarily practical: cost structure, accessibility, and flexibility.
ResoField's Approach: Digital Bioresonance and Frequency Broadcasting
ResoField takes a software-first approach to bioresonance practice. Rather than relying on physical products like infoceuticals, ResoField provides practitioners with digital tools for frequency broadcasting, protocol management, and client session tracking.
For practitioners who resonate with the bioenergetic concepts behind infoceuticals but find the cost structure challenging, either for themselves or their clients, a digital platform offers a way to work with similar principles at a fraction of the ongoing expense. ResoField's broadcasting features allow practitioners to work with frequency-based protocols, homeopathic remedy frequencies, and customized sessions without needing to stock, sell, or ship physical products.
This is not a claim that digital broadcasting is equivalent to or better than NES Health infoceuticals. They are different approaches within the same broad field. The choice between them depends on a practitioner's philosophy, their clients' preferences, and practical considerations like budget and workflow.
Disclaimer: The information in this article is for educational purposes only. Neither infoceuticals nor digital bioresonance broadcasting are proven medical treatments. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical concerns. Bioenergetic approaches should complement, not replace, conventional medical care.
References
- NES Health official website
- NES Health infoceuticals
- Homeopathy - Wikipedia
- Bioresonance therapy - Wikipedia
Frequently Asked Questions
What are infoceuticals made of?
Infoceuticals are structured mineral water solutions produced by NES Health. According to the company, the water is imprinted with specific electromagnetic information patterns using proprietary technology. The base liquid is a colloidal mineral solution. Unlike homeopathic remedies, which follow established pharmacopoeia methods, infoceuticals use NES Health's own imprinting process, which is not independently standardized or regulated in most countries.
How much do infoceuticals cost per month?
The monthly cost of infoceuticals varies depending on how many are recommended per scan session. Typically, a practitioner recommends 3 to 5 infoceuticals per session at $25 to $35 each, bringing the product cost to roughly $75 to $175 per month. When you add practitioner consultation and scan fees ($50 to $150), the total monthly investment is often between $125 and $325 or more.
Do infoceuticals have side effects?
NES Health describes what they call a "healing response" that some clients may experience when starting infoceuticals, including temporary fatigue, mild headaches, or emotional shifts. These are interpreted within the NES Health framework as signs that the body-field is adjusting. From a conventional standpoint, NES infoceuticals are essentially structured mineral water solutions, and serious adverse effects are not reported in the literature. That said, they are not regulated as medicines in most countries and have not been through formal safety trials. Clients should always inform their healthcare provider about any supplements or remedies they are taking, including infoceuticals. Pregnant women and people with serious medical conditions should consult their doctor before starting any bioenergetic protocol.
Where can I buy infoceuticals?
Infoceuticals are available exclusively through licensed NES Health practitioners. They are not sold directly to consumers through retail channels. To purchase infoceuticals, you need to work with a practitioner who will first perform a body-field scan and then recommend specific infoceuticals based on the results. This practitioner-only distribution model is part of why some people explore alternative approaches that do not require ongoing product purchases.
Can digital bioresonance replace infoceuticals?
Digital bioresonance platforms and NES Health infoceuticals are different approaches that operate on related but distinct principles. Whether one can replace the other depends on your perspective and philosophy. Some practitioners find that digital broadcasting achieves the bioenergetic support they are looking for without the recurring product costs. Others prefer the tangible nature of physical remedies. Both approaches lack strong conventional scientific validation, so the choice is largely practical and philosophical.
Do I need to be a NES Health practitioner to work with bioenergetics?
No. NES Health is one system within the broader field of bioenergetics and bioresonance, but it is not the only option. Many practitioners work with bioenergetic principles using a variety of tools and platforms, including Rife frequency generators, radionics software, homeopathic remedies, and digital bioresonance platforms like ResoField. Each system has its own methodology, training requirements, and cost structure. Exploring multiple options before committing to a single platform is a sensible approach.
Marvin Carter
Marvin Carter is a software developer and self-taught homeopathy practitioner who founded ResoField in 2025. Together with his wife, who runs a resonance therapy practice, he has 7+ years of hands-on experience and 100+ clients treated. With personal experience using devices like QEST4, Sulis, and Mora, he bridges the gap between IT and holistic health.