Zoom on Jetterix: The $40 Pressure Nozzle, Rara Digital, and 678 Trustpilot Reviews

Jetterix promises to turn any garden hose into a high-pressure washer for $39.99 instead of $160. The Facebook ads are everywhere: 4.7 stars, 1,800+ reviews, “8,000 happy customers.” Behind the polished sales page: a Lithuanian company with 20,000+ views on the French scam-reporting platform Signal-Arnaques, a growing pile of negative Trustpilot reviews, and YouTube reviewers calling it out.

👉 What you need to know…

  • Jetterix sells a hose nozzle attachment marketed as a “high-pressure washer.” The underlying physics doesn’t add up: a garden hose delivers ~3 bars of pressure. A real pressure washer delivers 100-150 bars. No passive nozzle can bridge that gap.
  • The site is operated by Rara Digital, UAB, a Lithuanian company (reg. n° 306641699, Gedimino pr. 20, Vilnius). The same entity also operates Epicooler, a portable air conditioner site that drew over 20 complaints on Signal-Arnaques within four days.
  • The company openly admits in its Terms and Conditions that testimonials on the site “may feature fictitious names and associated images.” The 1,800+ reviews are generated in-house.
  • On Trustpilot, Jetterix has 678 reviews across multiple country domains (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Ireland, New Zealand). Complaints describe undelivered orders, unauthorized extra charges, and a product that performs no better than a standard garden nozzle.
  • The main website (jetterix.com) currently returns SSL errors, suggesting the site may have been taken down or reconfigured. Multiple domain variants exist: jetterix.fr, get-epicooler.com, and others — a common pattern for operations that abandon domains as complaints pile up.

The product: a $40 nozzle that physics can’t explain

Jetterix is a classic viral-product sales page. Clean design, video demonstrations, customer photos, a countdown timer, and a -75% discount that creates urgency.

The sales pitch is simple: screw this nozzle onto your garden hose, and “Hydro-Power technology” multiplies the water pressure to blast away dirt like a professional pressure washer — no electricity needed. The promise defies basic physics. You cannot multiply water pressure without an external energy source. A garden hose has neither the flow rate nor the pressure to produce pressure-washer results, regardless of what nozzle you attach.

The site displays a 4.7/5 rating from 1,873 reviews, all generated in-house. The Terms and Conditions are unusually candid about this:

“All testimonials and/or comments displayed on the website may feature fictitious names and associated images.”
Jetterix Terms and Conditions, Disclaimer section

The reviews you see — Nathan, Chloé, Nicholas — are openly fabricated. The profile photos are stock imagery. The “Write a review” button at the bottom lets you submit feedback… that will never be published.

What buyers are saying

On the French platform Signal-Arnaques, the Jetterix report has accumulated over 20,000 views and dozens of consistent testimonials:

“I ordered one nozzle for €65.89. I received nothing and was charged twice for that amount.”
Karén, June 4, 2026

“I ordered one item. Three amounts were debited. The item was overcharged because a warranty extension was added without my request, and two other items were also added.”
Report n° 926442, May 31, 2026

“I received the device 3-4 weeks after ordering. There is no difference between this nozzle and my standard garden hose. With some common sense, one bar of pressure in a hose cannot transform into 15 bars.”
JC14, June 4, 2026

On Trustpilot, snippets from the 678 reviews paint a similar picture. One reviewer writes: “Ten days ago I ordered two high-pressure nozzles which I haven’t yet received.” The Trustpilot page spans multiple country domains — US, UK, Canada, Australia, Ireland, New Zealand — confirming this is a global operation.

On YouTube, several reviewers have taken a closer look. The video “WARNING: This Pressure Washer is a Complete SCAM” walks through the misleading claims. Security site MalwareTips investigated Jetterix in April 2026 and flagged the fictitious reviews and unrealistic performance claims.

The network: Jetterix isn’t alone

Rara Digital, UAB doesn’t operate just one brand. The same Lithuanian entity is behind:

  • Epicooler — portable air conditioners sold on Facebook at €157.97. Over 20 complaints on Signal-Arnaques in four days. Buyers report never receiving the product or receiving a cheap USB fan instead.
  • JetHose / GetJetHose — a near-identical pressure nozzle product with its own Trustpilot page (564 reviews) and the same pattern of complaints.
  • JetNozzle — another variant of the same product, also reviewed on Trustpilot with similar complaints.

The network operates through multiple domain registrations (NameCheap, Hostinger UAB), Cloudflare for traffic routing and anonymity, and Shopify as the underlying e-commerce platform. Products ship from China, customer support is effectively non-existent, and the legal fine print steers all disputes toward Lithuanian courts — a jurisdiction impractical for most international buyers.

The legal fine print

Jetterix’s Terms and Conditions contain several provisions worth reading before buying:

“These Terms and Conditions and the entire legal relationship between you and us are governed by the law of the Republic of Lithuania.”
Jetterix Terms, Article 12

“You explicitly agree not to request a refund or chargeback from your bank or credit card operator without having first contacted us and given us a chance to resolve the issues.”
Jetterix Terms, Disputes section

Domain registration data confirms the recent nature of the operation: jetterix.com was created on March 16, 2026 (three months ago). jetterix.fr on March 17, 2026. Both use budget registrars (NameCheap and Hostinger UAB — itself a Lithuanian company) and are shielded behind Cloudflare.

Have you purchased from Jetterix? Share your experience

If you ordered a Jetterix nozzle — whether you received it or not — your experience can help other buyers make an informed decision.

Leave a review on the Jetterix ScamDoc page to share what happened. Every review adds to the community knowledge base and helps flag this business for future buyers.

If you purchased through a related brand — JetHose, GetJetHose, JetNozzle, or Epicooler — your feedback is equally valuable.

Have you encountered Jetterix or another Rara Digital brand? Leave a comment below or on the ScamDoc page for jetterix.com.