Top4tunity fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.

Top4tunity operates from two known website domains:

  1. top4tunity.com (template website) – privately registered on November 11th, 2025
  2. top4tunityshop.com (product store) – privately registered on January 10th, 2026
  3. top4tunity.net (primary website domain) – privately registered on November 11th, 2025

Top4tunity is presumed to primarily operate from its .NET domain, currently set up as a promoter login form:

Top4tunity’s website domain registration dates tie in with the company launching in late 2025. Top4tunity primarily targets the Philippines, typically through in-person marketing events.

My only lead on Top4tunity’s executives was this FaceBook post from January 18th, 2026;

Jonray Esquejo is named as Top4tunity’s CEO. Esquejo’s FaceBook profile is linked to but the profile is locked:

Esquejo has a YouTube channel and, two years ago, he was promoting Levex:

Levex, aka MTSN and LEX, is an MLM product-based pyramid scheme built around a barley drink powder supplement. The Philippine SEC issued a Levex fraud warning on February 9th, 2026.

Another name we can definitively tie to Top4tunity is “GM” Ian Atacador:

Atacador is running Top4tunity marketing events at McDonald’s in Tarlac City.

As per his YouTube channel, eight months ago Atacador was promoting Greenleaf Care, a product-based MLM pyramid scheme.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

Top4tunity’s Products

Top4tunity markets barley drink powder, a “vitality and performance” supplement and soap.

  • Top Barley – barley powder purportedly from New Zealand, retails at P1250 for a box of unknown quantity single-serve sachets (note also sometimes marketed as barley powder coffee)

  • BANG! – energy supplement of unknown origin – retails at P315 for a box of capsules (unknown quantity)
  • Skin Candy – fruity scent soap, appears to retail at P315 for a bar of soap

Top4tunity’s Compensation Plan

Top4tunity came to me by way of a reader request. At the time I was able to track down a Top4tunity marketing presentation detailing its compensation plan.

By the time Top4tunity came up for review, that presentation had been pulled down. Top4tunity appears to have also provided “affiliate” compensation details on its “shop” website, however that information has since also been deleted:

Given the lack of Top4tunity compensation plan details available, it appears Top4tunity is actively engaged in hiding MLM compensation details from the public.

Top4tunity marketing from promoters suggests Top4tunity is a typical product-based pyramid scheme; sign up, purchase boxes of product to earn commissions on purchases made by recruited promoters.

Joining Top4tunity

Top4tunity promoter costs are not disclosed on any of the company’s websites.

Top4tunity appears to prohibit disclosure of costs being made public, as evidenced by promoters universally also failing to disclose Top4tunity promoter membership costs.

Marketing does suggest a Top4tunity product purchase is required but this remains unverified.

Top4tunity Conclusion

BehindMLM doesn’t typically review MLM companies if compensation plan details are withheld. With Top4tunity I’m making an exception as, based on what information is publicly available, it’s an MLM company that is surrounded by red flags.

First, the obvious: Any MLM company that hides compensation plan details from the public should be avoided. Period.

Second, no Top4tunity ownership or management details. This is likely due to Jonray Esquejo’s former ties to Levex – but that’s no excuse.

An MLM company failing to disclose management or executive information is another “this company should be avoided” red flag.

Third, barley drink powder (coffee or non-coffee) is widely available – even in the Philippines where barley isn’t grown.

Top4tunity makes a big deal about its barley powder being sourced from New Zealand. I’m not questioning that but barley is common enough such that does it even matter?

What does matter is the unsubstantiated medical claims promoters are making to sell Top4tunity’s barley powder drink:

Top4tunity’s barley powder drink supplement is not registered to treat, cure or prevent any diseases – the box Top Barley comes in openly discloses this.

Yet I easily found official looking Top4tunity marketing making Top Barley claims pertaining to cancer, hypertension, diabetes and anemia:

If you suffer from any of the above diseases, seek appropriate medical advice. Don’t get sucked into an MLM product-based pyramid scheme selling you false promises of prevention or recovery.

I suspect the primary reason Top4tunity does not disclose its MLM compensation plan is it’s a blatant pyramid scheme. While possible, retail is likely to be non-existent against promoter purchases.

In essence, in Top4tunity Jonray Esquejo has created his own barley drink powder MLM clone of Levex.

Barley powder MLM pyramid schemes marketed on illegal medical claims seem common in the Philippines. BehindMLM previously came across IAM Worldwide in September 2021.

Like Levex and IAM Worldwide, Top4tunity is a closed-loop system of money from purchases funnelled from new recruits to top recruits. New recruits quit if they can’t recruit anyone, with the majority of Top4tunity promoters ultimately taking a loss.