Shakeology Ingredients

Shakeology Ingredients Label Review

A close reading of Shakeology ingredient language, sweeteners, protein sources and claims consumers should compare.

Published: May 20, 2026 · Last reviewed: May 20, 2026 · By: Shake Nutrition Editorial Desk · Reviewed by: Shake Nutrition Nutrition Review Desk

Information on Shake Nutrition is educational and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified health professional before using supplements or changing your diet.

What this article checks

This article checks the product or category from the reader’s point of view: what the label says, which ingredients carry the claim, which disclosures help comparison and which details need more caution before a consumer treats marketing language as personal guidance.

We look for serving size, protein source, added sugar, fiber, sweeteners, proprietary blends, allergen statements, testing claims, price per serving and any health-related wording that should be supported by a clear source.

How to interpret the claim

Nutrition-shake claims are often written broadly. A stronger claim usually connects directly to an ingredient amount, a serving pattern, a published source or a transparent test result. A weaker claim relies on category language such as clean, superfood, detox, natural energy or gut support without enough disclosed context for a reader to compare products.

Consumers should read the full label before comparing products. Protein grams alone do not explain satiety, sugar load, fiber, allergens, taste, cost or whether the product is intended as a snack, supplement, breakfast shortcut or true meal replacement.

What we would update

We update this page when formulations change, labels are redesigned, prices shift materially, new test results become available or a brand changes the wording of a claim. Reader-submitted labels and correction notes can be sent to verify@shakenutrition.com.

References

  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration: Dietary Supplements
  2. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements
  3. Federal Trade Commission guidance on health claims