YourBiology SuperGreens Review (2025)
TL;DR: A clean-tasting, unflavoured greens powder with a broad ingredient mix (greens + 9 vitamins + 6 minerals + “superfoods” + fiber). It’s easy to blend, offers a 60-day money-back guarantee, and is positioned for digestion, steady energy, and skin “glow.” The AU page now shows detailed amounts for each ingredient—useful if you care about label transparency. Downsides: marketing is a touch “glowy,” and vitamin/mineral dosages are modest (as expected for a daily top-up).
Why women 35+ are eyeing greens powders (and where this one fits)
Between hormone shifts, busy work/family seasons, and changing recovery needs, many women 35+ want a nutrient safety net that’s not another pill. The YourBiology SuperGreens+ pitch is simple: 24 ingredients covering greens, vitamins, minerals, “superfoods,” and apple pectin fiber—without added flavours (so it hides well in smoothies). The UK page fronts the benefits (digestion, immunity, energy, focus, glow) and usability (mixes easily, vegan-friendly, “100% clean”).
Notably, the AU page provides a full “What’s in SuperGreens?” list with actual amounts (e.g., wheatgrass 1,750 mg; spirulina 500 mg; spinach 500 mg; apple pectin 500 mg; matcha 250 mg; beet extract 10:1 200 mg; grape seed extract 120:1 16.7 mg; plus 9 vitamins and 6 minerals at ~25–50% NRV each). That level of detail is handy for label-readers.
What other reviewers say (the quick temperature check)
- HelloGutHealth (Aug 18, 2025): Praises the long ingredient list and calls out additions like sunflower lecithin and stevia glycosides in their write-up. (Formulas can vary by region or over time—see “Ingredients & label transparency” below.)
- Vegan Food & Living (Mar 17, 2025): Lists YourBiology SuperGreens as a top AG1 alternative, highlighting a 60-day money-back guarantee and GMP manufacture; also notes limited shipping in their roundup (the brand’s site shows multiple regional stores—UK/US/AU/EU, etc.).
- HumanTonik comparison (older, ~2 years): Critiques YourBiology for less label clarity on the website at the time; says proprietary blending and hard-to-find nutrition info are concerns. (Counterpoint: the current AU page now lists per-ingredient amounts.)
Takeaway: sentiment ranges from positive on blend/simplicity/guarantee to cautious about label transparency, depending on which regional page or review you read.
Ingredients & label transparency (what you’re actually getting)
- Greens & “superfoods”: Spirulina, wheatgrass, spinach, matcha/green tea, acerola, beet, grape seed extract, wild yam. These bring phytonutrients, polyphenols, and (for acerola) natural vitamin C.
- Vitamins (9) & minerals (6): A, C, B-complex (B1, B2, B3, B5, B7, B9, B12) plus iron, zinc, iodine, copper, manganese, selenium. The AU page shows most at ~25–50% NRV per serving—i.e., a helpful top-up, not a megadose.
- Fiber: Apple pectin (listed at 500 mg on AU).
Label note: The UK site markets “24 wellness wonders” but doesn’t show a Supplement Facts panel with gram amounts; the AU site does. One independent review also lists sunflower lecithin and stevia glycosides among minor ingredients. If you’re sensitive to emulsifiers/sweeteners or want exact amounts, check your regional product page or the canister label you’ll receive.
Taste & mixability
It’s positioned as unflavoured and “mixes easily.” That’s a big plus for smoothie people and those who dislike sweet, artificial flavours—just add to water, lemon water, coconut water, or your usual smoothie base. (The AU FAQ also suggests up to 3 servings/day, but most readers here will do 1 daily.)
How to use it (so it actually sticks)
- Start with 1 scoop in 8–12 oz / 250–350 ml water or a morning smoothie.
- If you’re caffeine-sensitive, try it with breakfast or late morning (matcha can feel gently stimulating).
- Give it 8–12 weeks before you decide whether it fits your routine (the brand frames “Day 1 / Day 7 / Day 30” milestones, but real-life impressions take time).
Pros & cons (for busy midlife schedules)
Pros
- Ingredient spectrum covers greens + vitamins/minerals + polyphenol-rich extras + fiber—a true “top-up” approach.
- Unflavoured, vegan-friendly, “100% clean,” easy to blend (no swampy aftertaste reported in brand copy).
- 60-day money-back guarantee and GMP-made; multiple regional stores (UK/US/AU/EU) to route you properly.
- The AU page now includes detailed ingredient amounts, a win for label transparency.
Cons
- Label details vary by region; the UK page markets benefits but doesn’t show per-ingredient amounts.
- Independent reviewers have flagged transparency concerns in the past (older articles).
- Vitamin/mineral levels are modest (a feature, not a bug, for “daily” use—but worth noting if you want higher doses).
- If you dislike even slightly “green” notes, you’ll need a smoothie base (berries/banana/lemon) to mask it.
Who it’s best for
- Women 35+ who want a once-daily greens routine for gentle digestive support, “top-up” micronutrition, and easy mix-in flexibility.
- Smoothie people who prefer unflavoured powders that don’t clash with fruit or protein powders.
- Anyone who values a risk-free trial window and regional shipping options.
Skip it if you expect a miracle cure, need clinical-level doses of specific nutrients, or prefer fully flavoured/sweet greens.
Price, guarantee, and shipping (what to know before you buy)
The brand promotes a 60-day money-back guarantee and shows regional stores so you can buy in your local currency (e.g., UK/US/AU/EU); typical guidance is ~5 business days to UK/US, ~10 to AU/Canada/France from the AU FAQ. Always check your regional page at checkout for the latest pricing, bundles, and delivery windows.
My verdict (and how it compares in the real world)
If your checklist is “simple, unflavoured, blends easily, daily top-up, not a sugar-bomb, not packed with weird herbs”, YourBiology SuperGreens+ fits the bill—and the AU panel with per-ingredient amounts answers the common “what’s actually in here?” question. For women 35+ who prefer habit-friendly supplements over complex stacks, it’s a sensible start.
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