Greens / multivitamin
AG1 (Athletic Greens) daily powder
The most-marketed greens powder of the decade — a competent multivitamin sold as a transformation
AG1 is, on the formulation, a reasonable multivitamin / mineral / greens hybrid with some prebiotic fibre. It is not bad. It is also not the life-changing product the podcast network has spent five years selling. At ~€100/month it is the most expensive way to get a B-complex and a small dose of greens powder on the market.
What it claims
- 75 ingredients, 'foundational nutrition'
- Energy, gut health, immune support, 'one drink to replace your stack'
What the label is not telling you
- Many of the 75 ingredients are present in trace doses — well below the level at which they would meaningfully change a biomarker
- The marketing relies heavily on personal endorsement, not published clinical trials on the formulation itself
- On a per-nutrient basis, a basic multivitamin + a vegetable serving costs ~10% of AG1 and delivers more
Effect on the nervous system
Negligible direct effect. The morning ritual itself can be regulating for some users — but the same ritual works with a glass of broth at one-tenth the cost.
Who it might suit
Travellers, athletes in heavy training blocks, adults who genuinely cannot organise a vitamin / vegetable strategy and are willing to pay for convenience.
Who should skip it
Anyone on a budget. Anyone whose actual problem is sleep, stress or blood sugar — no powder fixes those.
Bottom line
Not harmful, very over-priced, very over-marketed. If you have €100/month of wellness budget, it almost always buys more change spent on coaching, sleep equipment, real food or the 7-Day Reset than on this powder. Verified greens picks are at thecodex.world.