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AG1 vs Organifi (2026)

Last reviewed May 2026|2 products compared|View all Greens Powder products

Disclosure: We earn commissions on purchases made through our links. This never influences our scores. Editorial policy

The Verdict

Closer than the price gap suggests, and Organifi's transparency complicates AG1's case. AG1 wins on certification - it is NSF Certified for Sport (an A on quality) - and that is its genuine differentiator. But Organifi (C+ overall) actually beats AG1 (C on transparency) by disclosing several individual ingredient amounts, including ashwagandha at 500mg, while AG1 hides everything in proprietary blends. On price, Organifi is modestly cheaper at $2.30 per serving versus AG1's $2.63, and it carries USDA Organic certification. The catch: Organifi contains about 40mg of caffeine from matcha, so it is a morning-only product. The verdict: choose AG1 if you need the NSF sport seal; choose Organifi if you want more dose transparency, organic certification, and do not mind (or want) the caffeine. Neither is a strong value for a general buyer - both are premium-priced - but Organifi at least lets you see more of what you are paying for.

71/100

AG1 (30 Servings)

AG1 (Athletic Greens)

Cost/day:$2.63Dose:12gForm:Powder (single-flavo...Price:$79.00
Third-party tested (NSF Certified for Sport)
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59/100

Organifi Green Juice (30 Servings)

Organifi

Cost/day:$2.30Dose:9gForm:Powder (matcha-flavo...Price:$69.95
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Head-to-Head Comparison

Category
AG1 (30 Servings)
AG1 (Athletic Greens)
Organifi Green Juice (30 Servings)
Organifi
Brand Score71/100Winner59/100
Dosing & Form14/25Winner14/25
Purity25/25Winner16/25
Value7/2513/25Winner
Transparency13/2516/25Winner
Cost/Day$2.63$2.30Winner
Dose/Serving12g9g
FormPowder (single-flavor pouch + travel packs)Powder (matcha-flavored, contains caffeine)
Third-Party Tested✓ YesNo
Proprietary BlendYesNo

Why This Comparison Matters

AG1 and Organifi are both premium greens powders, but they compete on different claims. AG1 leans on its NSF Certified for Sport seal and its 75+ ingredient formula. Organifi leans on being organic, partially dose-disclosed, and built around adaptogens like ashwagandha plus matcha green tea. One thing worth flagging up front: Organifi contains caffeine from matcha, so it is not interchangeable with AG1 as an evening or anytime product.

The interesting twist is transparency. AG1 hides its full formula in proprietary blends, while Organifi actually discloses some individual ingredient amounts - including ashwagandha at 500mg, which approaches a clinically relevant dose. So the more expensive product is, in this case, the less transparent one.

We scored both on clinical evidence, quality testing, cost per serving, and label transparency.

Detailed Score Breakdown

71/100

AG1 (30 Servings)

AG1 (Athletic Greens)

Dosing & Form
14/25

75+ ingredients organized into proprietary blends - individual ingredient doses are not disclosed, so it is mathematically impossible to verify whether any single ingredient (ashwagandha, rhodiola, milk thistle, etc.) hits its evidence-supported dose

Purity
25/25

NSF Certified for Sport - the only major greens powder with this certification; tested annually against 280+ banned substances and screened for heavy metals, microbial contamination, and label-claim accuracy

Value
7/25

$2.63 per serving on subscription ($79/month) or $3.30 on one-time order - the most expensive product in the category by a wide margin

Transparency
13/25

Discloses NSF Sport status and publishes a certificate of analysis, but the underlying formula is grouped into named blends ('Alkaline, Nutrient-Dense Raw Superfood Complex,' 'Nutrient-Dense Extracts, Herbs and Antioxidants') that hide individual doses

Dose/Serving12g
FormPowder (single-flavor pouch + travel packs)
Price$79.00(30 servings)
Cost/Effective Dose$2.63/day
Third-party tested: NSF Certified for SportProprietary blendGMP certified

Only NSF Certified for Sport greens powder on the market - genuine differentiator for tested athletes. Premium price reflects the certification more than the formula transparency.

59/100

Organifi Green Juice (30 Servings)

Organifi

Dosing & Form
14/25

11-ingredient organic formula featuring spirulina, chlorella, ashwagandha, matcha, and moringa; some individual amounts disclosed (matcha 200mg, ashwagandha 500mg) which is more than most competitors

Purity
16/25

USDA Organic, Glyphosate Residue Free certification; GMP certified manufacturing; no NSF/USP/Informed Sport certification

Value
13/25

$2.30 per serving - premium pricing for an organic, partially-disclosed formula

Transparency
16/25

Higher than category average - several individual ingredient amounts disclosed including ashwagandha at 500mg (close to clinical relevance) and matcha green tea at 200mg (caffeine ~40mg)

Dose/Serving9g
FormPowder (matcha-flavored, contains caffeine)
Price$69.95(30 servings)
Cost/Effective Dose$2.30/day
Not third-party testedNo proprietary blendGMP certified

Contains ~40mg caffeine from matcha - explains 'energy' user reports and means it should be taken before noon. Ashwagandha at 500mg approaches clinical-relevance threshold.

How We Compared These Products

Every product in our database is scored on four equally-weighted pillars: dosing accuracy and form quality, purity verification (third-party testing), cost per clinically effective dose (not cost per pill), and label transparency. Each pillar is worth 25 points for a total of 100.

Cost per effective dose is calculated using the clinically studied dose from published research, not the manufacturer's suggested serving. If a product requires multiple servings to reach the dose used in clinical trials, that cost is reflected in the value score.

For a full explanation of our scoring methodology, see our methodology page. Prices were last checked on the dates listed for each product and may have changed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is AG1 or Organifi better?

It depends on what you value. AG1's advantage is NSF Certified for Sport - the only such seal in the category - which matters for tested athletes. Organifi's advantages are more dose transparency (it discloses ashwagandha at 500mg and matcha at 200mg, where AG1 hides everything in blends), USDA Organic certification, and a slightly lower price. If you need the sport certification, AG1. If you want to actually see your ingredient doses and prefer organic, Organifi.

Does Organifi have caffeine?

Yes. Organifi Green Juice contains about 40mg of caffeine from its matcha green tea - roughly half a cup of coffee. That makes it a morning or pre-noon product rather than something to drink in the evening, and it explains the 'energy' boost some users report. AG1 is caffeine-free, so if you want a greens powder you can take any time of day, AG1 has the edge there.

Which is more transparent, AG1 or Organifi?

Organifi. It discloses several individual ingredient amounts - notably ashwagandha at 500mg (close to a clinically relevant dose) and matcha at 200mg - rather than hiding everything in proprietary blends. AG1 organizes its 75+ ingredients into named proprietary blends that disclose only blend totals. So despite being the cheaper product, Organifi lets you verify more of what you are getting.

How much do AG1 and Organifi cost?

AG1 is about $2.63 per serving on subscription ($79/month). Organifi Green Juice is about $2.30 per serving ($69.95 for 30 servings). So Organifi is modestly cheaper, though both sit firmly in the premium tier of the greens-powder category. Neither is a budget option.

Is the ashwagandha dose in Organifi enough to do anything?

Organifi discloses ashwagandha at 500mg per serving, which approaches the lower end of clinically studied doses (research often uses 300-600mg of a standardized extract). That is meaningfully better than a product that hides ashwagandha in a proprietary blend, where you cannot tell whether it is present in a trace amount or an effective one. Whether 500mg produces a noticeable effect varies by person and by the specific extract used, but at least Organifi lets you see the number - AG1 does not.

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FDA Disclaimer: These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. The products discussed on this page are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before starting any supplement regimen.