ARMRA didn’t just ride the colostrum wave — it largely made the wave. The founder-physician origin story, the “Cold-Chain BioPotent” processing, the celebrity endorsements, the little travel sticks in half the gym bags in America. If you’ve heard of colostrum at all, you’ve heard of ARMRA.

Which makes the question this review turns on genuinely surprising: how many grams of colostrum are in a serving? We read the product page top to bottom on July 12, 2026, and the number isn’t there. Neither is the IgG content — the antibody percentage the entire category uses as its potency shorthand.

So we scored what is disclosed: the sourcing claims (strong), the testing claims (better than most), the price ($119.99), and the customer record (documented below, and not flattering). The result is 48/100 — and the reasons matter more than the number.

At a glance

48 / 100
Grass-fed, calf-first US sourcing; glyphosate-free claim Third-party testing at FDA-registered, ISO/IEC-certified labs Serving weight not stated anywhere on the product page No IgG percentage or amount disclosed $119.99 a jar — premium price, unverifiable dose BBB rating F; unanswered complaint pattern (July 2026)

Quick verdict

ARMRA is a real, category-defining product with the most polished brand in colostrum and sourcing/testing claims that genuinely lead the field. But our methodology scores what a shopper can verify, and the two numbers that define any colostrum product — grams per serving and IgG content — are absent from the product page. That converts the $119.99 sticker into an unanswerable question: you cannot compute what a gram of ARMRA costs, or compare its potency with any competitor.

Add the customer-record problem — an F rating at the BBB with a complaint pattern the bureau describes as unanswered, concentrated in subscription billing — and the premium becomes hard to defend on the evidence. If the proprietary-concentrate story convinces you, buy it with eyes open. If you want the numbers first, this category has products that print them.

Score breakdown — where the 48 comes from Significant concerns

A consistent summary of formula, transparency, value and experience. Not a medical rating.

Formula & ingredient quality (25%)14/25
Dosage & label transparency (20%)5/20
Testing & manufacturing transparency (20%)12/20
Value — cost per serving (15%)6/15
Product experience (10%)7/10
Brand & customer experience (10%)4/10

Scores follow our published 100-point methodology, applied identically to every product. View the scoring methodology.

May suit you if

  • You want the category’s most established premium brand, and the proprietary-processing story is worth the premium to you
  • Sourcing claims matter most: grass-fed, calf-first US family farms with a glyphosate-free claim
  • You prefer a casein-free, fat-removed concentrate over whole colostrum

Skip it if

  • You want to know how many grams of colostrum you’re taking — the page won’t tell you
  • You compare products by IgG dose — no IgG number is disclosed
  • Subscription-billing horror stories put you off: the BBB record here is genuinely poor
ARMRA Colostrum, Unflavored Jar (120 servings)
Price checked July 12, 2026: $119.99 120 servings · XL jar (360) $329.99 Cost per serving: $1.00

Plain Google search link — not an affiliate link. The Ingredient Report earns nothing if you purchase this product.

Key findings

01The product page states neither the serving weight in grams nor the IgG content — the two numbers that define every colostrum comparison. The brand’s own consumer survey describes participants taking 2 g daily, but no serving-size disclosure appears (checked July 12, 2026).
02The sourcing and testing claims are the category’s strongest tier: grass-fed, calf-first US family farms, a glyphosate-free claim, and third-party testing described at FDA-registered, ISO/IEC-certified laboratories.
03At $119.99 for 120 servings, the sticker math is $1.00 a serving — identical to a competitor that states a 2,000 mg dose and 500 mg of IgG on its label. Cost per disclosed gram: computable there, not computable here.
04The company (Rahal Biosciences, Inc.) carries an F rating at the BBB, is not accredited, and the bureau cites a failure to respond to 21 complaints and an unresolved complaint pattern — dominated by subscription billing and shipping (checked July 15, 2026).

Product specifications

Product-page facts · checked July 12, 2026
FormatPowder concentrate (also sold as stick packs; unflavored and flavored)
Serving sizeNot stated on the product page
Servings per container120 (jar) · 360 (XL jar)
Price (checked July 12, 2026)$119.99 · XL $329.99
Cost per serving$1.00
IngredientProprietary ARMRA Colostrum™ Concentrate (bovine)
IgG disclosureNone on the product page
Stated testingThird-party testing at FDA-registered, ISO/IEC-certified labs; contaminant and microbiological analysis; glyphosate-free claim
Label claimsGrass-fed, calf-first US family farms; sugar/gluten/GMO/soy/casein-free; Cold-Chain BioPotent™ processing

What’s actually in a scoop — as far as anyone can tell

The ingredient list is genuinely clean: one ingredient, a bovine colostrum concentrate. ARMRA’s pitch is that its low-heat “Cold-Chain BioPotent” processing removes fat and casein while preserving the fragile bioactive compounds that pasteurization can damage. That’s a plausible and even attractive engineering story — colostrum’s immunoglobulins and growth factors are heat-sensitive, and a concentrate could deliver more actives per gram than whole powder.

Here’s the problem: “could” is not a number. A concentrate’s entire value proposition is its concentration — and no concentration is disclosed. Not grams per serving, not IgG percentage, not milligrams of any named bioactive. The brand’s own open-label consumer survey (60 participants, results like “86% experienced less bloating”) describes participants consuming 2 g daily, which hints at the intended dose — but a marketing survey’s protocol is not a Supplement Facts disclosure, and an open-label survey without a control group can’t establish that the product caused those outcomes.

Credit where due: the single-ingredient formula, the casein and fat removal (relevant to the dairy-sensitive), and the sourcing claims all earn points, which is why formula scores 14/25. The dosage category is where the silence costs: 5/20 — the lowest we’ve given in this category — because a shopper cannot determine the dose of the only ingredient in the product.

The testing claims, graded

ARMRA’s testing language is better than most of the category: third-party testing at FDA-registered, ISO/IEC-certified laboratories, covering contaminants and microbiology, plus a glyphosate-free claim. Naming the lab certification class is meaningfully better than the bare words “third-party tested” — it’s checkable in kind, if not in document.

What would move this from good to excellent, and what we could not find: published certificates of analysis, batch-level results, or a named testing program a customer can look up. The claims describe a real testing regime; they don’t let you audit it. 12/20 — near the top of this category’s field, with the ceiling set by what’s published rather than claimed.

What it’s like to take

We have not yet run our own hands-on trial of this product; when we do, this section will be updated on the record. Reported themes from hands-on reviews at established testing outlets are consistent: the powder is ultra-fine, dissolves quickly in cold water (the brand instructs against hot liquids, consistent with its heat-sensitivity story), and the unflavored version has a mild, slightly dairy-sweet taste most people don’t mind. Flavored versions and single-serving stick packs address the rest. Experience scores 7/10 on format convenience and reported palatability.

The math: $1.00 a serving for how many grams?

$119.99 ÷ 120 servings = $1.00 a serving — and taken daily, about $365 a year (the XL jar improves that to roughly $0.92). On sticker math alone, that’s mid-pack for the category.

But sticker math is the wrong math for a powder, and here’s why. A serving of a competitor that states 2,000 mg of colostrum at $1.00 a serving costs $0.50 per disclosed gram. ARMRA at $1.00 a serving costs — we genuinely cannot finish that sentence, because the grams aren’t stated. If a serving were 1 g, you’d be paying double per gram; if 2 g, parity. A $120 purchase shouldn’t require that much algebra on an undisclosed variable. Value: 6/15.

Returns and subscription

ARMRA sells one-time and by subscription, with discounts for subscribing (checked July 12, 2026). Before you enroll, read the customer record below — the dominant complaint themes at the BBB are subscription billing and shipping. Our standing advice for any supplement subscription applies double here: screenshot the offer terms at checkout, confirm the cancellation path before the first renewal, and watch the statement after cancelling. Verify current return terms on the brand’s site before purchase; policies can change.

What customers report

We read customer feedback across the major platforms and summarize the recurring themes. We don’t republish other platforms’ reviews — check the live sources yourself:

Better Business Bureau

F rating

Not accredited; BBB cites 21 unanswered complaints and an unresolved complaint pattern (checked July 15, 2026).

View the BBB record →

Trustpilot

Mixed reviews

Positives on perceived gut/skin effects; recurring negatives on subscription billing and support response.

View live reviews →

Hands-on testing outlets

Generally favorable

Independent testers report easy mixing and mild taste; several flag the undisclosed serving weight we score here.

Search hands-on reviews →

Recurring positives

  • Perceived improvements in bloating, skin and hair (the brand’s own survey claims mirror these themes)
  • Fine texture, easy daily routine, travel sticks

Recurring negatives

  • Subscription charges after cancellation; coupon/billing disputes
  • Shipping-method and delivery complaints
  • Support unresponsiveness — echoed by the BBB’s unanswered-complaint citation
How we handle customer feedback

We don't fact-check or verify individual customer reviews — reviewers' opinions and experiences are their own, and we never treat them as evidence that a product works or doesn't. What we do: read feedback at scale across named platforms, report only the themes that recur, and link the live sources so you can judge the raw material yourself.

Every factual claim on this page that is ours — prices, label contents, records — carries a checked date and a source. Spot an error? Tell us and we'll correct it under our corrections policy.

Reader reports · 0 so far

Share your experience
No reader reports yet — have you used ARMRA Colostrum? Be the first to report your experience below. Honest reports only, good or bad.
Share your experience with this product

Reports are screened against our review guidelines before publishing — we publish honest reports whether they're positive or negative. Attach proof of purchase in the follow-up email if you'd like the "Verified purchase" label.

By submitting you confirm this reflects your genuine experience with this product, and you agree we may publish it with your name as given. We never pay for reviews, never edit their meaning, and never suppress qualifying negative reports — see our review guidelines.

Right of reply: Rahal Biosciences, Inc. (ARMRA) is welcome to respond to this report on the record. Contact our editorial team — responses are published unedited alongside this review.

What to buy instead

If ARMRA’s missing numbers are what stopped you, the fix is a label that prints them. Our full colostrum comparison puts all four major products side by side — dose disclosure, IgG, testing standard, cost per serving — and our ARMRA vs Earth Energy head-to-head runs this exact matchup line by line. WonderCow (whole colostrum, 40% IgG claimed, but no stated serving weight either) and Bloom (mostly collagen with 1 g of colostrum) round out the field, each now with its own scored review.

Final assessment

ARMRA earns its reputation in every category except the one that matters most to a label-first shopper. The sourcing is credibly premium, the testing language leads the field, the product experience is reportedly excellent — and the product page will not tell you how much colostrum you’re buying. Pair that with an F at the BBB driven by subscription-billing complaints, and 48/100 is where the arithmetic lands: significant concerns, most of them fixable by the brand tomorrow with two printed numbers. If ARMRA discloses its serving weight and IgG content, we will re-score this product on the record. Until then: if you buy it, buy the jar rather than the subscription, and keep your checkout screenshots. Individual needs vary — colostrum is a dairy product, so talk with your healthcare provider if you’re allergic, pregnant, nursing or immunocompromised.

Frequently asked questions

How much colostrum is in a serving of ARMRA?

The product page doesn’t say — no serving weight in grams and no IgG content are disclosed (checked July 12, 2026). The brand’s own consumer survey describes participants taking 2 g daily, but that’s a survey protocol, not a label disclosure. This gap is the biggest single factor in our 48/100.

How much does ARMRA cost?

$119.99 for the 120-serving jar ($1.00/serving) and $329.99 for the 360-serving XL jar as of July 12, 2026, with subscription discounts offered. About $365 a year taken daily.

Is ARMRA legit?

It’s a real product from a real company (Rahal Biosciences, Inc.) with credible sourcing and testing claims. The two documented cautions: the undisclosed dose and IgG, and a BBB record showing an F rating with an unanswered complaint pattern concentrated in subscription billing (checked July 15, 2026).

What’s the difference between ARMRA and Earth Energy colostrum?

Earth Energy states its dose (2,000 mg per 2 g scoop) and IgG (25% — 500 mg/serving) on the label at $1.00/serving ($0.80 sub); ARMRA states neither at the same per-serving price. ARMRA offers the bigger brand and proprietary concentrate story. The full head-to-head is here — disclosure: the two companies behind this site and Earth Energy are independently operated under common ownership.

The Label Brief — free weekly report

We read the whole product page so you don’t have to. Want the next one first?

Every week we put one supplement label, one price claim and one “as seen everywhere” promise under the same microscope. One five-minute email. No hype, no sponsored scores — that’s the whole point.

Get The Label Brief free →

How we scored this product

Every product is scored with the same public 100-point methodology: formula and ingredient quality (25%), dosage and label transparency (20%), testing and manufacturing transparency (20%), value (15%), product experience (10%) and brand and customer experience (10%). Commercial relationships never add points. Read the full methodology.

Sources

  1. ARMRA — Colostrum Unflavored Jar product page (price, servings, ingredient, processing, testing and sourcing claims, consumer-survey claims). Checked July 12, 2026; claims re-checked July 15, 2026. armra.com/products/armra-unflavored-jar
  2. Better Business Bureau — Rahal Biosciences, Inc. (ARMRA) profile: F rating, non-accreditation, 21 unanswered complaints, complaint-pattern citation. Checked July 15, 2026. bbb.org
  3. Trustpilot — armra.com review listing (linked live; themes summarized, reviews not republished). Accessed July 15, 2026.
  4. The Ingredient Report — colostrum category comparison (all four products’ disclosed figures, checked July 12–14, 2026); Earth Energy Pure Bovine Colostrum printed label, verified July 14, 2026.

Update history

  • July 15, 2026 — Report first published. Product-page facts checked July 12, 2026; feedback record checked July 15, 2026. Standing offer: we re-score on the record if ARMRA discloses serving weight and IgG.

Content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Individual needs and results vary. Medical disclaimer.