Disclosure: The Ingredient Report and Earth Energy are independently operated companies under common ownership; this product is scored with the same published methodology as every brand we review. Details.

We’ve now scored the two biggest names in fruit-and-vegetable capsules, and both reviews turned on the same missing numbers: Balance of Nature (35/100) lists 31 plants and discloses the amount of none of them; Juice Plus+ (50/100) brings real certifications and still won’t print a single plant amount.

So here is the category’s only fully disclosed label — sold by our owner’s other company, a fact you just read twice above. The disclosure that matters for your wallet is the one on the bottle: 11 ingredients, 11 printed amounts, 600 mg of plant material per two-capsule serving.

And that number cuts both ways. It’s the reason you can audit this product — and it’s a modest dose, full stop. This review scores both halves of that sentence, and lands at 64/100.

At a glance

64 / 100
All 11 ingredient amounts printed — unique in this comparison ISO/IEC 17025 testing: heavy metals, microbials, pesticides $1.07–$1.57/day — cheapest option we’ve scored in the category 600 mg total plant material — a modest dose, plainly stated Strict returns: 15 days, unopened only, restocking fee Young brand; reviews live mostly on its own site

Quick verdict

On the checklist this category keeps failing — amounts disclosed? testing standard named? honest price? — this is the first label to go three-for-three: 100 mg of organic beet root and 50 mg each of ten named plants (four USDA Organic), every batch claimed tested to ISO/IEC 17025 for heavy metals, microbials and pesticides, at $1.57 a day falling to $1.07 on the 6-month plan. Against $3.00/day for undisclosed everything, the math isn’t close.

But a review that only said that would be an ad. So: 600 mg is well below the multi-gram doses most produce-concentrate research has studied, and if a big daily dose of plant powder is your goal, two capsules of anything won’t get you there — the produce aisle will. The return policy allows no try-it path (15 days, unopened, fee), the COAs aren’t published, and the brand’s track record is young. Buy this for what the label proves it is — a small, verified, honestly priced dose — not for what no capsule can be.

Score breakdown — where the 64 comes from Mixed

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

Formula & ingredient quality (25%)15/25
Dosage & label transparency (20%)14/20
Testing & manufacturing transparency (20%)13/20
Value — cost per serving (15%)11/15
Product experience (10%)6/10
Brand & customer experience (10%)5/10

Scores follow our published 100-point methodology, applied identically to every product — commercial relationships never add points, and this page is the test of that sentence. View the scoring methodology.

May suit you if

  • You refuse to buy undisclosed blends — this is the only fully disclosed label we’ve found in the category
  • You want the produce-capsule habit at the lowest scored price: $1.07–$1.57 a day
  • Two capsules a day beats six (Balance of Nature) or four (Juice Plus+) for your routine

Skip it if

  • You expect a capsule to deliver produce-level doses — 600 mg won’t, and neither will anyone else’s capsule
  • You want a try-it-and-return-it guarantee — the policy is 15 days, unopened only, with a fee
  • You eat plenty of fruits and vegetables already — then this product has little to add
Earth Energy Fruits & Veggies (30 servings — 60 capsules, 2/day)
Price checked July 15, 2026: $46.95 3-pack $109.95 · 6-pack $191.95 Cost per day: $1.57 ($1.22 / $1.07 packs; sub 20% off first, 15% after)

Disclosure: The Ingredient Report and Earth Energy are independently operated companies under common ownership; every brand is scored with the same published methodology. Details.

Key findings

01Every ingredient amount is printed on the label — 100 mg organic beet root plus 50 mg each of ten named plants, 600 mg total per serving, 4 of 11 USDA Organic, zero proprietary blends. Balance of Nature and Juice Plus+ disclose none (our July 2026 checks).
02600 mg is a modest dose and we say so. Most produce-concentrate research has examined multi-gram daily intakes; nothing about this label supports produce-replacement claims, and the brand makes none we’d flag — but neither should a buyer imagine one.
03Testing is claimed to a named standard — ISO/IEC 17025: heavy metals, microbials, pesticides — in a cGMP U.S. facility, but certificates of analysis are not published, which caps the testing score at 13/20.
04At $1.57/day ($1.07 on the 6-pack), it is the cheapest product we’ve scored in the category — and the return policy is the strictest: 15 days, unopened with seal intact, $7 restocking fee, subscriptions not returnable (checked July 15, 2026).

Product specifications

Label & product-page facts · label on file July 14, 2026 · prices July 15, 2026
FormatVegetarian capsules (HPMC) — 2 per day with a meal
Serving size2 capsules (600 mg plant material)
Servings per container30 (60 capsules)
Price (checked July 15, 2026)$46.95 · 3-pack $109.95 · 6-pack $191.95
Cost per day$1.57 ($1.22 / $1.07 multi-pack; sub 20% first, 15% after)
Individual amounts disclosedYes — all 11 (see table below)
Stated testingThird-party, ISO/IEC 17025: heavy metals, microbials, pesticides; cGMP, made in USA
Other ingredientsHPMC capsule only — no fillers, binders or added sugar
Organic content4 of 11 ingredients USDA Organic (beet, apple, camu camu, spinach)

The label, all eleven numbers of it

Here is the entire formula — a table competitors in this category cannot produce, because their labels don’t contain the numbers:

Per 2-capsule serving · printed label, on file July 14, 2026
IngredientAmountIngredientAmount
Beet root (organic)100 mgTomato fruit extract50 mg
Wild carrot root50 mgApple fruit extract (organic)50 mg
Garlic root50 mgCamu camu (organic)50 mg
Ginger root50 mgBlueberry fruit extract50 mg
Raspberry juice powder50 mgSpinach leaf (organic)50 mg
Strawberry juice powder50 mgTotal plant material600 mg

Now the honest reading of it. These are real, named plant parts with printed amounts and meaningful organic content — and every amount is small. 50 mg of spinach powder is a pinch; research on beet root, garlic or ginger as actives has typically studied hundreds of milligrams to grams of the single ingredient. This formula is best understood as a broad, verified micro-dose across 11 plants, not a therapeutic dose of any one of them — the same arithmetic standard we applied when Balance of Nature’s six capsules couldn’t disclose their split across 31 plants. Formula: 15/25. Dosage & transparency: 14/20 — full marks on disclosure, honest deductions for the dose itself.

The testing claim — and the document it’s missing

The claim: every batch third-party tested to ISO/IEC 17025 for heavy metals, microbials and pesticides — pesticides being a panel that matters more here than in colostrum, given eleven botanical inputs — in a cGMP, U.S. facility. As claims go, it’s the most specific in our fruit-and-veggie file; Juice Plus+’s NSF certifications are the one rival credential of comparable weight, and NSF’s is independently listable, which is worth saying.

Same ruler as everywhere: the COAs aren’t published. Until a shopper can download a batch certificate, verification stops one document short, and the score stops at 13/20. Publish them and we re-score on the record — the identical offer we made ARMRA, WonderCow, Bloom and Balance of Nature.

What it’s like to take

Two capsules once daily with a meal — the lightest routine in our comparison (Balance of Nature asks six; Juice Plus+ four). No taste, no mixing, HPMC shell suitable for vegetarians. We have not published a hands-on trial, and per the rule we set on all Earth Energy pages, experience claims wait for readers’ reports rather than ours: the brand site shows 860 verified-purchase reviews at 4.48/5 — collected via a review platform but displayed by the seller, so weigh accordingly. Experience: a conservative 6/10 until independent reports accumulate. Add yours, good or bad.

The math: $1.07–$1.57 a day, compared

$46.95 ÷ 30 = $1.57 a day; the 3-pack works out to $1.22, the 6-pack to $1.07, and subscription takes 20% off the first order and 15% after. A year runs $390–$573 depending on tier. The category context (all checked July 2026): Juice Plus+ $1.80/day, Balance of Nature $2.33–$3.00/day — for labels that disclose nothing. Per disclosed milligram, this is the only product in the file where the division is even possible. Value: 11/15, with points held back for the same reason as the formula score — at 600 mg total, the produce aisle remains the better per-gram buy, and we’d rather tell you that than pretend otherwise.

Returns and subscription — read before you buy

Same policy, same plain reading as our Earth Energy colostrum review: returns within 15 days of delivery, unopened with seal intact, pre-approved, $7 restocking fee, customer-paid return shipping — and subscription orders are not returnable (checked July 15, 2026). There is no try-it path; once the seal is broken you own it. The subscription mechanics themselves are clean — skip, swap or cancel anytime in a self-serve portal, no phone calls required — which beats both TV rivals’ cancellation records. Net: brand & customer experience 5/10. If you’re unsure, buy one bottle, not a subscription.

What customers report

We read customer feedback across available platforms and summarize recurring themes. As with the colostrum review: the third-party record is thin because the brand is young — a limitation of this review, stated plainly.

Brand site (Judge.me verified)

4.48 / 5 · 860 reviews

Verified-purchase reviews, displayed by the seller — weigh accordingly. Positives on routine and digestion; negatives on expectations.

View the review platform →

Better Business Bureau

No profile found

No BBB profile located as of July 15, 2026 — neutral for a young brand, not a credential.

Search the BBB →

Independent reviews

Mixed & sparse

Third-party writeups exist and some are skeptical — read them; we link the search, not a curated subset.

Search independent takes →
How we handle customer feedback — especially for this brand

We don't fact-check or verify individual customer reviews, and we never treat them as evidence a product works. For Earth Energy specifically: qualifying negative reader reports publish under exactly the same criteria as for any competitor, and this page links its own skeptics unfiltered. Had a bad experience? We want it on this page.

Every factual claim on this page that is ours — prices, label contents, policies — 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 Earth Energy Fruits & Veggies? Be the first to report your experience below. Honest reports only, good or bad — negative reports about this brand publish under the same rules as any other.
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 — including about this brand. Review guidelines.

Right of reply: this policy applies to Earth Energy Supplements like any brand — and the standing invitation goes to its competitors: Balance of Nature and Juice Plus+ may respond to any comparison on this site on the record. Contact our editorial team — responses publish unedited.

The honest alternatives

Both rivals carry full scored reviews on this site: Juice Plus+ (50/100) brings NSF certification and a 30-trial research file — real credentials, no disclosed amounts, $1.80/day; Balance of Nature (35/100) is the TV heavyweight at $2.33–$3.00/day with zero disclosed amounts and a regulatory record. And the alternative that outranks all three of us: the produce aisle — $2–3 buys actual servings of fruits and vegetables, with fiber, at doses no capsule matches. Our alternatives roundup ranks the field by the audit-ready checklist.

Final assessment

By the standard this site was built on — can a shopper verify what they’re buying? — this is the best label in its category, and it’s not close: eleven printed amounts, a named testing standard, and the lowest price we’ve scored. By the standard of what 600 mg of plant powder can plausibly do, it’s a modest product, and this review said so in its own headline. Both were scored: 64/100, mixed — nine points clear of the certified rival that won’t print its amounts, and well short of what published COAs, a friendlier return policy and a longer track record would earn. The ownership relationship is disclosed at the top of this page; the rubric is public; check every number. And if you already eat your vegetables — keep doing that instead. Individual needs vary; talk with your healthcare provider before starting any supplement.

Frequently asked questions

Is this review independent?

The Ingredient Report and Earth Energy Supplements are independently operated companies under common ownership — disclosed at the top of this review, under every purchase button, and in the full ownership disclosure. Same public rubric as every product; the modest dose and strict return policy are scored at full price; negative reader reports publish under the same rules as any brand.

How much of each ingredient does it contain?

All 11 amounts are printed: 100 mg organic beet root and 50 mg each of ten named plants — 600 mg total per two-capsule serving, 4 of 11 USDA Organic. The only disclosed label in our comparison.

Is 600 mg enough to do anything?

It’s a modest dose — below the multi-gram intakes most produce-concentrate research has examined — and no capsule replaces eating actual produce. What disclosure buys you is knowing exactly what you’re taking and paying for, which this category otherwise doesn’t offer at any price.

How much does it cost?

Checked July 15, 2026: $46.95/30 days ($1.57/day), 3-pack $109.95 ($1.22/day), 6-pack $191.95 ($1.07/day); subscription 20% off first order, 15% after. Versus $1.80/day (Juice Plus+) and $2.33–$3.00/day (Balance of Nature).

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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 — this review of a commonly-owned brand documents its weaknesses for exactly that reason. Read the full methodology.

Sources

  1. Earth Energy Supplements — Fruits & Veggies printed Supplement Facts label (2 capsules/serving, 30 servings, all 11 amounts, HPMC shell). On file, July 14, 2026.
  2. Earth Energy Supplements — Fruits & Veggies product page (prices incl. 3/6-packs, subscription terms, testing claims, 860 reviews at 4.48). Checked July 15, 2026. earthenergysupplementstore.com/products/fruits-and-veggies
  3. Earth Energy Supplements — Return & Refund Policy (15-day unopened window, $7 restocking fee, subscription exclusion). Checked July 15, 2026.
  4. Better Business Bureau — search for Earth Energy Supplements (no profile located). Checked July 15, 2026.
  5. The Ingredient Report — scored reviews of Balance of Nature (35/100) and Juice Plus+ (50/100); BoN vs Earth Energy comparison.

Update history

  • July 15, 2026 — Report first published. Label on file July 14; prices and policies checked July 15. Standing commitments: publish qualifying negative reader reports; re-score if COAs are published or the return policy changes.

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