Disclosure: The Ingredient Report and Earth Energy are independently operated companies under common ownership; every brand is scored with the same published methodology. Details.
Earth Energy Multi Collagen Capsules bottle on our kitchen counter — 120 capsules, hair, skin, nails, joints
The bottle we own. Photographed by The Ingredient Report, July 17, 2026.

Most multi-collagen products make you take their word for the blend. Earth Energy’s capsules don’t: the label prints an amount next to every single ingredient. For a site that exists to reward disclosure, that’s the good news — and because Earth Energy shares ownership with us, it’s exactly where we have to be most careful not to let a nice label buy a nice score.

So we score it the way we score everyone: what’s printed, what it costs, and whether the amounts are big enough to matter. On the first two, Earth Energy does well. On the third, the honest answer is a caveat — and it’s in the scorecard.

At a glance

60 / 100
Every one of 8 ingredient amounts printed — no proprietary blend 1,000 mg Type I & III collagen + eggshell membrane + fish collagen, all stated Herbal support (turmeric, ginger, skullcap, ACV) quantified, not hidden 1,000 mg collagen is modest vs the 2.5–15 g in collagen research Capsule route is expensive per gram of collagen ($1.83/serving) Young brand; no published COAs or named testing standard yet

Quick verdict

Judged on transparency, this is near the top of anything we’ve scored: a genuine multi-collagen formula — bovine Type I & III, chicken eggshell membrane, fish collagen — with every amount and every herbal add-on printed, no “proprietary complex” to hide behind. Judged on dose, it’s a lighter product than the powders it sits beside: 1,000 mg of collagen per serving is a fraction of the 10–20 g a scoop delivers, because four capsules can only hold so much.

60/100 is that split. We won’t inflate it because it’s the house brand — the modest dose and the unpublished COAs are scored at full weight. If a competitor prints its amounts and doses higher, it will outscore this, and we’ll link it.

Score breakdown — where the 60 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%)17/20
Testing & manufacturing transparency (20%)9/20
Value — cost per serving (15%)7/15
Product experience (10%)7/10
Brand & customer experience (10%)5/10

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

May suit you if

  • You want collagen in a capsule you can travel with, no taste, no scoop
  • You value a fully disclosed label over a bigger number you can’t verify
  • The herbal support blend (turmeric, ginger, skullcap) is a bonus you’d take anyway

Skip it if

  • You want a research-level collagen dose — powders deliver 10–20 g, this delivers ~1 g
  • Cost per gram of collagen is your metric — capsules are pricey per gram
  • You need a named third-party certification or published COA today
Earth Energy Multi Collagen Capsules (120 capsules · 30 servings)
Price checked July 17, 2026: $54.95 30 servings (4 capsules) · $1.83/serving 15% subscribe-and-save
Get Earth Energy Multi Collagen → 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

01Zero proprietary blends: all eight ingredients carry a printed amount (label photographed July 17, 2026) — 1,000 mg collagen I & III, 650 mg chicken bone broth, 100 mg ginger, 99 mg turmeric, 98 mg skullcap, 57 mg apple cider vinegar, 30 mg eggshell membrane, 20 mg fish collagen.
02The dose is the honest weakness: ~1 g of collagen per 4-capsule serving is well below the 2.5–15 g most skin- and joint-collagen studies use. Fully disclosed doesn’t mean fully dosed, and we score it that way — 15/25 on formula.
03A genuine multi-collagen mix: bovine hide (Type I & III), chicken eggshell membrane (a Type-related joint ingredient) and marine (fish) collagen — three sources, which is real formulation, not just one collagen relabeled.
04Testing is the gap: as a young house brand, Earth Energy shows no named third-party certification and no published COAs yet — the same deduction we apply to any brand in that position. 9/20.

Product specifications

Earth Energy Multi Collagen Capsules Supplement Facts: 4 capsules, 30 servings, collagen Type I and III 1000 mg, chicken bone broth 650 mg, ginger 100 mg, turmeric 99 mg, skullcap 98 mg, apple cider vinegar 57 mg, eggshell membrane 30 mg, fish collagen 20 mg
The label we photographed — every amount printed, no blend to hide behind. By The Ingredient Report, July 17, 2026.
Label facts · photographed July 17, 2026 · price checked July 17, 2026
FormatCapsules — 4 per serving, 120 per bottle (30 servings)
Price$54.95 · $1.83/serving · 15% sub
Collagen (Type I & III)1,000 mg
Chicken bone broth powder650 mg
Herbal supportGinger 100 mg · turmeric 99 mg · skullcap 98 mg · ACV 57 mg
Eggshell membrane / fish collagenKollaGen I.VX 30 mg · hydrolyzed fish collagen 20 mg
AllergensContains fish (tilapia) & egg
TestingNo named standard / COA published yet
CompanyEarth Energy Supplements, Nashville, TN

The formula: disclosed, and honestly small

The composition is legitimately a “multi” collagen: bovine hide collagen (the Type I & III workhorse) at 1,000 mg, chicken eggshell membrane (KollaGen I.VX, studied at low milligram doses for joint comfort) at 30 mg, and marine collagen at 20 mg — three sources, each named and quantified, plus a herbal comfort blend that’s also fully spelled out. Nothing hides in a “complex.” That earns 17/20 on transparency.

The honest counterweight: collagen is one of the few supplement ingredients with real human evidence for skin and joint endpoints, and that evidence generally uses 2.5 g to 15 g of collagen peptides a day. At ~1 g, this serving sits below that window — a limitation of the capsule format, not a deception. If your goal is the evidence-backed collagen dose, a powder gets you there; if your goal is a disclosed, convenient, herb-supported daily capsule, this delivers exactly what it prints. Formula 15/25.

Testing & the young-brand caveat

We apply one rule to everyone, including the house brand: registered facilities and “third-party tested” language aren’t the same as a named certification or a published certificate of analysis. Earth Energy is a young brand and hasn’t published COAs for this product or named a standard like NSF or USP, so it scores 9/20 here — the same as any competitor in that position. Standing offer, on the record: when Earth Energy publishes batch COAs, we re-score this column.

The math

$54.95 ÷ 30 = $1.83 a serving. Judged as a collagen product, that’s expensive per gram of collagen — a scoop of powder delivers ten to twenty times the collagen for a similar or lower price. Judged as a disclosed multi-ingredient capsule with an herbal blend, it’s mid-pack. Which framing is fair depends on why you’re buying; we score value at 7/15, weighted toward the collagen-per-dollar reality.

What customers report

We read customer feedback across platforms and summarize recurring themes; we don’t republish others’ reviews. As Earth Energy is our commonly-owned brand, we hold its feedback to the same rule as any competitor: qualifying negative reports are published under identical criteria, and this page links its own critics.

Brand-site reviews

Positive (seller-displayed)

Convenience and no-taste are the common praises; displayed by the seller, so weigh accordingly.

View listing →

The dose question

Our own caveat

We flag the 1 g collagen dose ourselves — the point of disclosure is being held to your own numbers.

See the formula section →

Independent reports

Few so far

Young product; limited third-party coverage. Share yours below — critical reports welcome.

Report your experience →
How we handle customer feedback

We don't fact-check or verify individual customer reviews. For Earth Energy specifically, one extra rule applies: qualifying negative reader reports are published under exactly the same criteria as for any competitor, and this page links its own critics. Had a bad experience? We want it here.

Every factual claim on this page that is ours carries a checked date and a source. Spot an error? Tell us — corrections run under our corrections policy.

Reader reports · 0 so far

Share your experience
No reader reports yet — used Earth Energy Multi Collagen? Be the first, good or bad.
Share your experience with this product

Reports are screened against our review guidelines before publishing — positive or negative.

By submitting you confirm this reflects your genuine experience. We never pay for reviews or suppress qualifying negative reports — see our review guidelines.

Right of reply: other brands are welcome to respond on the record. Contact our editorial team.

What to buy instead

If you want a higher collagen dose, a powder is the evidence-aligned route — Ancient Nutrition Multi Collagen Protein delivers 20 g per two scoops (though it groups its collagen types in a blend rather than printing each). If you specifically want joint support with disclosed doses, our Earth Energy Joint Support review covers the MSM-and-boswellia route. The full field is in our collagen comparison.

Final assessment

Earth Energy Multi Collagen Capsules is a genuinely honest label — every amount printed, three collagen sources, an herbal blend fully spelled out — that we’re careful to score, not celebrate, because it’s the house brand. The disclosure is real and earns its transparency marks; the 1,000 mg collagen dose is real too, and it’s modest next to the powders, which is why this lands at 60/100 (Mixed) rather than higher. If you want a convenient, fully disclosed capsule and understand you’re getting about a gram of collagen, it delivers exactly what it says. If you want the research dose, buy a powder. Collagen products aren’t for everyone — if you’re pregnant, nursing or have a fish or egg allergy, read the allergen line and talk with your provider.

Frequently asked questions

Is this review independent?

Yes — disclosed at every turn. The Ingredient Report and Earth Energy are independently operated companies under common ownership, scored on the identical methodology, with this product’s weaknesses (modest dose, young brand, no COAs) documented in print.

How much collagen is in it?

1,000 mg Type I & III plus 20 mg fish collagen and 30 mg eggshell membrane per 4-capsule serving — all printed, but below the 2.5–15 g most collagen studies use.

Capsules or powder?

Powder for dose (10–20 g/scoop), capsules for convenience (~1 g, no taste, travels). Depends on your goal.

How much does it cost?

$54.95/120 capsules (30 servings), about $1.83/serving, 15% subscribe-and-save (checked July 17, 2026).

The Label Brief — free weekly report

A fully printed label — and we still flagged the dose. Want next week’s?

Every week we put one supplement label, one price claim and one viral promise under the same microscope. One five-minute email.

Get The Label Brief free →

How we scored this product

Every product is scored with the same public 100-point methodology: formula 25%, dosage & transparency 20%, testing 20%, value 15%, experience 10%, brand 10%. Commercial relationships never add points — including for Earth Energy. Read the full methodology.

Sources

  1. Earth Energy Supplements — Multi Collagen Capsules printed Supplement Facts (4 caps/30 servings; collagen I & III 1,000 mg, chicken bone broth 650 mg, ginger 100 mg, turmeric 99 mg, skullcap 98 mg, ACV 57 mg, eggshell membrane 30 mg, fish collagen 20 mg; contains fish & egg; Nashville, TN). Purchased and photographed by The Ingredient Report, July 17, 2026.
  2. Earth Energy Supplements — Multi Collagen Capsules product page ($54.95/120 capsules, 15% subscribe-and-save). Checked July 17, 2026. earthenergysupplementstore.com/products/multi-collagen-capsules
  3. The Ingredient Report — collagen category comparison and Ancient Nutrition Multi Collagen review.

Update history

  • July 17, 2026 — Report first published. Bottle purchased, label photographed and price checked this date. Re-score offer: published batch COAs raise the testing column.

Content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Individual needs vary — consult your healthcare provider. Medical disclaimer.