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Brand teardown

Total Living Drink Greens teardown: the rare greens powder with receipts

Most greens powders ask you to trust a long ingredient list. Total Living Drink Greens does something more useful: it shows a broad formula, meaningful protein, and a public COA. That is why it sits far above the category in the current score table.

Last reviewed: 2026-06-04Focus: Score: 98/100, testing, formula disclosure, protein
For research and educational purposes only. Not medical advice.

The quick read

Bottom line: this is what a high score looks like

Total Living Drink Greens is expensive, but the score is not a vibes score. It wins because the product gives buyers more to audit than a normal greens tub.

The current NutriScore snapshot gives it a 98/100 overall score. That is not a medical claim. It is a label, safety, efficacy, and transparency read against the rest of the green powder field. NutriScore rankings

The core reason is simple: the formula has real nutrition density for a greens powder, and the brand publishes a certificate of analysis instead of stopping at 'third-party tested' language. Kylea Health Total Living Drink Greens product page Kylea Total Living Drink Greens certificate of analysis

The price is high, but at least the formula is doing work

Kylea currently lists Total Living Drink Greens at $99. The product FAQ says each bag contains 30 servings, designed for a full month of daily nutrition. Kylea Health Total Living Drink Greens product page

That puts it near AG1-style pricing, so the formula has to justify more than green color and a wellness paragraph.

The current page says the product includes 11 g vegan protein, a 15,000 mg superfoods blend, 11B CFU plus 3,000 mg enzymes, and 24 vitamins and minerals. Those are not tiny decorative numbers by greens-powder standards. Kylea Health Total Living Drink Greens product page

The COA is the main reason this teardown is different

The public certificate of analysis is from Makers Nutrition for Total Living Drink Powder, lot 2209001, with a manufacture date of 11/2022. That date matters. A COA is best when buyers can match it to the product lot they are buying. Kylea Total Living Drink Greens certificate of analysis

The COA lists ingredient potency results for major formula components, microbial results, and heavy metals. The heavy-metal table reports mercury, lead, arsenic, and cadmium results in ppm using ICP/MS. Kylea Total Living Drink Greens certificate of analysis

That does not make the product magically risk-free. It does mean Kylea is giving buyers a real document to inspect, which is more than most brands provide.

The catch: a public COA should stay current

The COA earns points because it exists and contains useful sections. The caution is that the visible report is tied to a specific older lot. A best-in-class testing page would make it easy to find the current lot's report before purchase. Kylea Total Living Drink Greens certificate of analysis

FDA says dietary supplements are not approved for safety, effectiveness, or labeling before they are sold. So testing transparency is not decoration. It is one of the few practical ways a buyer can check a brand's safety posture. FDA 101 dietary supplements

FTC guidance also expects health-product claims to be backed by competent and reliable evidence. For a greens powder, the evidence standard should include clear label math and testable product facts, not only front-label confidence. FTC health products compliance guidance

Why the score is so much higher than the category

Safety: 99/100

The product gets a strong safety read because Kylea publishes a COA with microbial and heavy-metal sections, and the formula avoids obvious artificial-flavor or filler positioning in the current page copy.

Efficacy: 97/100

The formula is not just dusted greens. The brand lists protein, superfoods, probiotics, enzymes, and vitamins/minerals in amounts that make the product more complete than a basic greens scoop.

Transparency: 98/100

The score comes from disclosed formula structure plus a public testing document. The remaining weakness is lot recency and how easy it is to verify the exact bag a buyer receives.

The NutriScore read

If you are going to pay $99 for a greens powder, this is the kind of receipt stack you want to see: meaningful protein, large disclosed formula blocks, a public COA, and enough label detail to argue about the product honestly. Kylea Health Total Living Drink Greens product page Kylea Total Living Drink Greens certificate of analysis

The best next improvement would be a current, lot-searchable testing library. Until then, Total Living Drink Greens still looks like the top product in the current NutriScore snapshot. NutriScore rankings

Compare it against the full rankings table or the Total Living Drink Greens scorecard.

Sources

  1. NutriScore rankings: /rankings
  2. NutriScore Total Living Drink Greens scorecard: /reviews/total-living-drink-greens
  3. Kylea Health Total Living Drink Greens product page: https://kyleahealth.com/products/total-living-drink-greens
  4. Kylea Total Living Drink Greens certificate of analysis: https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/1126/1752/files/Kylea_Total_Living_Drink_Greens_Third_Party_Lab_COA.pdf?v=1760532607
  5. FDA 101 dietary supplements: https://www.fda.gov/consumers/consumer-updates/fda-101-dietary-supplements
  6. FDA dietary supplement labeling guide: https://www.fda.gov/food/dietary-supplements-guidance-documents-regulatory-information/dietary-supplement-labeling-guide-chapter-iv-nutrition-labeling
  7. FTC health products compliance guidance: https://www.ftc.gov/business-guidance/resources/health-products-compliance-guidance

Corrections: send corrections or updated label/source evidence to support@nutriscore.fit.

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