Protein powder labels are designed to mislead. Brands display "$2.99 per serving" on the front while hiding the 67g scoop size in fine print. You're paying for fillers, not protein.
SupplementMath pulls actual nutrition data and calculates what you actually care about: cost per 100g of protein and calories per 100g of protein.
What you get:
- Database of 300+ powders with real cost calculations
- Scatter chart showing price vs calories to spot value outliers
- Educational guides on whey isolate vs concentrate, plant proteins, sweeteners
- Calculators to check any tub against the database
- Multi-market support (US and UAE, more coming)
- Works in the US and UAE with local pricing and Amazon links
There's been a bit of buzz recently around the level of lead in many protein powders. I've also seen it mentioned quite a lot on Reddit when people ask for protein powder recommendations.
So, I added detailed information on this to the product database in SupplementMath. It includes:
- Lists which products have certifications that test for heavy metals
- Provides the exact lead level from lab reports (where available)
You can learn more about the testing procedures and products here: https://www.supplementmath.com/protein-powder/learn/lead-in-protein-powder/?utm_source=peerpush&utm_medium=referral
Product had at the time: 4 upvotes • 1 comments • 1 followers • 11 PeerPush
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Hi! I built this after doing math every time I was purchasing protein powder. Every tub claimed "best value" but scoop sizes and protein content were all over the place. Let me know what you think!
Comments (1)
Hi! I built this after doing math every time I was purchasing protein powder. Every tub claimed "best value" but scoop sizes and protein content were all over the place. Let me know what you think!