Traced / Electrolytes
Category Report

Electro-
lytes

The most influencer-saturated category in supplements. Brands built on podcast sponsorships, celebrity equity rounds, and proprietary names for science that predates them by decades. The actual transparency questions are simpler than the marketing — how much sodium, who owns the company, is the "science" claim backed by independent research or an in-house trademark? We traced seven brands. Here's what the shelf actually looks like.

8
Profiles traced
1
High Transparency profiles
6
Mixed Transparency profiles
1
Low Transparency profiles
Before You Buy

What to Look For in Electrolytes

🧂 Sodium content is the number that matters most — and most brands hide it
  • Sweat losses run 500–1,000mg sodium per hour of hard exercise
  • Most mainstream products contain 50–250mg per serving — a fraction of what you need — because high-sodium tastes medicinal
  • LMNT (1,000mg) and DripDrop (330mg) are the exceptions. Check the sodium number first.
Red flag — Under 300mg sodium per serving for active use
🍬 Sugar vs. sweetener — the tradeoff most brands skip
  • Glucose genuinely aids sodium absorption via the SGLT1 co-transporter — real science behind sugar in oral rehydration
  • Most brands use sugar for taste, not physiology, at levels (10–14g) that add caloric load without meaningful absorption benefit
  • Stevia/monk fruit avoids this but tastes different — neither is universally better, depends on use case
Ask — is the sugar for absorption or for taste?
💊 "Clinical" and "medical-grade" claims are almost never regulated
  • DripDrop holds an FDA ORS Monograph — a real regulatory designation for oral rehydration solutions meeting WHO/UNICEF standards
  • Liquid IV, Pedialyte Sport, and most others use "clinical" language that refers to general electrolyte research, not their specific formula
  • These are marketing claims, not certifications
Red flag — "Clinical" without citing specific regulatory clearance
💧 "Hydrates 2–3x more than water" exploits a misunderstanding
  • These claims reference sodium + glucose creating a hypotonic solution that aids intestinal absorption — real science, misleadingly applied
  • The comparison baseline is plain water, not what you drink during exercise
  • For normal daily hydration, water is not inadequate. The claim implies otherwise.
Red flag — Hydration multiplier language without osmolarity data
🏥 Wellness positioning vs. rehydration positioning — different products
  • Liquid IV and Pedialyte Sport: positioned for general wellness hydration
  • LMNT and DripDrop: formulated for active exercise and clinical rehydration
  • The product that looks better in a lifestyle photo is not necessarily the product that performs better during a hard workout
Ask — what is this product actually formulated for?
🏢 Most "clean" electrolyte brands are owned by the conglomerates they market against
  • Liquid IV → Unilever. Nuun → Nestlé (then Edgewell). Pedialyte → Abbott Labs.
  • The "clean sports hydration" positioning exists inside the same conglomerate infrastructure that makes Gatorade
  • Check the parent company before the label
Red flag — "Independent" brand owned by beverage conglomerate
Transparency Spectrum
LMNT
0R · 3Y · 4G
DripDrop
0R · 2Y · 5G
Nuun
0R · 3Y · 4G
Ultima
0R · 4Y · 3G
Pedialyte
0R · 4Y · 3G
Liquid IV
1R · 4Y · 2G
ROAR Organic
0R · 5Y · 2G
← Most transparent Methodology: 7-dimension transparency score Least transparent →
Sodium per Serving — In Context
Na⁺ mg per serving FDA daily limit: 2,300mg · AHA recommendation: 1,500mg · Endurance sweat loss: up to 7,000mg/hr
LMNT
1,000mg
Pedialyte Classic
370mg
Liquid IV
510mg
DripDrop
330mg
Nuun Sport
300mg
Ultima
55mg
ROAR Organic
~80mg
Gatorade (ref)
170mg
High-sodium camp (LMNT): targeted at keto, low-carb, endurance athletes. Contested for general daily use. Mid-range ORS (Liquid IV, Pedialyte, DripDrop, Nuun): clinically validated range. Sugar required for ORS mechanism in Pedialyte and DripDrop. Low-sodium (Ultima, ROAR): daily casual hydration. Insufficient for post-exercise replenishment. ROAR markets as "Complete Hydration" despite trace electrolyte levels.
Score
Sodium
Sugar
Ownership 4 of 4
Brand Ownership Sodium
/ Serving
Added
Sugar
3rd-Party
Certified
Batch
COAs
Influencer
Equity
Price
/ Serving
Overall
LMNT
Zero-Sugar Electrolyte Drink Mix
Drink LMNT, Inc. — Robb Wolf, co-founder (active)
Independent 1,000mg 43% FDA daily value
None (stevia)
~
Informed Choice
~
Undisclosed
~$1.50 per packet Yellow
Formula
1,000mg Na · 200mg K · 60mg Mg
No proprietary blend. All amounts disclosed. Stevia-sweetened, no added sugar, no artificial flavors.
Owner
Drink LMNT, Inc.
Co-founded by Robb Wolf (still active). Bootstrapped. No PE or conglomerate parent. No Series A disclosed.
Key Gaps
✓ Full ingredient disclosure
✓ Informed Choice certified
✗ Batch COAs not published
○ Huberman/Attia equity: undisclosed
○ Montana class action filed (fillers claim)
Key Finding
The sodium dosing is legitimate for its stated use case. The transparency gap is influencer economics — podcast sponsorships involving equity create undisclosed conflicts that affect how the science is presented to consumers.
Full Report →
Ultima
Electrolyte Powder Drink Mix
WM Partners (PE) — acquired July 2019
PE-Owned 55mg 2% FDA daily value
None (stevia)

Non-GMO only

None apparent
~$0.55 per serving Yellow
Formula
55mg Na · 250mg K · 100mg Mg
6 electrolytes + Vitamin C + zinc. Stevia-sweetened. Clean label, plant-based colors. No artificial anything.
Owner
WM Partners (FL-based PE)
Acquired July 2019. Firmament Group debt investment Dec 2020. Founded 1996 — long pre-acquisition history. No formulation changes documented post-PE.
Key Gaps
✓ Fully clean label
✓ No influencer equity concerns
✗ 55mg sodium: insufficient for exercise replenishment
✗ No batch COAs published
○ "Replenisher" name overstates Na dose for athletes
Key Finding
A genuinely clean product positioned in the wrong use case. 55mg sodium cannot replenish meaningful sweat losses — the "Replenisher" brand name implies function the formula doesn't deliver during exercise. Best read as a daily flavoring supplement, not a sports hydration product.
Full Report →
Nuun
Sport Electrolyte Tablets
Nestlé Health Science — acquired July 2021
Conglomerate 300mg 13% FDA daily value
1g sugar (dextrose)

No NSF cert

B-Corp certified
~$0.75 per tablet Yellow
Formula
300mg Na · 150mg K · 25mg Mg · 13mg Ca · 40mg Cl
5 electrolytes, 1g dextrose, stevia sweetened. All amounts fully disclosed. Effervescent tablet format — distinctive and portable.
Owner
Nestlé Health Science (CHF 100B+ parent)
Founded Seattle 2004. TSG Consumer Partners took minority PE stake in 2017. Nestlé Health Science acquired fully July 1, 2021. Now sits alongside Garden of Life, Vital Proteins, Boost in the Nestlé nutrition portfolio.
Key Gaps
✗ Nestlé-owned since 2021
✗ No NSF Certified for Sport
✗ No publicly available batch COAs
✓ Certified B-Corp (pre-acquisition, maintained)
✓ Non-GMO Project Verified
✓ 100% dose-disclosed formula
Key Finding
The formula is genuinely transparent — every electrolyte amount disclosed, clean ingredient list, stevia-sweetened. The ownership is the watch condition: Nestlé is one of the world's largest food conglomerates. B-Corp certification maintained post-acquisition, but no independent testing certification (NSF) and no public batch COAs limit verification for athletes subject to drug testing.
Full Report →
DripDrop
ORS Electrolyte Powder
Public Benefit Corp — founded 2008, independent
Ind. PBC 330mg 14% FDA daily value
7g sugar (ORS-required)

NSF Content + Sport (16oz)
~$1.12 per packet High Transparency
Formula
330mg Na · 185mg K · 39mg Mg · 7g sugar · Zinc + Vitamin C
Sugar is structurally required for the sodium-glucose cotransport mechanism — not incidental sweetening. DripDrop's own FAQ explains this explicitly. Patented formula (US #8557301).
Origin
Dr. Eduardo Dolhun, MD — humanitarian aid physician
Founded 2008 after Dolhun witnessed cholera outbreaks in Guatemala in 1993. Structured as a Public Benefit Corporation. Over 10M servings donated to disaster relief globally. Mayo Clinic Humanitarian Award recipient. No conglomerate acquisition.
Certifications
✓ NSF Content Certified (16oz sticks)
✓ NSF Certified for Sport (16oz sticks)
✓ Non-GMO, Gluten-Free, Vegan, Kosher
✓ Public Benefit Corporation — mission-locked
○ Sugar required for ORS mechanism — transparent about why
✗ NSF sport cert limited to 16oz stick format only
Key Finding
The most transparent ownership and science story in the category. Physician-founded, Public Benefit Corporation, NSF Sport certified, formula rationale publicly documented. The sugar is ORS-mechanism-required and DripDrop explains it clearly — unlike Liquid IV which obscures the same science behind a trademark. Watch condition: NSF sport cert applies to 16oz format only; smaller sticks are NSF Content only.
Full Report →
Pedialyte
Classic Oral Electrolyte Solution
Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT) — since 1966
Conglomerate 370mg per 12oz serving
5–9g sugar + artificial dyes

#1 doctor-recommended
~$0.50 per 12oz serving Yellow
Formula
370mg Na · 280mg K · 440mg Cl · 5–9g sugar · Zinc
Flavored versions contain sucralose, acesulfame potassium, and artificial dyes (Red 40, Blue 1, Yellow 6). Classic unflavored avoids synthetic dyes. Formulation unchanged since 1966 — it works, and it's the medical gold standard for pediatric rehydration.
Owner
Abbott Laboratories — $190B+ NYSE-listed pharmaceutical conglomerate
Pedialyte invented 1966, hospital distribution began 1966, consumer sales 1969. Abbott has owned it since inception. #1 doctor-recommended ORS in the US. 2015 adult marketing pivot explicitly targeted hangover recovery — "See the Lyte" campaign — without FDA indication change.
Key Gaps
✗ Abbott is a $190B pharmaceutical conglomerate
✗ Flavored versions contain Red 40, Blue 1, Yellow 6 artificial dyes
✗ Adult hangover marketing campaign (2015+) without clinical evidence hangovers are improved beyond basic rehydration
✗ No batch COAs publicly available
✓ Most studied ORS formula in the world
✓ Formulation transparently disclosed, no proprietary blends
Key Finding
The formula is legitimate and well-established — 50+ years of clinical use, backed by WHO ORS science. The transparency concern is the marketing repositioning: a pediatric clinical formula rebranded for adult hangovers via influencer seeding (#TeamPedialyte), without changing the formulation or obtaining an FDA indication for hangover recovery. Flavored versions' artificial dyes are a secondary concern for health-conscious consumers. Unflavored Classic is the cleanest option.
Full Report →
Liquid IV
Hydration Multiplier
Unilever — acquired October 2020
Conglomerate 510mg 22% FDA daily value
11g added sugar

Non-NSF

Pre-acquisition equity
~$1.56 per packet Red
Formula
510mg Na · 370mg K · 11g sugar
Sugar is structurally required for CTT mechanism. Sugar-free version swaps to allulose — but the CTT mechanism no longer functions as described.
Owner
Unilever (Dove, Vaseline, Axe)
Acquired Oct 2020 (~$500M reported). Now the largest brand in Unilever's €1.9B Health & Wellbeing division. Quadrupled in size post-acquisition.
Key Gaps
✗ Unilever-owned since 2020
✗ CTT is a proprietary name for standard ORS science
✗ 11g sugar: marketed as "daily" — problematic for diabetics
✗ No NSF cert, no batch COAs
○ Sugar-free version undermines the CTT claim it was built on
Key Finding
CTT is the WHO oral rehydration solution renamed. The science is real — but it's not proprietary and it's not new. Unilever now owns a product whose core claim is a trademarked name for 1970s WHO science. No independent testing transparency.
Full Report →
ROAR Organic
Complete Hydration™
Factory LLC (CPG equity) — stake 2020, $10M add 2024
PE-Backed ~80mg 3% FDA daily value ~
2–3g sugar + erythritol

USDA Organic ✓

Founder-led
~$2.50 per 18oz bottle Yellow
Formula
~80mg Na · ~150mg K · 2–3g sugar · B vitamins · coconut water base
Magnesium and calcium not quantified on label. "Complete Hydration" claim unsupported by clinical electrolyte thresholds — ~80mg sodium is 12× lower than LMNT and 6× lower than Liquid IV per bottle.
Owner
Factory LLC (CPG equity fund)
Took equity stake 2020, deployed $10M add-on March 2024 after record 2023. Founder Roly Nesi still CEO. Factory positions brands for acquisition. Total funding ~$36.3M across 9 rounds.
Key Gaps
✗ "Complete Hydration" — sodium ~80mg total; trace level for athletic rehydration
✗ "Proprietary electrolyte blend" = coconut water concentrate + sea salt, not novel science
✗ No NSF cert, no batch COAs published
○ USDA Organic, Non-GMO, Vegan — certifications are real and verified
✓ No artificial colors, flavors, or sweeteners; clean label
Key Finding
ROAR is the Bloom of the electrolyte category — aesthetic-lifestyle positioning, strong USDA Organic credentials, but electrolyte payload too light to justify "Complete Hydration" marketing. Factory LLC backing signals a brand being built for acquisition, not long-term independence.
Full Report →
Full Profiles
Mixed Transparency — Watch
LMNT
Zero-Sugar Electrolyte Mix

The formula is transparent: 1,000mg sodium, 200mg potassium, 60mg magnesium, everything disclosed. The structural concern is that the brand's growth was built through podcast sponsorships with Huberman, Attia, and others — and whether those relationships involve equity is not disclosed. The science is real; the communication of it routes through undisclosed financial relationships.

Mixed Transparency — Misaligned Claim
Ultima
Electrolyte Powder

The cleanest ingredient label in the category — stevia, plant-based colors, no artificial anything. The transparency gap is a different kind: at 55mg sodium per serving, the product cannot meaningfully replenish electrolytes lost during exercise. The "Replenisher" name overpromises. PE-acquired in 2019 by WM Partners; no formulation changes documented, but a watch condition.

Low Transparency — Conglomerate + CTT Claim
Liquid IV
Hydration Multiplier

Cellular Transport Technology is a branded name for the WHO oral rehydration solution developed in the 1970s. The science is legitimate — the name is a trademark on public domain knowledge. Unilever acquired the brand in October 2020 and has since quadrupled its size. Now the largest brand in a €1.9B Unilever division, marketed aggressively as a daily supplement with 11g of added sugar per serving and no independent testing certification.

Mixed Transparency — Nestlé Watch
Nuun
Sport Electrolyte Tablets

One of the most transparent formulas in the category — every electrolyte amount disclosed, stevia-only sweetening, B-Corp certified, Non-GMO. The concern is downstream: Nestlé Health Science acquired Nuun in July 2021, adding it to a portfolio that includes Vital Proteins and Garden of Life. No NSF sport certification, no public batch COAs. The formula earns trust; the ownership chain requires watching.

High Transparency — Category Benchmark
DripDrop
ORS Electrolyte Powder

Physician-founded during disaster relief missions in Guatemala. Structured as a Public Benefit Corporation — legally mission-locked. NSF Certified for Sport (16oz sticks). Sugar is structurally required for the ORS sodium-glucose cotransport mechanism, and DripDrop's own FAQ explains this transparently — the opposite of Liquid IV's approach to the same chemistry. No conglomerate acquisition in 17 years of operation.

Mixed Transparency — Repositioned Medical Product
Pedialyte
Classic Oral Electrolyte Solution

The formula is 60 years old and clinically proven — the gold standard for pediatric ORS, legitimately backed by WHO-aligned science. The transparency issue isn't the science. It's the 2015 adult marketing pivot: Abbott seeded influencers with #TeamPedialyte to promote the product as a hangover cure, without a new FDA indication and without clinical evidence that Pedialyte performs better than water for hangover beyond basic rehydration. Flavored versions contain artificial dyes (Red 40, Blue 1, Yellow 6).

Mixed Transparency — Aesthetics Over Electrolytes
ROAR Organic
Complete Hydration™

Founded 2013 by Roly Nesi ("Coachella meets Lululemon") as an organic lifestyle beverage. USDA Certified Organic, Non-GMO, Vegan, clean label — those credentials are real and verified. The problem is the "Complete Hydration" claim on a bottle with ~80mg sodium per 18oz. That's trace-level for athletic rehydration. Coconut water concentrate is the primary electrolyte source, not a formulated electrolyte solution. Factory LLC (CPG equity fund) invested in 2020 and doubled down with $10M in 2024 — standard pre-acquisition runway financing. This brand is a lifestyle product positioned as a sports drink.

What We Found

The electrolyte category has a problem that protein doesn't: the core science is genuinely simple and genuinely settled, but the marketing infrastructure built around it implies complexity that justifies premium pricing. Sodium, potassium, and magnesium in appropriate ratios replace what sweat removes. That's been known since at least the 1970s WHO cholera research. What the category sells is a branded version of that knowledge — and the brands differ mainly in which aspect of the science they emphasize and whether their financial relationships with the people presenting it to you are disclosed.

The sodium dosing debate is the clearest example. LMNT's 1,000mg sodium is legitimate for its stated use case — endurance athletes, heavy sweaters, people on ketogenic diets that increase sodium excretion. The problem is that this specific use case was communicated to a mass audience through podcast sponsorships where the economic relationships between brand and host were either undisclosed or incompletely disclosed. That changes how the "evidence" reads.

Liquid IV's CTT is the most flagrant example of trademarking public domain science. Oral rehydration therapy using a sodium-glucose cotransport mechanism is how every pediatric rehydration packet works — including Pedialyte since 1966 and DripDrop since 2010. Liquid IV did not invent it. They named it, branded it, and sold it to Unilever for a reported $500M. DripDrop uses the same mechanism and explains it plainly on their FAQ page. The science is identical; the transparency is not.

Pedialyte is the category's most interesting case study in use-case drift. A clinical formula that's been working for 60 years — unchanged, validated, legitimate — repositioned for adult hangovers through influencer seeding (#TeamPedialyte, beer koozies, festival sampling) without a new FDA indication and without clinical evidence of superiority to water for hangover beyond basic rehydration. The product didn't change. The marketing premise did.

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