A typical Arbonne scoop weighs about 20 g; many flavors use two scoops (40 g) per serving.
Scoop Sizes Across Arbonne Powders
This quick table groups the current powders and the labeled serving. The gram values come from the nutrition panels that list a serving weight and the number of scoops that make that serving. Where the label lists a serving as two scoops, divide by two to get the single-scoop weight.
| Product | Label Serving | Serving Weight |
|---|---|---|
| FeelFit Pea Protein Shake (Vanilla) | 2 scoops | 40 g per serving* |
| FeelFit Pea Protein Shake (Coffee) | 2 scoops | 40 g per serving* |
| FeelFit Pea Protein Shake (Chocolate) | 2 scoops | 34–40 g per serving* |
| Daily Protein Boost (Unflavored add-in) | 1 scoop | 13 g per serving** |
| EssentialMeal Meal Replacement | 2 scoops | Varies by market*** |
*Two scoops total 40 g on several flavors; one scoop is about 20 g. Some older labels list 34 g for two scoops on one flavor. **One scoop weighs 13 g on the Daily Protein Boost add-in. ***Meal replacement uses two scoops per serving; check the local label for grams.
How To Read Your Label For Scoop Math
Every jar shows two key lines near the Nutrition Facts: the serving weight in grams and the number of scoops per serving. Match those two lines and you’ll know the single-scoop weight and the total for a shake.
Step-By-Step
- Find “Serving Size” on the panel.
- Note the scoops listed for one serving.
- Note the gram weight for that serving.
- If the serving shows two scoops, divide the grams by two to get the weight of one level scoop.
- Use a kitchen scale the first time to confirm your scoop is level and matches the math.
Why The Numbers Vary A Little
Different flavors and blends pack slightly differently in a scoop. Pea, rice, cranberry, and added fiber change the density. Labels reflect this. The protein target stays steady at about 20 g protein per serving on the standard shake line.
Close Variant: Arbonne Shake Scoop Size Guide
When you search the label, you may also see older product names in PDFs. The older “Protein Shake Mix” sheets point to two scoops per serving for the classic line. Newer “FeelFit” pages keep the same pattern for most flavors. The meal replacement line lists a higher calorie, higher-fat blend with its own serving. Using the label each time keeps you accurate even if names change.
Trusted Sources For The Gram Figures
Brand pages and nutrition databases list both scoop counts and weights. Two solid references you can open in a new tab:
- FeelFit Pea Protein Shake nutrition entry shows a serving of two scoops at 40 g and 20 g protein.
- Daily Protein Boost listing shows 1 scoop at 13 g for the unflavored add-in.
Arbonne’s own product pages describe the products and the “two scoops” serving language for the main shake line. Those pages can change by country, so always cross-check your jar.
Measure Without The Original Scoop
Lost the scoop? No stress. You can land on the right weight for a shake.
Fast Options
- Use a scale: Zero the shaker with the lid off. Add powder until you reach the target grams.
- Mark your scoop: If you have a spare scoop from another brand, weigh and mark a line that hits 20 g with your powder. Keep it in the jar.
Mix Ratios That Match The Scoop
The label sets a fluid target for texture. Use it as a baseline. Thicker shakes need less liquid; thinner shakes need more. Start with 9–10 fl oz water or milk-alt for two scoops, and 5 fl oz for one scoop, adjust by 1–2 oz until the texture suits you.
Flavor-Save Tips
- Chill the liquid and the shaker. Cold mixes smoother.
- Shake 20–30 seconds, pause, then shake again to break clumps.
- Add liquid first, then powder, then a few ice cubes.
Protein Targets And How Scoops Map To Them
Most adults aim for 0.6–0.8 g of protein per pound of goal body weight spread across meals. The standard shake serving supplies about 20 g protein. Use these simple maps to plan your glass.
| Goal Per Snack | Powder Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ~10 g protein | Half serving (1 scoop, ~20 g powder) | Light bump between meals |
| ~20 g protein | One serving (2 scoops, ~40 g powder) | Standard shake |
| ~30 g protein | One serving + 1/2 scoop | Add water by 2–3 oz |
Troubleshooting Common Scoop Questions
“My Jar Says Two Scoops, But The Weight Looks Different”
Labels change by flavor and region. Coffee lists 40 g for two scoops on one database entry, while chocolate shows 34 g on another. Trust the jar in your hand first, then use a scale for repeatable shakes.
“Can I Mix One Scoop With Milk And Still Hit My Protein”
One 20 g scoop gives around 10 g protein in the FeelFit line, since that serving is split across two scoops. Add milk or a high-protein milk-alt to bump the total, or keep two scoops for the full 20 g from powder alone.
“What About The Booster”
The unflavored add-in is a separate product with a small scoop. One level scoop weighs 13 g and adds 10 g protein to a shake or oatmeal.
Label Links For Cross-Checking
For product language and serving directions, see the official pages:
- FeelFit protein page (U.S.).
- Simply1 variant (U.S.).
Real-World Portions And Budgeting
Powder weight drives cost per shake. If your tub lists 30 servings at two scoops per serving, you can plan your month with simple math: one shake a day will finish the bag in about four weeks. If you only use a half serving in smoothies that already include Greek yogurt or milk, double the number of days you’ll get from the same tub.
Easy Planning Examples
- Post-workout snack: Two scoops with water gives 20 g protein and fewer carbs than milk. Add a banana when you want more carbs.
- High-protein smoothie: Two scoops plus strained yogurt moves the drink toward 35–40 g protein, depending on the yogurt brand.
Scoop Care And Storage
Keep the scoop dry and buried in the powder. Moisture clumps powder and throws off level fills. If you wash the scoop, dry it completely before dropping it back in.
Leveling Tips
- Use a butter knife to scrape a flat top across the scoop.
- Tap the scoop once on the counter before leveling to settle the powder without packing it tight.
- Avoid digging deep with a wet spoon; it leaves hard clumps.
When To Pick Meal Replacement Instead
Meal replacement products in the line provide extra calories, carbs, and fats with a similar two-scoop serving. Choose that option when you need more energy in one glass or when a shake stands in for a full meal. The brand’s page lists the protein blend and macros, and you can still use the same scoop math to track grams.
Bottom Line Scoop Guide
Match the product name to the panel. Standard FeelFit flavors use two scoops per serving that weigh about 40 g in total, so one level scoop is near 20 g. The Daily Protein Boost add-in uses a smaller scoop at 13 g. Use your label and a scale once, and every shake after that feels easy.
Sources: Nutrition databases and brand pages linked above carry the gram and scoop figures cited.
