Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Protein Shake: 24g Protein, Labelgrade B+ (80/100)
B+ 80 / 100 — 24g of milk-and-whey protein in a 140-calorie carton with effectively zero sugar, very low saturated fat, and modest sodium. The Labelgrade ceiling is the long additive panel — gums, phosphates, and two artificial sweeteners (sucralose + acesulfame potassium) — and a per-100ml protein figure that, like every ready-to-drink shake, reads lower than a powder because most of the carton is water.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Protein Shake delivers 24 g of protein in a 140-calorie, 11 fl oz (325 ml) carton (USDA FDC 2478917). The protein is the part ON actually engineered: a four-source dairy blend — milk protein isolate, milk protein concentrate, whey protein concentrate, and calcium caseinate — that pairs fast-digesting whey with slow-digesting casein in one pour. Sugar is effectively zero (about 1 g of naturally-occurring lactose, sweetened the rest of the way with sucralose and acesulfame potassium), saturated fat is negligible (~0.5 g), and sodium is low (211 mg). The Labelgrade is B+ (80 / 100). What holds it back isn’t the macros — it’s the long additive panel and the structural reality of any ready-to-drink format: most of a carton is water, so per-100ml protein reads modest. Best-fit use: a cold, no-prep, sugar-free 24 g hit when a tub and shaker aren’t practical — travel, an office fridge, a gym bag.
Why the B+
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C | 61 / 100 | 7.4 g per 100 ml. The 24 g per carton is genuinely useful; the per-100ml figure is low because an RTD shake is mostly water — true of every ready-to-drink shake, not a knock on this one specifically |
| Ingredient quality | B | 76 / 100 | Complete four-source dairy/whey base, but a ~37-item panel with gums (cellulose gel/gum, carrageenan), three phosphate stabilizers, and two artificial sweeteners. Functional, not clean-label |
| Saturated fat load | A+ | 99 / 100 | ~0.5 g per carton — essentially none |
| Sodium load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 211 mg per carton (~9% of the daily limit) — low for a flavored shelf-stable drink |
| Sugar load | A+ | 100 / 100 | ~1 g sugar, all naturally-occurring lactose; no added sugar |
| Fiber | F | 32 / 100 | ~1 g — negligible, as expected for a protein beverage |
| Overall | B+ | 80 / 100 | A well-formulated grab-and-go protein with excellent sugar, sodium, and saturated-fat numbers. The ceiling is the additive/sweetener panel and the inherent dilution of an RTD format |
Read the column honestly: this shake scores A+ on the three things that usually sink a flavored beverage — sugar, sodium, saturated fat. Three of its six dimensions are maxed or near-maxed. The two that pull it to an 80 are baked into the category. Fiber is an F because a protein drink has none; protein density is a C because you’re drinking water with 24 g suspended in it. Neither is fixable without changing what the product is.
The 24 g question: why it carries less than its rivals
The honest headline is that two shakes in its own comparison set hold more protein per bottle. Here is the verified field, all numbers from each product’s USDA entry:
| Product | Protein | Calories | Sugar | Sodium | Size / format |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ON Gold Standard Shake (this product) | 24 g | 140 | ~1 g | 211 mg | 11 fl oz carton |
| Premier Protein Vanilla | 30 g | 159 | 1 g | 231 mg | 11.5 fl oz carton |
| Quest Vanilla Shake | 30 g | 159 | 1 g | 250 mg | 11 fl oz bottle |
| Fairlife Core Power Elite | 42 g | 232 | 7 g | 261 mg | 14 fl oz bottle |
Premier and Quest both pack 30 g into a similar carton for ~20 more calories — if your only metric is grams of protein per dollar, they win outright. Fairlife Core Power Elite carries a huge 42 g, but in a bigger bottle, at 232 calories, and with seven times the sugar. ON’s pitch sits between them: the leanest pour of the four (140 cal, the lowest sugar, the lowest sodium) and the only one built on a deliberate four-protein blend rather than a single milk-protein source. You give up 6 g versus Premier and Quest to get the lowest-calorie, lowest-sodium carton in the set. Whether that trade is worth it depends entirely on whether you’re chasing protein totals or calorie discipline.
The real alternative is the powder, not another carton
The comparison ON would rather you not make is against its own tub. Gold Standard 100% Whey delivers the same 24 g per scoop for a fraction of the per-gram cost, with a label a few words long instead of three dozen. Everything this carton adds — sucralose and acesulfame potassium for sweetness, cellulose and carrageenan gums for mouthfeel, three phosphate compounds to keep the emulsion stable on a shelf, a full vitamin-mineral premix — exists to make whey survive months at room temperature and taste like a milkshake out of a sealed box. That’s the RTD premium, and it’s a real feature: no blender, no fridge until you open it, no cleanup, no clumping. But if you’re standing in a kitchen with a shaker in the drawer, the powder is the smarter buy. This carton earns its place in a gym bag, a glovebox, or a hotel mini-fridge — not on the counter next to a tub you already own.
What 24 g of protein looks like as food
One carton is roughly equivalent to:
- ~77 g of cooked chicken breast (about 2.7 oz)
- ~4 large eggs worth of protein
- ~240 g of plain nonfat Greek yogurt (a generous cup)
The shake’s edge over all three is convenience and shelf-stability: no cooking, no fridge until opened, no cleanup, and a fixed 24 g you don’t have to weigh. The trade versus whole food is the additive-and-sweetener panel and the cost per gram of protein.
Scope
This page covers Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Protein Shake in Chocolate, sold as 11 fl oz (325 ml) cartons by the 12-pack case (UPC 748927968200, USDA FDC 2478917 — which lists the ~1.03 gal / 3.9 L case volume, not a serving). ON sells this shake in other flavors (Vanilla, Cafe Latte, Strawberry); per-carton macros are essentially identical across flavors, though sweetener and cocoa content shift slightly. This is a separate product from the Gold Standard 100% Whey powder, which has different macros and a different ingredient list. Always check the actual carton.
Ingredients
Filtered water, protein blend (milk protein isolate, milk protein concentrate, whey protein concentrate, calcium caseinate), cocoa (processed with alkali), sunflower oil, natural flavors, cellulose gel and gum, vitamin and mineral blend (magnesium phosphate, sodium ascorbate, ferric orthophosphate, zinc aspartate, dl-alpha tocopheryl acetate, folic acid, potassium iodide, niacinamide, vitamin A palmitate, phytomenadione, copper amino acid chelate, manganese sulfate, cholecalciferol, sodium selenite, d-calcium pantothenate, sodium molybdate, chromium chloride, biotin, cyanocobalamin, pyridoxine hydrochloride, thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin), potassium phosphate and sodium hexametaphosphate, heavy cream, salt, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, carrageenan.
The first four ingredients tell the story: water, then a stack of dairy proteins. Cocoa, oil, and flavor come next; everything after is there to sweeten it, stabilize the emulsion, and fortify it. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2478917.)
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 carton (11 fl oz / 325 ml)
748927968200See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 carton (11 fl oz / 325 ml)) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 140 |
| Protein | 24g |
| Total Fat | 2.99g |
| Saturated Fat | 0.488g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 4g |
| Dietary Fiber | 0.975g |
| Total Sugars | 1.01g |
| Sodium | 211mg |
| Cholesterol | 26mg |
| Calcium | 390mg |
| Iron | 2.99mg |
| Potassium | 400mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Protein Shake (Chocolate) (11 fl oz (325 ml) carton — sold by the 12-pack case) · UPC 748927968200. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.
How this fits each diet
Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.
contains animal-derived ingredients
contains no listed meat or fish
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein is in an Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard shake?
24 g of protein per 11 fl oz (325 ml) carton (USDA FDC 2478917). That's about 7.4 g per 100 ml — the protein is real and complete (milk protein isolate, milk protein concentrate, whey concentrate, calcium caseinate), it just reads low per-100ml because a ready-to-drink shake is mostly water.
Why does it have 24 g when Premier and Quest carry 30 g in a similar carton?
It's a formulation choice, not a shortfall. ON capped this carton at 24 g for 140 calories; Premier (30 g / 159 cal) and Quest (30 g / 159 cal) push 6 g more protein and ~20 more calories into a bottle a touch larger. ON's trade is a four-source dairy blend (isolate + concentrate + whey + caseinate) that mixes fast and slow protein, where Premier and Quest lean on milk protein concentrate. If you only count grams, the other two win; if you want the lower-calorie pour with the broader amino profile, this is it.
Is there added sugar?
No. The carton lists about 1 g of sugar, all naturally-occurring lactose from the dairy base. Sweetness comes from sucralose and acesulfame potassium (two zero-calorie artificial sweeteners) rather than sugar — so it's effectively sugar-free, but not sweetener-free.
What's the 1.03 gal / 3.9 L on the USDA entry and the product name?
That's the case volume, not a single serving. Gold Standard RTD ships as a 12-pack of 11 fl oz cartons; 12 x 11 fl oz works out to roughly 1.03 gallons (3.9 L). You drink one 11 fl oz carton at a time — that's the 24 g / 140 cal serving on this page.
Is this the same as Gold Standard 100% Whey powder?
No. This is the pre-mixed, ready-to-drink carton. The famous Gold Standard 100% Whey tub is a powder you mix yourself — it costs far less per gram of protein and lets you control what goes in. The RTD carton trades that cost and ingredient control for grab-and-go convenience.
How does its ingredient list compare to a cleaner RTD?
It's mid-pack. ON's panel runs to roughly three dozen items (gums, three phosphate compounds, a full vitamin-mineral premix, two sweeteners). Quest's vanilla shake does a similar 30 g job on about 10 ingredients with sucralose only — no acesulfame potassium. ON earns a B on ingredient quality (76); Quest's shorter label edges it slightly. Both are engineered convenience products, not clean-label.
Is it 'high in protein' under FDA rules?
Yes — 24 g is 48% of the FDA's 50 g Daily Value, comfortably past the 20% threshold for a 'high in protein' claim.
Is it keto-friendly?
It fits most low-carb plans: 4 g total carbs, ~1 g sugar, ~3 g fat, 24 g protein per carton. Net carbs land around 3 g. It's protein-forward rather than a fat-fueled keto product, but the carb load is trivial.