Premier Protein Dark Chocolate Mint Bar: Nutrition & Labelgrade B- (70/100)
B- 70 / 100 — Best-in-class protein density at 41.7g per 100g — most other packaged foods can't approach that. The trade-off is the formulation: soy protein isolate + whey concentrate + sucralose + palm kernel oil + corn syrup. You're trading ingredient simplicity for protein density.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Premier Protein’s Dark Chocolate Mint bar packs 30g of protein into a single 72g bar — about 41.7g of protein per 100g, the densest protein of any packaged food in our database (USDA FDC 2038520). That’s the whole reason this bar exists, and it earns a perfect A+ on protein density. The overall grade is B- (70/100), held back by the formulation that makes 30g in a chewy mint bar possible: soy protein isolate and whey, bound with palm kernel oil, sweetened with both sugar and sucralose. You’re buying protein quantity, not a clean label.
Why the B-
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | A+ | 100 / 100 | 41.7g per 100g — best-in-class, denser per gram than any whole food |
| Ingredient quality | C+ | 65 / 100 | Soy isolate + whey + hydrolyzed gelatin + palm kernel oil + corn syrup + sucralose — functional, not whole-food |
| Sugar load | B- | 74 / 100 | 10g per bar, scored as added (sugar is the 2nd ingredient, corn syrup lower) — sucralose keeps it from going higher |
| Saturated fat | C | 60 / 100 | 5g per bar (~7g/100g) from palm kernel oil — elevated, adds up if eaten daily |
| Fiber | C- | 59 / 100 | 3g per bar (from inulin) — better than most bars, not a fiber source |
| Sodium | D | 47 / 100 | 360mg per bar (500mg/100g) — the biggest single knock |
The grade is an honest split decision. Density carries it; sodium and saturated fat drag it down. There’s no data dishonesty in the formula — the bar genuinely delivers the 30g it advertises — but the engineering needed to hit that number in a soft, mint-chocolate texture (palm kernel oil for structure, gelatin for chew, sucralose to keep sugar in check) is exactly what costs it the ingredient, sat-fat, and sodium points.
What the “Dark Chocolate Mint” flavor actually is
There’s no chocolate shell and no peppermint oil on this label. The chocolate comes from cocoa processed with alkali — Dutched cocoa, listed mid-panel after the palm kernel oil — and the mint rides in on the natural and artificial flavors line. That matters for expectations: this isn’t a thin-mint or peppermint-patty experience built around a coating. The flavor is mixed into the dense protein matrix itself, so it reads as a chocolate-mint protein bar — sweet, fudgy, faintly cooling — rather than a candy. If you want a mint bar that tastes like dessert, this isn’t it; if you want 30g of protein that doesn’t taste like vanilla-again, it does its job.
The 30g comes at a density most foods can’t reach
To see why the A+ on protein density is the headline, put it next to plain chicken: cooked chicken breast is about 31g of protein per 100g, and that’s already a benchmark lean protein. This bar hits 41.7g per 100g — higher than chicken, in a shelf-stable form you eat in 60 seconds. That’s only possible because the protein is isolate, stripped of the water and fat that come with whole food. The same trick is what every high-protein bar uses; it’s also why the ingredient panel reads like a formulation rather than a recipe. The 30g is real and it’s portable — that’s the entire value proposition, and on that single axis nothing in a wrapper beats it by much.
The sodium and fat are the real cost, not the protein
If you only read the front of the package, this looks like a clean win. The back is where the B- comes from. Sodium is a D at 360mg per bar — that’s 500mg per 100g, a lot for a 72g object, and the kind of number that adds up fast if you eat one daily alongside other packaged food. Saturated fat is a C at 5g, almost entirely from the palm kernel oil that gives the bar its set, sliceable texture. Neither is a dealbreaker for an occasional protein hit, but both are reasons this is a supplement-style bar, not an everyday food. The sugar, at 10g, is actually the better-behaved of the trade-offs — sucralose lets Premier hold it to a B- rather than letting it climb.
How it compares
| Product | Protein per bar | Protein density (per 100g) | Sugar per bar | Labelgrade |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premier Protein Dark Chocolate Mint (this product) | 30g | 41.7g | 10g (added) | B- (71) |
| RXBAR Protein Bar (per USDA serving) | 7g | 21.2g | 10g (from dates) | B+ (82) |
| Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark) | ~31g per 100g | 31.0g | 0g | — |
The comparison that matters is RXBAR, the whole-food alternative on the same shelf. Premier delivers 4× the protein per bar, but RXBAR scores higher overall (B+ 82) because its label is five real foods — dates, peanuts, egg whites, strawberries, natural flavor — with no isolate and no sucralose. Note both bars carry the same 10g of sugar; the difference is RXBAR’s is naturally occurring from dates, while Premier’s is added. For a portable 30g protein hit, Premier is hard to beat per unit. For ingredient simplicity, it loses to RXBAR outright. Isolate-based competitors like Quest and Barebells live in the same trade-off zone as Premier — high protein, engineered panel.
Ingredients
Premier Protein Bar protein blend (soy protein isolate, whey protein concentrate, whey protein isolate), sugar, glycerin, hydrolyzed gelatin, palm kernel oil, water, cocoa (processed with alkali), inulin, natural and artificial flavors, and 2% or less of: soy lecithin (an emulsifier), tapioca starch, nonfat dry milk, corn syrup, high oleic sunflower oil, salt, and sucralose. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2038520.)
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 bar (72 g)
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 bar (72 g)) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 280 |
| Protein | 30g |
| Total Fat | 7g |
| Saturated Fat | 5g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 26g |
| Dietary Fiber | 3.02g |
| Total Sugars | 10g |
| Sodium | 360mg |
| Cholesterol | 5.04mg |
| Calcium | 100mg |
| Iron | 5.4mg |
| Potassium | 290mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Premier Protein High Protein Bar — Dark Chocolate Mint (2.53 oz (72 g)) · UPC 643843000563. 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 meat, fish, or gelatin
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein is in a Premier Protein Dark Chocolate Mint bar?
30 grams per 72g bar — about 41.7g of protein per 100g, denser per gram than any whole food and matched only by other isolate-based bars in our database (USDA FDC 2038520). One bar covers 60% of the FDA's 50g Daily Value.
How many calories are in one bar, and where do they come from?
280 calories. The protein blend supplies 30g (~120 cal), then 26g of carbs (~104 cal, including 10g sugar) and 7g of fat (~63 cal, 5g of it saturated from palm kernel oil) make up the rest. It eats like a small meal, not a snack.
What makes it taste like mint chocolate if there's no chocolate bar in it?
The chocolate note comes from cocoa processed with alkali (Dutched cocoa, listed mid-panel), and the mint is carried by the 'natural and artificial flavors' line. There's no chocolate coating or peppermint oil called out — the flavor is built into the bar matrix, which is why it reads more 'chocolate-mint protein' than a peppermint patty.
Is it sweetened with sugar or sucralose?
Both. It carries 10g of added sugar (sugar is the second-listed ingredient, with corn syrup further down) and finishes with sucralose, an artificial sweetener, at the end of the panel. The sucralose lets Premier keep the bar sweet without pushing sugar higher.
How does the Dark Chocolate Mint compare to the Chocolate Peanut Butter version?
Same 30g protein and the same soy-isolate-plus-whey blend, but the formulas diverge on the two dimensions that hurt most: the Mint runs lower sodium (360mg vs the Peanut Butter's 440mg) and slightly higher sugar (10g vs 8g). If sodium is your concern, Mint is the better of the two Premier bars.
How does it compare to a whole-food bar like RXBAR?
Premier delivers 30g of protein per bar versus RXBAR's 7g (per USDA serving) — roughly 4× the protein — but does it with soy/whey isolate and sucralose, where RXBAR uses dates, peanuts, and egg whites. Premier wins on protein-per-bar; RXBAR wins on ingredient simplicity and scores higher overall (B+ 82) on the strength of its label.
What's the single biggest knock against this bar?
Sodium, at a D (47/100). 360mg per bar is 500mg per 100g — high for something this small. The saturated fat (5g, a C) is the secondary issue, driven by the palm kernel oil that binds the bar.