Premier Protein Vanilla Shake (11.5 fl oz): 30g Protein, Labelgrade B+ (80/100)

B+ 80 / 100 — Premier Protein is the protein-per-calorie king of the RTD shake aisle — 30 g of protein for 159 calories is genuinely excellent (a 5.3:1 protein-to-calorie efficiency rivaling whey isolate powder). The Labelgrade is held back by the 30+ ingredient formulation: dual artificial sweeteners (sucralose + acesulfame potassium), three phosphate compounds for emulsion stability, carrageenan, and an extensive vitamin-mineral premix. This is a heavily engineered convenience product. If your goal is hitting protein totals at low calorie cost, the formulation does its job; if minimally-processed is your priority, plain Greek yogurt scores higher.

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Protein
63/100
📋
Ingredients
71/100
🧈
Sat fat
99/100
🧂
Sodium
100/100
🍬
Sugar
100/100
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Fiber
32/100

The short answer

Premier Protein Vanilla delivers 30 g of protein for 159 calories in one 11.5 fl oz (345 mL) bottle (USDA FDC 2622652) — one gram of protein per 5.3 calories, which is whey-isolate territory in a shelf-stable, no-blender package. Sugar is 1 g (0 g added), held there by a sucralose–acesulfame-potassium pairing rather than any real sweetener. It earns a Labelgrade B+ (80/100): the protein-per-calorie math is genuinely top of the category, but a roughly 30-item ingredient list keeps it out of the A range. This is the macro-friendly mass-market pick — honest about being an engineered product, not a clean one.

Why the B+

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityC63 / 1008.7 g protein per 100 mL. Liquids dilute density by volume, so the per-mL number looks merely average — but the figure that matters here, 30 g per bottle, is excellent
Ingredient qualityB-71 / 100The drag. Two artificial sweeteners (sucralose + acesulfame K), three phosphates for emulsion stability, carrageenan, and a long vitamin-mineral premix. The protein sources themselves (milk protein concentrate + calcium caseinate) are solid
Sugar loadA+100 / 1001 g total, 0 g added — about as low as packaged food gets. The cost of that number is the two non-nutritive sweeteners
Sodium loadA+100 / 100231 mg per bottle, just 67 mg per 100 mL — low for a savory-leaning dairy drink, despite the salt and phosphate additives
Saturated fat loadA+99 / 1000.5 g per bottle. The high-oleic sunflower oil keeps it nearly fat-free without going skim-chalky
FiberF32 / 1001 g, a token amount from the inulin. Not what you drink this for

The two F-and-C scores aren’t really faults so much as the shape of the product: a liquid protein shake will always read low on per-volume density and near-zero on fiber. The score that’s genuinely earned down is ingredient quality — and that’s the trade Premier is asking you to make on purpose.

The protein-per-calorie case (and the catch)

The number that sells this shake is 5.3 calories per gram of protein. To put that in context: most ready-to-drink shakes that hit 30 g of protein do it at 180–250+ calories because they carry more fat or sugar for taste and texture. Premier strips both — 3 g fat, 1 g sugar — and leans entirely on filtered milk protein and engineered flavor to make the calories disappear. For anyone counting macros, cutting weight, or trying to land a 30 g protein hit inside a tight calorie budget, that efficiency is the whole reason to buy.

The catch is right there in the macro line: the only way a sweet vanilla drink lands at 1 g of sugar is by replacing sugar entirely with sucralose and acesulfame potassium. If you’re indifferent to non-nutritive sweeteners, this is a feature. If you actively avoid them, there’s no version of this exact shake that removes them.

What the long ingredient list is actually doing

The ~30 ingredients look alarming until you sort them. They fall into four buckets, and almost none of them are there for flavor or padding:

So the list is long because the product is doing two jobs — delivering protein and acting as a fortified convenience meal. That’s a defensible design; it’s just the opposite of “short and clean.”

Premier vs. Quest: the only true peer

Quest Vanilla (11 fl oz) is the closest thing on the shelf, and the macros are a dead heat: both are 30 g protein, 159 calories, 1 g sugar, and both score Labelgrade B+ (80/100). They diverge on formulation, and that’s the only thing worth deciding between.

Premier Protein Vanilla (this)Quest Vanilla Shake
Protein per bottle30 g30 g
Calories159159
Sugar1 g1 g
Bottle size11.5 fl oz11 fl oz
Ingredients~30~10
SweetenersSucralose + acesulfame KSucralose only
CarrageenanYesNo
Vitamin-mineral premixYes (~20 nutrients)No
LabelgradeB+ (80/100)B+ (80/100)

The honest read: Quest is the cleaner formulation — fewer additives, one sweetener, no carrageenan. Premier gives back a more comprehensive micronutrient premix and a half-ounce more drink. If “shortest ingredient list” is your tiebreaker, Quest wins it. If you’d rather your shake double as a multivitamin, Premier does. Neither is meaningfully better on the macros that brought you here.

Ingredients

Water, milk protein concentrate, calcium caseinate, less than 1% high-oleic sunflower oil, natural and artificial flavors, inulin, cellulose gel and cellulose gum, salt, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, carrageenan, three phosphates (tripotassium, dipotassium, and sodium hexametaphosphate), a vitamin and mineral blend (~20 nutrients including E, A, D3, K1, the B-complex, zinc, iron, copper, manganese, selenium, iodine, chromium, and molybdenum), magnesium phosphate, and sodium ascorbate. (Verbatim source: USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2622652.)

Where to buy

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 1 shake (11.5 fl oz / 345 mL)

Size 11.5 fl oz (345 mL)
UPC 0643843717041
Verified 2026-05-27 · checked monthly
159
Calories
30g
Protein 60% DV
4g
Carbs 1% DV
3g
Fat 4% DV
per 100 mL
8.7g protein · 46 cal ·0.29g sugar ·67mg sodium
per fl oz (1 fl oz)
2.6g protein · 14 cal ·0.09g sugar ·20mg sodium
Sugar 1g · 0g added
Fiber 1g · 4% DV
Saturated fat 0.5g
Trans fat 0g
Sodium 231mg · 10% DV
Cholesterol 21mg
Calcium 649mg · 50% DV
Iron 1.8mg · 10% DV
Potassium 179mg · 4% DV

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Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (1 shake (11.5 fl oz / 345 mL))
Calories159
Protein30g
Total Fat3g
Saturated Fat0.5g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates4g
Dietary Fiber1g
Total Sugars1g
Added Sugars0g
Sodium231mg
Cholesterol21mg
Calcium649mg
Iron1.8mg
Potassium179mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Premier Protein Vanilla High Protein Shake (11.5 fl oz (345 mL)) · UPC 0643843717041. 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.

Vegan
F 0/100

contains animal-derived ingredients

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
A+ 100/100

no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein is in a Premier Protein Vanilla shake?

30 grams per 11.5 fl oz (345 mL) bottle (USDA FDC 2622652), for 159 calories. That works out to one gram of protein for every 5.3 calories — a ratio you'd normally only get from whey isolate powder mixed with water, not from a ready-to-drink bottle off the shelf.

Why only a B if the protein is so good?

The protein efficiency earns it the high marks. The B ceiling comes from the ingredient list: ~30 items including two artificial sweeteners (sucralose and acesulfame potassium), three phosphate compounds, carrageenan, and a full vitamin-mineral premix. Labelgrade rewards the macros and penalizes the heavy engineering — both are real, and they roughly cancel to an 80.

Does Premier Protein contain artificial sweeteners?

Yes — both sucralose and acesulfame potassium. They're how the shake lands at 1 g sugar with a vanilla flavor; together they do the sweetening that sugar otherwise would. Premier does not sell an unsweetened or stevia-sweetened version of this shake, so if you avoid sucralose and ace-K there's no in-line alternative.

How does it compare to the Quest Vanilla shake?

Identical headline macros — both are 30 g protein, 159 calories, 1 g sugar. The real difference is the formula: Quest uses ~10 ingredients and one sweetener (sucralose); Premier uses ~30 ingredients and two (sucralose + acesulfame K), plus carrageenan and a vitamin-mineral premix Quest skips. Both score Labelgrade B+ (80/100). Pick Quest for a shorter list, Premier for the added micronutrients and a half-ounce more liquid.

Is Premier Protein keto-friendly?

Yes — 4 g total carbs (1 g of it fiber), 1 g sugar, 3 g fat, 30 g protein per bottle fits ketogenic and low-carb macros comfortably. The sucralose and acesulfame potassium are non-nutritive and don't raise blood sugar.

What's the protein source, and is it lactose-free?

Milk protein concentrate plus calcium caseinate — both dairy-derived, so the shake is not vegan. It's not labeled lactose-free either, but the lactose load is low: it's built on filtered milk protein rather than whole milk, so carbs total just 4 g.

How much calcium does one bottle have?

649 mg — about half the FDA Daily Value (1,300 mg) in a single shake. Most of it rides along with the milk protein concentrate and caseinate naturally, rather than being dosed in as a separate additive.

Does it qualify as 'high in protein' under FDA rules?

Easily. 30 g is 60% of the FDA's 50 g Daily Value for protein — three times the 20% a product needs to claim 'high in protein,' and the USDA entry (FDC 2622652) confirms the 30 g figure against the on-package label.