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1 g serving size
40 mg caffeine
3.28 kcal per serving
0.076 g total sugars
0 g added sugar
50 servings per jar
~Rs 10 per serving

Data Transparency

This review uses declared product labels, official product pages, and published nutrition information available at the time of writing. Formulas, prices, and labels may change, so always check the latest product pack before purchase.

Editorial Note

This review is published by KhelSpace and evaluates DietXP NRGT Peach using declared labels, product pages, and publicly available nutrition data. The comparison is based on measurable factors such as caffeine, sugar, calories, ingredients, serving size, and cost.

What Is DietXP NRGT Peach Tea?

Most energy drinks in India are either sugary carbonated cans or sweet tea-style powders. DietXP NRGT Peach Tea takes a lighter route: a 1 g powder serving with 40 mg caffeine, 3.28 kcal, 0 g added sugar, and a mild peach tea taste.

This review compares NRGT Peach with Herbalife Afresh Peach, Red Bull, and Sting using declared label data. The goal is simple: to understand which option fits better for daily energy, sugar control, cost, and practical use.

At a Glance

NRGT Peach is a low-calorie, no-added-sugar powdered drink for daily use. It sits closer to a tea-style caffeine routine than a carbonated energy drink. The cost is roughly Rs 10 per serving, and the caffeine dose is measured rather than aggressive.

Smart Comparison

Two servings of NRGT Peach provide 80 mg caffeine, which is close to one 250 ml Red Bull can at 75 mg caffeine. The major difference is sugar: Red Bull has 27 g sugar, while two NRGT Peach servings provide only trace naturally occurring sugar.

80 mgCaffeine in two NRGT Peach servings
75 mgCaffeine in one Red Bull 250 ml can
27 gSugar in one Red Bull can

Who Should Choose NRGT Peach?

Choose it if you want

  • A light caffeine drink for daily use
  • A tea-style peach drink instead of soda
  • No added sugar
  • Lower calories than RTD energy drinks
  • A measured 40 mg caffeine dose
  • A switch from sweet tea, juice, cola, Red Bull, or Sting

Skip it if you want

  • Strong pre-workout stimulation
  • Carbonation
  • A very sweet drink
  • Single-serve sachet portability
  • A high-caffeine 150 to 200 mg product

How We Reviewed This Product

Review Methodology

  • Declared nutrition facts from product labels and official product pages
  • Serving size, caffeine dose, and sugar content compared at a consistent unit (per 1 g for powders, per 250 ml for RTD)
  • Ingredient lists compared head-to-head for each product
  • Cost per serving calculated from listed retail price and declared servings per unit
  • Caffeine safety context drawn from EFSA 2015 scientific opinion and US FDA guidance
  • Vitamin and botanical context drawn from NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and published peer-reviewed literature
  • Vitamin C framed as a meaningful daily contribution, not a full-day replacement for food sources

No laboratory testing was performed. All values are from declared label information. This review does not make therapeutic or clinical claims about any ingredient.

Label Verification

  • NRGT Peach label checked: 3.28 kcal, 0.82 g carbohydrate, 0.076 g total sugars, 0 g added sugar, 0.005 g total fat, and 0.77 mg sodium per 1 g serving
  • NRGT Peach other ingredients checked: caffeine 40 mg, Vitamin C 40 mg, beet root 40 mg, turmeric 30 mg, and pomegranate 25 mg per 1 g serving
  • NRGT Peach label declares Vitamin C at 40 mg per serving
  • Afresh Peach canister label checked
  • Red Bull India product page checked
  • Sting reviewed 250 ml label source checked
  • Prices checked at time of review and may change

NRGT Peach vs Herbalife Afresh: Key Numbers

Both products share the same 1 g serving size and the same 40 mg caffeine dose, so the comparison is direct. Here is what the labels say.

Metric (per 1 g serving) DietXP NRGT Peach Herbalife Afresh Peach
Energy 3.28 kcal 3.52 kcal
Total sugars 0.076 g (naturally occurring) 0.61 g (naturally occurring)
Added sugars 0 g 0 g
Sodium 0.77 mg Check current pack
Caffeine 40 mg 40 mg
Caffeine source Coffea arabica (botanical) Caffeine Powder from Coffee Bean
Vitamin C 40 mg declared Not declared
Additional botanical inclusions Beet root, turmeric, pomegranate None beyond tea base
Artificial sweeteners None None

Sources: DietXP product page; Herbalife Afresh Peach canister label (Mfg. Tirupati Lifesciences / Zeon Lifesciences for Herbalife International India). FSSAI Lic. No. 10013043000639.

Where NRGT Peach Fits in India

Most convenience-store energy drinks in India are carbonated, ready-to-drink, and built for a quick hit of caffeine and sugar. NRGT Peach sits in a different lane: a 1 g powder, 40 mg caffeine, 3.28 kcal, and 0 g added sugar.

If your current routine involves one 250 ml Red Bull a day, you are taking in roughly 27 g of sugar and 113 kcal from that drink alone. Over a month of daily use, that is about 810 g of sugar from one drink. Switching to NRGT Peach at the same frequency brings that figure down to roughly 2.3 g of naturally occurring sugar over the same period. For someone tracking daily sugar intake or managing weight, that difference is meaningful.

The Herbalife Afresh Peach comparison is the most direct because both share the same 1 g serving format and the same 40 mg caffeine. Red Bull and Sting are included because many shoppers compare any new caffeine product against familiar cans and bottles. The formats are different, but the sugar and calorie gap is large enough to be worth understanding before choosing.

If your current routine is sweet tea, packaged juice, soda, or a canned energy drink, the practical difference with NRGT Peach is straightforward: you get a measured caffeine lift without turning the drink into a high-sugar beverage.

The 1 g Serving Size and Maltodextrin

Both NRGT Peach and Afresh Peach list maltodextrin first in their ingredients. If these were 20 g scoops, that would be worth a closer look. Maltodextrin has a glycaemic index around 85 to 105 and produces a measurable blood glucose response in gram quantities.

At a total serving of 1 g, though, the actual maltodextrin content is in milligrams. Every other ingredient in the mix, including Orange Pekoe (8%), Green Tea (4%), caffeine, vitamin C, beet root, turmeric, and pomegranate, has to fit inside that same 1 g. At sub-gram levels, maltodextrin is doing a formulation job as a carrier and flow agent. At this serving size, the total glycaemic load is very small for most healthy adults.

Both products use it at the same 1 g serving. It is not a meaningful difference between them.

Label Note

At a 1 g total serving size, maltodextrin is present in milligrams and serves as a formulation carrier. At this serving size, the total glycaemic load is very small for most healthy adults. Both NRGT Peach and Herbalife Afresh Peach use it at the same 1 g serving.

The Sugar Gap Across Four Drinks

At the same 1 g serving size, Herbalife Afresh Peach declares 0.61 g total sugars and NRGT Peach declares 0.076 g. Both declare 0 g added sugars, so the difference is in naturally occurring sugars from botanical ingredients. Neither product uses the word "sugar-free" accurately because both contain some naturally occurring sugar, however small. The correct framing for NRGT Peach is a no-added-sugar, very low-sugar drink mix.

The bigger contrast is with ready-to-drink cans and bottles: Red Bull declares 27 g sugars per 250 ml can, while the Sting label source reviewed here declares 6.8 g sugars per 100 ml, or about 17 g per 250 ml serving. Both include added sugar. The powder formats are in a different tier entirely on this metric.

355x less sugar than Red Bull Red Bull India declares 27 g sugar per 250 ml can. NRGT Peach declares 0.076 g total sugars per 1 g serving, so the Red Bull sugar load is roughly 355 times higher on the compared serving basis.

Key Finding

At the same 1 g serving, NRGT Peach has roughly eight times less naturally occurring sugar than Afresh Peach. Both powder formats sit far below Red Bull and Sting in total sugar per drink.

Ingredient Comparison: NRGT Peach vs Afresh Peach

Both products share a tea-style base: maltodextrin, tea-origin ingredients, nature-identical flavouring, and acidity regulator/citric acid (INS 330). The NRGT Peach label specifically declares Orange Pekoe at 8% and Green Tea at 4%. Both are prepared in 160 ml of water with 50 servings per jar. The real differences are the caffeine form and four botanical additions that only appear in NRGT Peach.

Caffeine Source

NRGT Peach

Coffea arabica

Caffeine declared from Coffea arabica. 40 mg caffeine per serving with a predictable dose from a well-established botanical source.

Herbalife Afresh Peach

Caffeine Powder from Coffee Bean Powder

Isolated caffeine compound from a coffee-origin source. 40 mg per serving as declared on the canister label.

Both products give you 40 mg of caffeine from coffee-origin material. The caffeine molecule is the same. The declared dose is the same.

Additional Botanical Inclusions: Only in NRGT Peach

NRGT Peach

Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid) 40 mg

Vitamin C at 40 mg per serving is declared on the NRGT Peach label. It is a meaningful daily contribution, but not a full-day replacement for Vitamin C from fruits and vegetables.

Present in NRGT only

Afresh Peach: not declared in the reviewed ingredient list.

NRGT Peach

Beet Root 40 mg

Food-level botanical inclusion. Contributes colour at a declared 40 mg amount. Clinical beet root studies on athletic performance typically use 300 to 500 ml of whole juice, so this is not a sports ergogenic dose.

Present in NRGT only

Afresh Peach: not declared in the reviewed ingredient list.

NRGT Peach

Turmeric 30 mg

Spice-level inclusion with a long safe-use history in Indian cooking. It is not a concentrated curcumin extract; it is a food-level amount consistent with culinary use.

Present in NRGT only

Afresh Peach: not declared in the reviewed ingredient list.

NRGT Peach

Pomegranate 25 mg

Food-level polyphenol inclusion. Declared at 25 mg in the ingredient list. Human clinical studies on pomegranate polyphenols typically use much larger extract doses.

Present in NRGT only

Afresh Peach: not declared in the reviewed ingredient list.

Evidence Framing

The four botanical additions are food-level inclusions, not clinical supplement doses. Vitamin C at 40 mg supports daily Vitamin C intake. Beet root, turmeric, and pomegranate are additional declared ingredients at food-level doses. All four are absent from Afresh Peach, at no extra calories, within the same 1 g serving.

NRGT Peach: Nutrition at a Glance

Energy per serving 3.28 kcal per 1 g scoop
Caffeine 40 mg From Coffea arabica
Added sugar 0 g No artificial sweeteners either
Total sugars 0.076 g Naturally occurring per serving
Sodium 0.77 mg Per 1 g serving on pack label
Vitamin C 40 mg Label declares 40 mg
Servings per jar 50 50 g jar, 1 g per scoop

4-Way Comparison Table

NRGT Peach data comes from the DietXP product page and pack label. Afresh Peach comes from the product canister label. Red Bull values use Red Bull India's official product information. Sting values are based on the reviewed 250 ml label source. Since ready-to-drink beverage labels may change, readers should verify the current bottle before using the value for dietary tracking.

NRGT Peach

Caffeine
40 mg
Calories
3.28 kcal
Added sugar
0 g
Total sugar
0.076 g
Cost
~Rs 10

Best for daily tea-style energy.

Afresh Peach

Caffeine
40 mg
Calories
3.52 kcal
Added sugar
0 g
Total sugar
0.61 g
Price
Varies

Best for users already comfortable with Herbalife's seller channel.

Red Bull

Caffeine
75 mg
Sugar
27 g
Calories
~110-113
Format
RTD can

Best for stronger carbonated energy drink use.

Sting

Caffeine
~72 mg
Sugar
~17 g
Calories
~70
Format
RTD bottle

Best for low-cost RTD energy drink users.

Attribute DietXP NRGT Peach Herbalife Afresh Peach Red Bull (250 ml) Sting (250 ml)
Format Powder (1 g scoop) Powder (1 g scoop) Ready-to-drink can Ready-to-drink bottle
Serving volume 160 ml prepared 160 ml prepared 250 ml (full can) 250 ml (full bottle)
Energy per serving 3.28 kcal 3.52 kcal approx. 110 to 113 kcal approx. 70 kcal
Total sugars 0.076 g 0.61 g 27 g approx. 17 g
Added sugars 0 g 0 g approx. 27 g approx. 17 g
Caffeine 40 mg 40 mg 75 mg 72 mg
Caffeine source Coffea arabica Caffeine Powder from Coffee Bean Caffeine, as declared Caffeine, as declared
Artificial sweeteners None None None (original) Sucralose + Acesulfame K on label source
Vitamin support Vitamin C 40 mg declared Not declared B vitamins declared Vitamins B3, B6, B12 declared
Additional inclusions Beet root, turmeric, pomegranate None beyond tea base Taurine, B vitamins Taurine, caffeine, vitamins, red ginseng
Servings per unit 50 per jar 50 per canister 1 per can 1 per bottle
Carbonated No No Yes Yes

Red Bull and Sting formulas vary by market and pack. Verify current labels before using any value in dietary calculations.

The Bottom Line

NRGT Peach and Afresh Peach are close on caffeine, format, and calories. NRGT Peach has the lower declared total sugar and a broader ingredient profile. Red Bull and Sting are higher-caffeine, ready-to-drink formats with much higher sugar and calorie loads per drink.

Cost Per Serving in India

Energy drink pricing in India covers a wide range. Sting sits at around Rs 20 per 250 ml bottle. Red Bull runs Rs 115 to 130 per can at modern trade and online. Afresh Peach pricing can vary by seller and purchase channel.

NRGT Peach costs approximately Rs 10 per serving. The jar is around Rs 499 to Rs 500 on dietxp.com, giving you 50 servings at roughly Rs 10 each. That puts it well below a Red Bull can and below a Sting bottle, with a much lower sugar load than either ready-to-drink option. Two servings of NRGT Peach cost less than one Sting and deliver 80 mg caffeine with near-zero sugar.

Product Format Approx. Price (INR) Servings per unit Cost per serving
DietXP NRGT Peach 50 g jar (powder) approx. Rs 499 to 500 50 approx. Rs 10 per serving
Herbalife Afresh Peach 50 g canister (powder) Varies by seller 50 Varies by seller / channel
Red Bull (250 ml) RTD can Rs 115 to 130 1 Rs 115 to 130 per drink
Sting (250 ml) RTD bottle approx. Rs 20 1 approx. Rs 20 per drink

At Rs 10 per serving, NRGT Peach is the lowest-cost option in this comparison on a cost-per-caffeine-dose basis. Sting at Rs 20 is inexpensive but the label source reviewed here still declares about 17 g sugar per 250 ml. Red Bull at Rs 115 to 130 is in a different cost bracket entirely. Because Afresh Peach pricing varies by seller and channel, a direct price comparison depends on the actual price offered.

Note on Herbalife Distribution

Afresh is distributed through independent associates, while NRGT is purchased directly online. Compare the price you are actually offered against NRGT Peach's listed online price before deciding.

The 40 mg Caffeine Dose in Context

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) concluded in 2015 that single doses up to 200 mg of caffeine are safe for healthy adults, and that habitual daily intake up to 400 mg is well tolerated. The US FDA has reached similar conclusions.

At 40 mg per serving, NRGT Peach sits in the same general range as a cup of green tea (roughly 25 to 45 mg depending on brew time and leaf quality). It is roughly half the caffeine in a standard 250 ml Red Bull can (75 mg) and well below a shot of espresso (60 to 70 mg). Two servings of NRGT Peach across a morning bring you to about 80 mg, which is roughly equivalent to one Red Bull in caffeine terms, but with near-zero sugar and about 6.5 kcal versus Red Bull's 113 kcal and 27 g sugar.

Three servings a day adds up to about 120 mg, which is around 30% of the 400 mg daily reference value. That leaves room for coffee, tea, and other caffeinated drinks in your day without approaching the upper limit.

EFSA Reference Value

EFSA puts the safe single-dose ceiling at 200 mg and the daily upper reference value at 400 mg for healthy adults. Three servings of NRGT Peach per day (120 mg total) sit at 30% of that daily figure. Caffeine tolerance varies. People with anxiety, insomnia, high blood pressure, heart rhythm issues, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or caffeine sensitivity should follow medical advice and count caffeine from tea, coffee, cola, chocolate, pre-workouts, and energy drinks.

Vitamin C, Beet Root, Turmeric, Pomegranate: What to Expect

Vitamin C at 40 mg

Vitamin C at 40 mg per serving is declared on the NRGT Peach label. This makes it a meaningful daily contribution, but not a full-day replacement for Vitamin C from fruits and vegetables. The NIH notes that absorption is most efficient at 30 to 180 mg per day, with intestinal uptake becoming saturated above 200 mg. Three servings provide around 120 mg, but daily intake should still come mainly from food.

Beet Root at 40 mg

Research on dietary nitrate from beet root as a performance ingredient typically uses 300 to 500 ml of whole beet root juice per session. At 40 mg, the beet root here contributes colour and appears as a plant-based declared ingredient. It is not an ergogenic nitrate dose for athletic performance purposes.

Turmeric at 30 mg

Studies on curcumin typically use 500 to 2000 mg of concentrated extract, often with bioavailability enhancers. Thirty milligrams of powdered turmeric is a spice-level amount consistent with culinary use in Indian cooking. It adds a mild botanical note to the drink profile, not a curcumin supplement effect.

Pomegranate at 25 mg

Human clinical studies on pomegranate polyphenols typically use 100 to 250 ml of juice or larger extract doses. At 25 mg, pomegranate should be understood as a supporting food-level inclusion, not a therapeutic polyphenol dose.

Evidence Quality Note

Most published research on beet root, curcumin from turmeric, and pomegranate polyphenols uses doses significantly larger than those present in this formula. Their inclusion in NRGT Peach should be understood as food-level botanical support, not therapeutic supplementation. Vitamin C at 40 mg is the clearest quantifiable nutritional addition and sits within the NIH's efficient absorption range.

Ingredient Profile Perspective

The four botanical additions give NRGT Peach a broader declared ingredient profile than a plain caffeine-and-tea base. Vitamin C at 40 mg delivers a meaningful daily contribution. Beet root, turmeric, and pomegranate are supporting inclusions at food-level doses. All four are absent from Herbalife Afresh Peach, at no extra calories, within the same 1 g serving footprint.

Taste, Preparation, and Practical Use

Customer feedback on the DietXP product page describes a clean, light peach note with a tea backbone, quick dissolution, and no visible residue. That last point matters for anyone preparing it at a desk, in a gym bag, or on a commute.

Cold preparation at around 160 ml brings the peach flavour forward and makes it closer to a cold brew tea experience. Hot water softens it into a gentler, tea-forward profile similar to standard chai-strength green tea. The sweetness level is mild. If you are used to sweetened RTD energy drinks, the first cup may taste understated. That adjusts over a few days. If you prefer a more concentrated flavour, reducing water to 120 to 140 ml works without any residue.

There is no carbonation and no stomach-heavy feel after drinking. For people who find carbonated energy drinks uncomfortable on an empty stomach, this is a practical difference.

One genuine limitation versus sachet-based formats: the jar works well at home and in the office, but carrying it daily requires either a small bag or decanting into a separate travel container. If portability is your main priority, single-serve sachets would be more convenient. That is a format gap worth factoring in.

Preparation Tip

For the clearest peach flavour, cold water at 130 to 150 ml is the starting point most customer reviews recommend. Both hot and cold preparations dissolve cleanly without visible residue.

Quick Decision Guide

Given that NRGT Peach and Afresh Peach match on format, caffeine, and approximate calorie count, the choice between them comes down to ingredient profile, declared sugar, and how you prefer to buy.

Choose this If you want
NRGT Peach Low sugar, low calorie, tea-style daily energy with vitamin C, beet root, turmeric, and pomegranate. Available direct online at a fixed price.
Herbalife Afresh Peach A similar 1 g powder format with 40 mg caffeine and you already buy through the Herbalife seller channel.
Red Bull A higher-caffeine carbonated can with B vitamins and taurine. Good for occasions where a 75 mg caffeine hit is the goal.
Sting A low-cost ready-to-drink energy bottle at around Rs 20. Comes with caffeine, sugar, taurine, B vitamins, and sweeteners on the label source reviewed.

Where NRGT Peach Falls Short

  • NRGT Peach is not built as a pre-workout. For exercise performance, research commonly uses caffeine doses around 3 to 6 mg per kg body weight. A 40 mg serving is better understood as a light daily caffeine dose for work, study, travel, or a tea-style routine.
  • Jar format is less portable than individual sachets. Daily carry requires planning.
  • The flavour profile is mild and tea-like. Anyone accustomed to heavily sweetened energy drinks may find it understated.
  • Three servings a day is the declared upper limit. For people wanting sustained high-stimulant caffeine across a full training day, this product is not built for that purpose.

When NRGT Peach Is Not the Right Choice

NRGT Peach is not built as a pre-workout. A three-serving daily maximum of 120 mg caffeine from this product is a light-to-moderate daily routine, not a sports performance protocol.

Verdict

KhelSpace Verdict

Best understood as a light daily caffeine drink

DietXP NRGT Peach Tea is best understood as a light, low-sugar, tea-style caffeine drink for daily routines. It is not a high-stimulant energy drink or pre-workout. Compared with Afresh Peach, it offers the same 40 mg caffeine dose with lower declared total sugar and additional declared botanicals. Compared with Red Bull and Sting, it delivers a much lighter sugar and calorie load. For office work, study, travel, and daily refreshment, it is a practical lower-sugar switch.

Best for Daily Low-sugar caffeine
Not for Pre-workout Not high-stimulant
Advantage 40 mg Measured caffeine with 0 g added sugar
Limitation Jar Less portable than sachets

Bottom Line

NRGT Peach works best when you want a measured daily lift, a tea-style taste, and a much lower sugar load than ready-to-drink energy drinks.

Frequently Asked Questions

NRGT Peach contains 0 g added sugar and no artificial sweeteners. The label declares 0.076 g of total sugars per 1 g serving, all naturally occurring from botanical ingredients. That amount is nutritionally negligible. It is correctly described as a no-added-sugar, very low-sugar drink mix. The term "sugar-free" should not be used because the product does contain a small amount of naturally occurring sugar.

NRGT Peach declares 0.076 g total sugars per 1 g serving. Red Bull India declares 27 g sugars per 250 ml can. The Sting label source reviewed here declares 6.8 g sugars per 100 ml, or about 17 g per 250 ml serving. These are different formats but the sugar difference per drink is substantial for anyone moving from a ready-to-drink can or bottle.

Herbalife Afresh Peach declares 0.61 g total sugars per 1 g serving. DietXP NRGT Peach declares 0.076 g per 1 g serving. Both declare 0 g added sugars, so all sugar is naturally occurring. At the same serving size, NRGT Peach carries about eight times less naturally occurring total sugar.

NRGT Peach gets its caffeine from Coffea arabica, providing 40 mg per 1 g serving. Herbalife Afresh Peach uses Caffeine Powder sourced from Coffee Bean Powder. Both products come from coffee-origin material at 40 mg per serving. The caffeine molecule is identical in both.

At a 1 g total serving size, every ingredient including maltodextrin fits within that 1 gram. The maltodextrin content is in milligrams and works as a carrier. At this serving size, the total glycaemic load is very small for most healthy adults. Herbalife Afresh Peach also lists Maltodextrin first at the same 1 g serving size.

A 250 ml Red Bull can declares approximately 110 to 113 kcal. The Sting label source reviewed here declares about 70 kcal per 250 ml. One 1 g serving of NRGT Peach prepared in 160 ml water has 3.28 kcal. Over 30 days of daily use, switching from one Red Bull a day to one NRGT Peach removes roughly 3,200 kcal from your monthly intake from that drink alone.

DietXP NRGT Peach Tea costs approximately Rs 10 per serving. It comes in a 50 g jar with 50 servings, priced at around Rs 499 to Rs 500 on dietxp.com. That is below a Red Bull can and below a Sting bottle, with far less sugar than either ready-to-drink format.

For healthy adults, the product label allows up to 500 ml of prepared drink per day, roughly three servings and 120 mg of total caffeine. EFSA's daily upper reference value for caffeine is 400 mg. Three servings of NRGT Peach sit at about 30% of that. Caffeine tolerance varies. People with anxiety, insomnia, high blood pressure, heart rhythm issues, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or caffeine sensitivity should follow medical advice and count caffeine from tea, coffee, cola, chocolate, pre-workouts, and energy drinks. Not recommended for children.

Both work and dissolve cleanly without residue. Customer feedback points to cold water at 130 to 150 ml for the clearest peach flavour. Hot water gives a gentler, tea-forward experience closer to a standard green tea. Reducing water below 160 ml concentrates the taste for those who prefer a stronger profile.

They are different products for different purposes. NRGT Peach gives 40 mg caffeine, near-zero sugar, and 3.28 kcal per serving. Red Bull gives 75 mg caffeine, 27 g sugar, around 110 kcal, B vitamins, and taurine per 250 ml can. NRGT Peach has the lower sugar and calorie load, while Red Bull is built as a higher-caffeine carbonated drink with B vitamins and taurine. The use cases are different.

No. NRGT Peach declares no artificial sweeteners. The mild sweetness comes from the peach flavouring and 0.076 g of naturally occurring sugars from botanical ingredients per serving. Herbalife Afresh Peach also declares no artificial sweeteners. The Sting label source reviewed here does declare sucralose and acesulfame K.

Each 1 g serving contains 40 mg of caffeine from Coffea arabica. That is roughly equivalent to a cup of green tea and about half the caffeine in a 250 ml Red Bull can (75 mg). Two servings across a morning bring the total caffeine from this product to 80 mg, which is in the same general range as one Red Bull in caffeine terms, but with near-zero sugar and about 6.5 kcal versus Red Bull's 113 kcal and 27 g sugar.

References and Sources

  1. DietXP NRGT Peach Tea Energy Drink Mix, product page and declared nutritional information. dietxp.com
  2. Herbalife Afresh Energy Drink Mix Peach (50 g canister), declared nutritional information from product canister label. Mfg. by Tirupati Lifesciences Private Limited and Zeon Lifesciences Ltd. for Herbalife International India Pvt. Ltd. FSSAI Lic. No. 10013043000639.
  3. Red Bull Energy Drink India, 250 ml can product information. redbull.com and ingredient list
  4. Sting Energy Red, official product information. stingenergy.com
  5. Sting Energy 250 ml, declared nutritional information from reviewed product label source. Values marked approximate; verify from current label. label PDF
  6. EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies. Scientific Opinion on the safety of caffeine. EFSA Journal. 2015;13(5):4102. efsa.europa.eu
  7. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Spilling the Beans: How Much Caffeine is Too Much? fda.gov
  8. National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements. Vitamin C Fact Sheet for Health Professionals. ods.od.nih.gov
  9. Guest NS, et al. International society of sports nutrition position stand: caffeine and exercise performance. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2021;18:1. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
  10. Lansley KE, et al. Acute dietary nitrate supplementation improves cycling time trial performance. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2011;43(6):1125-1131.
  11. Hewlings SJ, Kalman DS. Curcumin: A Review of Its Effects on Human Health. Foods. 2017;6(10):92.
  12. Zarfeshany A, et al. Potent health effects of pomegranate. Adv Biomed Res. 2014;3:100.
  13. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. Vitamin C Fact Sheet for Health Professionals. ods.od.nih.gov
  14. Food Safety and Standards Authority of India. Food Safety and Standards (Food Products Standards and Food Additives) Regulations 2011. fssai.gov.in

This article is for informational purposes only. All nutritional data comes from declared label information, official product pages, and published nutrition information available at time of publication and may change as products are reformulated. This content does not constitute medical or dietary advice. Individuals with health conditions including diabetes, cardiovascular conditions, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or caffeine sensitivity should consult a qualified healthcare professional before changing their dietary choices. Product pricing references are approximate and subject to change. This review is published by KhelSpace and evaluates DietXP NRGT Peach using declared labels, product pages, and publicly available nutrition data.

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