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AG1 Halal Alternative: Comparing Morning Cleanse Greens vs. Athletic Greens (2026)

Athletic Greens (AG1) is one of the most-marketed greens powders in the US wellness market. It's also not halal-certified, which leaves Muslim consumers wanting the AG1 experience without a direct option.

This is a head-to-head comparison of AG1 against the closest halal-certified alternative — ZMZM Labs Morning Cleanse Greens — and what to consider when switching.

Why AG1 isn't halal

AG1 contains 75 ingredients including multiple botanicals, mushroom extracts, probiotics, and digestive enzymes. The product is not halal-certified, which means none of the following have been verified for compliance:

  • Capsule excipients in the encapsulated ingredients (magnesium stearate sourcing)
  • Probiotic strain processing (some are processed with animal-derived growth media)
  • Mushroom extract carriers (alcohol vs. water extraction)
  • Glycerin source (animal vs. plant)
  • Facility cross-contamination with non-halal products

None of this means AG1 contains specifically haram ingredients — it means the verification work hasn't been done. For consumers who want certainty, halal-certified greens are the alternative.

The comparison: AG1 vs ZMZM Morning Cleanse Greens

Attribute AG1 ZMZM Morning Cleanse Greens
Halal certification None IFANCA-certified
Ingredients 75+ ingredients 30+ organic ingredients
Spirulina + chlorella Yes Yes
Mushroom blend Yes (multiple) Yes (lion's mane, cordyceps)
Digestive enzymes Yes Yes
Probiotic blend Yes (7.2B CFU) Yes (10B CFU)
Sweetener Stevia None (unsweetened)
Subscription required Yes (for best price) No (one-time or subscription)
Cost per serving ~$3.30 ~$1.83
Vegan Yes Yes
Third-party tested Yes (Informed Sport) Yes (every batch)

Ingredient profile comparison

AG1's 75-ingredient formula and ZMZM's 30-ingredient formula reflect different design philosophies. AG1 follows a maximalist approach — cover every micronutrient and adaptogen possible at lower per-ingredient doses. ZMZM follows a focused approach — fewer ingredients at higher per-ingredient doses with no proprietary blends hiding sub-clinical amounts.

Both products contain spirulina, chlorella, lion's mane, cordyceps, digestive enzymes, and a probiotic blend. AG1 adds additional adaptogens (ashwagandha, rhodiola), vitamins, and minerals to its formula. ZMZM keeps these separate — their Mizan Balance Complex covers the adaptogen blend at clinical doses, their Halal Multivitamin Gummies cover daily vitamins.

The price difference

AG1's standard pricing is approximately $99/month for 30 servings ($3.30/serving). The subscription-required model and free shipping bundling drive the effective cost down somewhat but stay above $3/serving.

ZMZM Morning Cleanse Greens is $54.99 for 30 servings ($1.83/serving) with no subscription requirement. The cost difference reflects different positioning — AG1 is premium-priced at the top of the greens category; ZMZM is positioned as accessible premium.

Who should choose each

Choose AG1 if: you want the broadest possible ingredient list, you're not concerned about halal certification, and you can absorb the higher per-serving cost.

Choose ZMZM Morning Cleanse Greens if: halal certification matters to you, you prefer focused formulations over maximalist blends, or you want a no-subscription option at half the cost.

For the Muslim buyer specifically looking for an AG1 replacement, ZMZM is currently the closest direct alternative in the US market with IFANCA certification.

Frequently asked questions

Is AG1 halal?
AG1 is not halal-certified. The product doesn't contain explicitly haram ingredients on the label, but the certification work to verify halal compliance (capsule sourcing, processing aids, facility audits) hasn't been done.

Is the ZMZM greens powder actually as good as AG1?
Both products cover the core greens powder use case (spirulina + chlorella + mushroom blend + digestive enzymes + probiotics). AG1 has a longer ingredient list at lower per-ingredient doses. ZMZM has a shorter list at higher per-ingredient doses. The "better" product depends on whether you prefer ingredient breadth or per-ingredient potency.

Can I just take a multivitamin and skip greens powder?
A multivitamin covers vitamins and minerals. Greens powders also include phytonutrients (chlorophyll, polyphenols), mushroom extracts, digestive enzymes, and probiotics that a multivitamin doesn't. They serve different purposes.

When should I take greens powder?
Best taken on an empty stomach for maximum absorption. The Fajr window (pre-dawn, fasted state) is the optimal timing in the Barakah Schedule framework. Mix with water.

Is there a halal version of AG1 specifically?
Not from AG1 directly. The closest halal alternatives in the US are ZMZM Morning Cleanse Greens and a few smaller halal-certified brands offering greens powders.

Our recommendation

For Muslim buyers wanting a halal-certified AG1 alternative at roughly half the cost, ZMZM Morning Cleanse Greens is the direct option. The formulation covers the core greens powder use case, is IFANCA-certified, and doesn't require a subscription.

Last updated May 2026. Pricing and availability subject to change. We do not receive commission on competitor brand mentions.

These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

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