We know you'll read the label.
Here's everything that's on it — and everything that isn't. Baseline was built to be the kind of product you'd be comfortable with, and we think the ingredients speak for themselves.
- 01
- No stimulants, no caffeine, no performance drugs — not even the legal ones.
- 02
- Every ingredient is a whole food or a food-derived mineral. Nothing synthesized.
- 03
- Classified as food, not a dietary supplement. Different regulatory category entirely.
- 04
- Developed with input from sports dietitians who work with youth athletes.
- 05
- The full ingredient list has nine items. You can pronounce all of them.
What's in Baseline
Nine ingredients. Each one is there for a reason. We haven't included anything we can't explain, and we haven't left out anything your athlete needs in the pregame window.
Baseline is not a supplement.
This is worth saying directly because the sports nutrition aisle blurs the line. Baseline is a food product, regulated under the same FDA framework as any packaged food — not as a dietary supplement.
That means no proprietary blends, no undisclosed ingredients, no "serving suggestion" disclaimers. The label shows exactly what's in it and exactly how much.
The electrolytes in Baseline — sodium, potassium citrate, magnesium malate — are the same compounds used in pediatric rehydration products. They're not performance-enhancing drugs. They're minerals your athlete's body uses and loses.
What Baseline doesn't contain
What to know before buying
Contains
- Peanuts (peanut butter, granulated peanuts)
- Eggs (egg whites)
- Oats (may affect gluten-sensitive individuals)
Free from
- Tree nuts
- Gluten (wheat, rye, barley)
- Dairy
- Soy
- Artificial flavors, colors, or preservatives
If your athlete has a known nut allergy, Baseline is not suitable. For other sensitivities or medical conditions, consult your pediatrician or sports dietitian.
Questions parents ask
You're on the list.
We'll reach out when Baseline ships.