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Beworths Mushroom Coffee Review 2026

posted on April 30, 2026

Beworths Mushroom Coffee occupies an unusual position in the 2026 mushroom coffee market. The category is dominated by premium brands charging $1.20 to $1.87 per serving, and most of those brands disclose their mushroom content in proprietary blend language without per-ingredient milligram figures. Beworths sells at roughly half that price and does the opposite: every mushroom in the formula is named on the Supplement Facts panel with its own milligram dose. That alone makes this product worth a careful look.

This review is built on the verified panel from the 4.23oz / 120g / 40-serving SKU, which lists ten functional mushrooms at 280mg each per 3g serving. The brand also sells a 60-serving variant on Amazon that contains additional adaptogens not on this panel, so the specific listing matters when comparing what readers are actually buying. The frame here is straightforward: what does the disclosed dose math look like, what does it deliver compared to the SERP-leading alternatives, and where does the brand still leave gaps that a careful buyer should weigh.

What is Beworths Mushroom Coffee?

Beworths Mushroom Coffee Powder is an instant powdered beverage that combines a 10-mushroom extract blend with organic Arabica coffee and cocoa powder. The format is a coffee alternative rather than a coffee replacement: the brand positions it for buyers who want the morning ritual of a hot dark beverage without the caffeine load of a full cup of brewed coffee. The 4.23oz pouch contains 40 servings at 3g each, which works out to approximately $0.66 per serving at the published $26.39 retail price.

The recommended preparation is one 3g scoop stirred into hot water, smoothies, milk, or hot cereal. The brand markets the formula as non-GMO, gluten-free, vegan, and made from mushroom fruiting bodies rather than mycelium. Sweetness comes from stevia leaf extract; the panel discloses zero added sugar.

The 10-Mushroom Panel: What Is Actually Disclosed

The verified Supplement Facts panel discloses each of the ten mushrooms at 280mg per 3g serving. That math gives a total mushroom content of 2,800mg per serving, which is the figure that matters most for category comparison. The full list, with botanical names from the panel:

Lion’s Mane (Hericium Erinaceus): 280mg. The most commonly searched mushroom in the cognitive support category and the one most buyers are looking for when they purchase a 10-in-1 blend.

Chaga (Inonotus Obliquus): 280mg. Traditionally used in immune-support and antioxidant-focused wellness routines.

Turkey Tail (Trametes Versicolor): 280mg. One of the more-studied mushrooms in the immune-modulation literature.

Reishi (Ganoderma Lucidum): 280mg. Common in stress and sleep support formulations.

Cordyceps (Cordyceps Militaris): 280mg. The militaris species specifically, which is the form used in most modern supplement formulations rather than the wild sinensis variety.

Maitake (Grifola Frondosa): 280mg. Traditionally included in metabolic and immune-support routines.

Shiitake (Lentinula Edodes): 280mg. A culinary mushroom with a long supplement-formulation history.

King Trumpet (Pleurotus Eryngii): 280mg. Less common in commercial mushroom blends than the marquee species above.

Agaricus Blazei: 280mg. Used in immune-support formulations and traditional wellness routines.

Willow Bracket (Phellinus Igniarius): 280mg. The least common mushroom in the formula and one rarely seen on commercial supplement panels at all.

For deeper context on what 280mg per species means relative to common research dose ranges, see the dedicated breakdown on what 280mg per mushroom actually means.

What 2,800mg Total Mushroom Content Means in Context

The total mushroom blend math is where Beworths separates from category competitors in a way that matters for buyers comparing labels. Most premium 6-mushroom blends in the SERP top results disclose roughly 2,000mg of total mushroom extract per serving. Beworths discloses 2,800mg across ten species per serving on the 4.23oz panel. That is forty percent more total mushroom milligrams per serving than the category leader, at roughly half the per-serving price.

The dose-math caveat applies here and applies hard: more total mushroom milligrams in a blend does not automatically mean better outcomes. The species mix matters, the extraction method matters, and the individual research base for each mushroom varies enormously. What 2,800mg total does mean is that the dose-per-dollar value calculation is genuinely favorable on this product compared to the premium tier, assuming the disclosed doses match what is in the bag. That assumption is one a careful buyer has to weigh against the absence of third-party testing.

Other Ingredients on the Panel

The non-mushroom ingredients are short and unremarkable in a positive sense. Organic Arabica coffee is the carrier base and provides the coffee flavor and the caffeine load. Cocoa powder rounds out the flavor profile and contributes to the product reading as a coffee-cocoa hybrid rather than a straight coffee substitute. Coconut milk powder adds creaminess to the cup. Stevia leaf extract is the sole sweetener, which keeps the carbohydrate count under 1g and the calorie count at 3 per serving.

What is notably absent from the verified panel: no proprietary blend language, no ambiguous “complex” naming, no fillers like maltodextrin or natural flavors, and no added gum or thickener systems. For a sub-$30 mushroom coffee, the supporting ingredient list is unusually clean.

The Marketing-Copy Discrepancy: A Note for Careful Buyers

One finding readers should know about before buying. The brand’s homepage product copy on certain SKU pages mentions Ashwagandha, L-theanine, Taurine, and Ginseng among the ingredients. Those compounds are not on the 4.23oz / 40-serving panel reviewed here. They do appear on the 60-serving Amazon SKU panel, which is a different formulation. The marketing copy across SKUs is inconsistent, and any buyer comparing across listings should verify the panel on the exact listing they intend to purchase rather than relying on summary marketing language.

This is not unusual for brands with multiple SKUs in the same product family, but it does mean buyers cannot assume that “Beworths Mushroom Coffee” universally contains a fixed ingredient set. The 4.23oz panel reviewed here is the cleaner formulation and the one that supports the per-ingredient transparency frame this review is built around.

What Beworths Does Not Disclose

The disclosure picture is not perfect, and a complete review names the gaps. Three items are missing from the public information on this SKU.

Caffeine milligrams. The panel discloses no specific caffeine figure. The brand uses “low caffeine” language in marketing, and Arabica coffee is the carrier, but the actual milligram load per 3g serving is not published. Caffeine-sensitive readers should treat this as a known unknown and start with a fractional serving the first time. The dedicated side effects guide covers this in more detail.

Extraction method per mushroom. The panel describes “mushroom extract powder from mushroom fruiting bodies” but does not specify whether the extracts are hot-water, dual-extracted, or alcohol-extracted. Different extraction methods pull different bioactive compounds at different efficiencies. This is a category-wide disclosure gap that affects most mushroom blends in this price range.

Third-party Certificate of Analysis. No COA, no independent lab testing reference, and no batch-level transparency are published on the brand site or in the listing materials. Buyers who prioritize verified third-party testing as a non-negotiable should weigh that against the per-ingredient dose disclosure the brand does provide.

Who Beworths Mushroom Coffee Fits

The honest read on this product, based on the verified panel and the category context, fits a specific buyer profile. The reader getting the most value from Beworths is someone who wants a 10-mushroom blend, prefers per-ingredient dose disclosure over proprietary blend marketing, accepts that “no third-party testing reference” is a real tradeoff at this price, and is shopping the value tier of the category rather than the premium tier.

The reader who is not the right fit is someone who needs a published Certificate of Analysis to feel confident about a supplement purchase, someone who wants a precisely controlled caffeine dose, or someone who needs single-mushroom isolation rather than a broad blend. Those buyers are better served by category alternatives, which the dedicated Beworths vs RYZE vs Four Sigmatic comparison walks through.

The Bottom Line

Beworths Mushroom Coffee Powder, in the 4.23oz / 40-serving formulation, is one of the very few sub-$30 functional mushroom coffees with full per-ingredient milligram disclosure. The 280mg-per-mushroom × 10 species blend totals 2,800mg per serving, which is more total disclosed mushroom milligrams than the SERP-leading premium brand at roughly half the per-serving price. The supporting ingredient list is clean. The brand-attribution language is appropriately conservative.

The gaps are real and worth naming clearly: no third-party COA, no per-ingredient extraction-method disclosure, no published caffeine milligrams, and inconsistent marketing copy across the brand’s SKU family. None of those gaps disqualifies the product. They just mean a careful buyer goes in with eyes open about what is verified and what is not.

For a granular look at each individual mushroom on the panel and what 280mg of each represents in dose-research terms, the ingredient audit walks through the full breakdown. For caffeine, drug interactions, and pregnancy considerations, see the side effects guide. The statements in this review have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary.

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