Bloom Nutrition Reimagines Soda With Bloom Pop

Building on its energy drink success, the fitness influencer-founded brand is now aiming to conquer the functional soda market, competing with Coca-Cola’s Simply Pop, Olipop and Poppi as 2025 becomes the year of the soda edit
Bloom Nutrition, the wellness brand founded by Mari Llewellyn, a fitness and wellness influencer-turned-entrepreneur, is expanding into a new category — one that’s picking up steam this year: low-sugar, functional soda.
Enter Bloom Pop, a better-for-you, gut-supporting twist on traditional soda, unveiled at Expo West 2025, the West Coast’s annual natural and organic products trade show.
“What we do best at Bloom is reimagine wellness essentials with flavor and function,” Bloom co-founder Mari Llewellyn said. “Made with a scientifically-backed prebiotic and flavor we’ve perfected, Bloom Pop is our answer to what our fans feel the modern soda category is missing: a truly tasty and functional drink. We will continue to reach our community as we always have—by making it easier for them to bloom into their best selves.”
The new functional sodas will launch in five flavors, including Shirley Temple, Raspberry Lemon and Orange, and are expected to hit shelves around Labor Day at Walmart and other major retailers. The functional soda will contain 20 calories and 3-4 grams of sugar, aligning with the growing consumer preference for low-sugar options.

The Bloom brand has successfully captured the attention of Gen Z and millennials, particularly women interested in fitness and wellness. Many have followed its blonde founder and podcast host since 2017, when she posted a before-and-after photo on Instagram documenting her 70-pound weight loss — a transformational post in more ways than one, as it quickly cemented her status as a go-to source for fitness motivation and then CPG empire.
Nutrabolt, the company behind C4 Energy, made a significant minority investment in Bloom Nutrition last January, making it Bloom’s largest investor. At the time, Bloom Nutrition focused on supplements in the greens and superfoods category, including pre-workout blends, whey isolate proteins, collagen peptides, collagen creamers and blending accessories — all secured shelf space at major retailers like Walmart, Sam’s Club and Target. By July, Bloom Sparkling Energy hit the market, an energy beverage with prebiotics that sold over three million cans within its first two and a half months.
“Our partnership with Bloom is focused on driving beverage innovation and bringing Mari and Greg’s vision to life,” Nutrabolt chairman and CEO Doss Cunningham said. “Bloom Pop is a prime example of what we can accomplish together and further solidifies Bloom’s leadership in the beverage category.”
If 2024 kicked off the era of energy drinks, 2025 is shaping up to be the year of the great soda edit.
Functional soda brand Poppi poured big bucks into a Super Bowl LIX commercial last month, poking fun at the traditional soda industry with an ad that showed young consumers tempted by soda but hesitating over its sugar content — before ultimately cracking open a can of Poppi’s colorfully-branded prebiotic soda instead. The company sells low-sugar functional sodas in eight flavors, including Classic Cola, Doc Pop and Lemon Lime.
Olipop, another low-sugar functional soda brand touting beverages with prebiotics, plant fiber and botanical extracts, recently secured a $50 million investment from J.P. Morgan Private Capital’s Growth Equity Partners, bringing its valuation to $1.85 billion. The brand plans to expand its already extensive flavor line-up and retail presence.

Other contenders in the healthier soda category include Slice soda brand, which was acquired by Suja to give it a healthy makeover with the addition of pro, pre and post-biotics and Culture Pop Soda, a soda alternative with live probiotics, which landed a $21 million investment last year.
If there was any doubt that the healthy soda trend isn’t just a passing fad, look no further than an industry titan like Coca-Cola launching its own take on the prebiotic soda category with Simply Pop.

“We found that consumers, especially wellness-focused Gen Z-ers and millennials, were really interested in juice and prebiotic sodas,” said Becca Kerr, CEO of Nutrition at Coca-Cola.
The new fruit-forward line contains 25-30% real fruit juice from concentrate, includes Vitamin C and zinc, and has no added sugar. Interestingly, it pulls from Simply, which originally launched as an orange juice brand in 2001. Coca-Cola believes the brand recognition will resonate with those who are “curious” about prebiotic sodas but haven’t yet taken the leap.
“Gen Z grew up with this brand,” noted Terika Fasakin, Simply’s North America brand senior director. “They don’t remember a world where Simply doesn’t exist, and it’s the juice they’ve seen in the fridge throughout their lives, so it has a particular tug on their heartstrings.”