Prima’s rapid growth at Sprouts Farmers Market suggests a shift in how some consumers approach nutrition bars, favoring products rooted in animal-based ingredients and “ancestral” dietary ideas.
Prima, a Chicago-based food startup, is seeing strong early traction for its protein bars at Sprouts Farmers Market, where the brand launched nationally in 2025. According to company data and retail analytics cited in the announcement, Sprouts has ordered more than 1.2 million Prima bars in roughly ten months, placing the brand among the fastest-growing products in the retailer’s nutrition bar category.
The momentum is notable in a segment that has long been crowded with plant-based snacks and whey-heavy sports bars. Prima’s formula instead centers on beef tallow, collagen, and grass-fed whey, drawing inspiration from what the company describes as “ancestral” nutrition approaches that emphasize animal-based fats and proteins.
Sprouts Farmers Market has become an important testing ground for emerging food brands that appeal to ingredient-conscious shoppers. The retailer’s customer base often gravitates toward products marketed as minimally processed or aligned with specific dietary philosophies, making it a place where unconventional formulations can find early traction.
Within the store’s nutrition bar aisle, Prima’s performance appears particularly strong at the product level. The company reports that its Cacao flavor has become the top-selling bar at Sprouts by both unit and dollar velocity, while its Salted Caramel variety ranks close behind, indicating that shoppers are responding not only to the concept but also to the product’s taste and positioning.
The rise of a beef-tallow-based snack bar also reflects a broader conversation unfolding across the food industry. In recent years, debates about seed oils, animal fats, and “whole food” ingredients have moved from niche diet communities into mainstream grocery shelves, creating opportunities for brands that frame their products around alternative nutrition philosophies.
Whether this approach can translate into lasting growth beyond natural grocery channels remains uncertain. For now, Prima’s early performance suggests that even in a category as saturated as protein bars, distinctive ingredients and dietary narratives can still carve out space on store shelves.