How to Choose a Colostrum Supplement

"Colostrum" on a label tells you almost nothing about quality. Two products at the same price can differ wildly in how much active material they contain. Here are the things worth checking before you buy.
1. Guaranteed IgG content
Immunoglobulin G (IgG) is the most-cited active component, and better brands publish a guaranteed minimum — often somewhere in the range of 20–40%. A product that won't state its IgG percentage at all is a yellow flag. Higher isn't automatically better for everyone, but a stated number signals the maker actually tests for it.
2. Sourcing and the herd
Look for colostrum from cows raised without routine antibiotics or added hormones (rBGH-free), ideally grass-fed. Ethical brands also collect colostrum after the calf has been fed. "First-milking" colostrum is generally considered the most potent.
3. Processing temperature
Antibodies and growth factors are heat-sensitive. Low-temperature drying (and gentle pasteurization) helps preserve them, which is why many quality brands advertise low-heat or "flash" processing. Heavily heat-treated colostrum may still be a fine protein source but can lose some bioactivity.
4. Third-party testing and purity
Independent testing for potency and contaminants (heavy metals, microbes) is a strong trust signal. So is transparency about country of origin. Bonus points for clean labels — colostrum should be the main event, not buried under fillers, sweeteners, and flow agents.
5. Form and value
Decide between powder and capsules based on your routine, then compare cost per gram of colostrum, not just sticker price. Capsules are convenient but you pay more per gram and often get a smaller daily dose; powder is usually better value if you'll actually use it.
What we look for in a recommendation
When we point to a product, it's one that checks most of these boxes: a stated IgG percentage, clean sourcing, gentle processing, third-party testing, and fair value. Below are example slots — the specific picks link to current listings.
Quality grass-fed colostrum powder
A defatted, low-heat powder with a published IgG percentage and clean label — a sensible default if you want flexible dosing and the best value per gram.
Convenient colostrum capsules
For travel and consistency: a capsule from a transparent brand with third-party testing, when you'd rather not deal with scooping powder.