Moringa powder and spirulina are both pitched as “superfoods” with overlapping marketing claims, but their nutritional profiles are quite different. Moringa is a leaf-derived green powder, high in vitamins A, C, calcium, and iron. Spirulina is a cyanobacteria biomass, high in complete protein and iron, with measurable B12 analogues. For supplement brands deciding between them, the decision usually rests on three factors: target nutrient, taste/colour compatibility, and price-per-gram of the target nutrient.
Nutritional comparison (per 100 g dry powder, typical)
| Nutrient | Moringa Powder | Spirulina (Dihé) |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | ~27 g | ~57 g (complete, with all essential amino acids) |
| Iron | ~28 mg | ~28 mg |
| Calcium | ~2,000 mg | ~120 mg |
| Vitamin A (beta-carotene) | Very high (~16,000µg RAE) | Very high (~3,500µg RAE) |
| Vitamin C | ~17 mg | ~10 mg |
| Vitamin B12 analogues | None (or trace) | Measurable, but bioavailability debated |
| Antioxidants (ORAC) | ~46,000 | ~24,000 |
| Chlorophyll | Moderate | Very high (~1,000 mg) |
| Phycocyanin | None | Yes (the anti-inflammatory pigment unique to spirulina) |
| Taste profile | Vegetal, slightly bitter (like very strong matcha) | Strong oceanic / pondy — needs flavour masking |
| Colour in finished product | Vibrant deep green | Dark blue-green to teal |
| Wholesale 20 kg | $512 | $999 |
When to choose moringa
Choose moringa when the formulation targets calcium, vitamin A, antioxidants, and overall “greens” positioning. Its taste is mild enough to use in higher inclusion percentages (5–15% in protein bars, 3–8% in smoothie blends, full inclusion in capsule formats). Its vibrant green colour reads as “leafy plant” on packaging — the visual cue most consumers associate with healthy. Per-kilogram of usable nutrient, moringa is significantly cheaper than spirulina, which is why mass-market “green powder” formulations are usually moringa-led.
Moringa is the wrong choice when the customer expects complete protein per serving (moringa is incomplete; missing or low in some essential amino acids), or when the wellness positioning is “ancient algae” / “the first food” — that is spirulina’s territory. Wholesale moringa available in 10/20/50/70/100 kg tiers.
When to choose spirulina
Choose spirulina when the formulation targets complete protein, phycocyanin (its unique pigment-protein with documented anti-inflammatory data), or a premium nutrient-density positioning. Spirulina’s complete amino-acid profile makes it the green-powder of choice for protein supplement formulators serving vegan athletes. The Lake Chad source has the additional storytelling advantage that this is the spirulina humans have eaten the longest — the Kanembu women have harvested it from the alkaline ponds of Lake Chad for centuries, predating modern algae cultivation by hundreds of years.
Spirulina is the wrong choice for mild-flavour smoothie blends (the oceanic taste is hard to mask), for calcium-positioned supplements (moringa wins by an order of magnitude), and for budget-conscious bulk formulations (it costs roughly twice moringa per kg). Wholesale Lake Chad spirulina available with origin-water test per batch.
Combining both
Premium green-powder blends often combine moringa + spirulina + other functional greens (wheatgrass, chlorella, barley grass). A common ratio in this space is 60% moringa / 30% spirulina / 10% other, blending moringa’s mild taste and broad micronutrient coverage with spirulina’s complete protein and phycocyanin. The combination also softens spirulina’s flavour challenge while retaining its protein advantage.