


What is Yava Labs Elite Whey?
Elite Whey is a whey‑protein supplement (whey protein concentrate) by Yava Labs.
It comes in tubs (commonly 1 kg or 2 kg), designed to supply extra dietary protein, especially for people doing strength training, bodybuilding, or generally wanting to support muscle growth and recovery.
Per typical serving (about 30 g / 1 scoop):
| Nutrient / Info | Typical Value |
|---|---|
| Protein | ~ 22 g per 30 g serving |
| BCAAs / Amino Acids | ~ 5 g BCAAs (with ~2.4 g L‑Leucine) per serving. |
| Fat | ~ 1.66 g per serving |
| Carbohydrates | ~ 1.9–2.5 g per serving (of which sugars ~1.7–2.4 g) |
| Calories | ~ 112 kcal per serving (some listings ~111–114 kcal) |
| Serving Size / Use | 1 scoop (30 g) mixed with about 200‑400 ml water or milk. Recommended after workout, or any time you need extra protein (morning, between meals, before bed) |
The product is offered in a variety of flavors (ice‑cream, chocolate, vanilla, banana, cookies & cream, etc.) depending on seller/region.
According to product descriptions:
A high‑quality whey concentrate that supports muscle growth and repair thanks to good protein + amino‑acid content (including BCAAs).
Fast absorption and easy digestibility.
Flexible use: post‑workout, between meals, morning or evening — to help meet daily protein needs.
A lean nutrition profile (relatively low carbs/fats) for those who might want to build/maintain muscle without excessive calories.
Composition per serving is in line with many whey concentrates: ~ 22 g protein, small carbs and fats — useful if you want to add protein without many extra calories.
Amino‑acid / BCAA content helps muscle repair and growth (especially with regular training).
Versatile: you can use it any time of day, not only post‑workout.
Various flavors, which may make it more palatable than plain protein — helpful if you dislike “bland” shakes.
I didn’t find any public independent lab analysis or third‑party testing verifying the exact protein purity or ingredient quality of Yava Labs Elite Whey (i.e. no public test results). Most data come from the manufacturer or retail seller listings.
As with any supplement: it cannot replace a balanced diet. Protein from whole foods (meat, eggs, dairy, legumes) remains important — whey should complement, not substitute.
The effectiveness depends also on your overall diet, workout regime, rest, hydration. Whey alone won’t build muscle without consistent training and good nutrition.
If you have allergies: some formulas may contain traces of gluten, nuts, or other allergens depending on flavor/production.