Power Crunch Mocha Creme Protein Energy Bar: Nutrition & Labelgrade B- (71/100)

B- 71 / 100 — A crisp wafer bar built on hydrolyzed whey peptides — 13g protein at 32.5g per 100g, with only 5g sugar. The format is its own undoing on the Labelgrade: the wafer is layered with palm oil and palm kernel oil, pushing saturated fat to 6g (an F) and total fat to 13g, so half the calories are fat. Low fiber rounds out a polarizing profile.

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Protein
99/100
📋
Ingredients
70/100
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Sat fat
33/100
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Sodium
67/100
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Sugar
88/100
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Fiber
48/100

The short answer

Power Crunch Mocha Crème delivers 13g of protein per 1.4 oz (40g) bar at 205 calories, with just 5g of sugar (USDA FDC 1904336). At about 32.5g of protein per 100g it’s dense for a snack, and the protein is hydrolyzed whey — whey pre-broken into short di- and tripeptides — which is exactly what lets this be a crisp wafer with a smooth crème filling rather than the chewy brick of a Quest or Barebells. The Labelgrade is B- (71/100), and it’s a genuinely split verdict: protein density (A+) and sugar load (A-) are excellent, but this is a wafer built on palm oil and palm kernel oil, so it carries 6g of saturated fat — an F on our scale — and 13g of total fat, meaning more than half its calories are fat. Buy it if the light, cookie-like bite is the point. Just don’t mistake it for a lean, clean protein bar, and ignore any “no sugar” impression: the formula uses real sugar and fructose.

Why the B-

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityA+99 / 10032.5g per 100g — among the densest protein snacks we’ve graded, from hydrolyzed-whey peptides plus whey and milk isolates
Sugar loadA-88 / 1005g sugar total — low. The grade reflects the small quantity, not a sugar-free formula: real sugar and fructose are both on the label
Ingredient qualityB-70 / 100~21 ingredients including enriched wheat flour and maltodextrin — recognizable but processed; the wafer format requires the flour and starch
Sodium loadC+67 / 100120mg per bar — moderate, and genuinely a non-issue on a 40g bar
FiberD48 / 1001g per bar — minimal; the wafer base contributes almost none
Saturated fat loadF33 / 1006g per bar (~15g per 100g) — 30% of the FDA 20g daily limit from one small bar. Palm oil + palm kernel oil are the source, and the single reason this isn’t an A-tier bar

The story this table tells is unusual. Most bars that score in the B range get there by being mediocre across the board. Power Crunch is the opposite — it’s a barbell of an A+ and an F. The protein density is near-perfect and the sugar is genuinely low, so on two of the three dimensions that usually decide a protein bar, it wins outright. What drags it to B- is one dimension failing hard: saturated fat. That’s not a rounding error you can ignore by eating it occasionally — it’s structural to what the product is, so it’s worth understanding why before you decide.

The wafer is the whole trade-off

Pull a Power Crunch apart and you can see the grade in cross-section: thin crisp wafer layers sandwiching a pale crème filling. That architecture is the entire reason this bar exists and the entire reason it scores a B-. A crisp wafer needs a fat that’s solid at room temperature and snaps cleanly; a smooth crème filling needs a fat that melts on the tongue without graininess. Palm oil and palm kernel oil do both jobs better than almost anything else — which is why they’re the second and fourth ingredients, ahead of sugar. They’re also among the most saturated fats in commercial baking, and that’s the bill: 6g saturated fat and 13g total fat, so ~117 of the 205 calories (about 57%) come from fat. A dense, chewy bar achieves its texture from binders like soluble fiber and glycerin instead, which is why bars like Quest sit at 3g saturated fat. You cannot have the dry, crisp, cookie-snap mouthfeel and a lean fat profile in the same bar. Power Crunch picks crispness, on purpose. Whether that’s a good deal depends entirely on why you’re buying.

Hydrolyzed whey: real, but mostly for texture

Power Crunch leans hard on “Proto Whey” and high-DH hydrolyzed whey in its marketing, so it’s worth separating the substance from the pitch. Hydrolyzed whey is real and it is the most pre-digested form of whey — enzymatically chopped into short peptide chains (here, 40% di- and tripeptides) that absorb a touch faster than concentrate or isolate. The marketing implies this matters for muscle. For a recreational lifter, the honest answer is that absorption speed of a single snack barely moves the needle — total daily protein intake does almost all the work, and 13g is a modest contribution toward it. Where the hydrolysate genuinely earns its place is in the mouth: pre-broken peptides dissolve smoothly instead of going chalky, which is what makes the crème filling taste like dessert rather than like a powder bar. So the headline ingredient is doing something real — it’s just doing it for the flavor and texture far more than for your physique.

How it compares

ProductProtein per barSaturated fatSugarTotal fatCalories
Power Crunch Mocha Crème (this product)13g (40g bar)6g5g13g205
Quest Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough21g (60g bar)3g1g9g200
Barebells Caramel Cashew20g (55g bar)3g1g8g200
EAS Pure Milk Cookie Dough15g (50g bar)4g9g7g190

The pattern is unambiguous: Power Crunch carries the least protein and the most saturated fat of the four, in the smallest bar. Quest and Barebells each pack 7-8g more protein for half the saturated fat and almost no sugar — on the raw Labelgrade dimensions, they simply beat it. EAS trades away the artificial sweeteners but does it by carrying 9g of real sugar. So why does Power Crunch hold a devoted following against bars that out-spec it on paper? Texture. It eats like a crisp chocolate-mocha wafer cookie, not a protein bar, and a chewy 20g brick is a fundamentally different snacking experience no matter how good its macros are. That’s a real and valid reason to reach for it — this page just won’t pretend the numbers are best-in-class, because the table says they aren’t.

Whole-food equivalent

The 13g of protein in one bar is roughly 42g of cooked chicken breast (about 1.5 oz) or two large eggs — but the more honest framing is a chocolate wafer cookie with whey peptides added, because that’s structurally what this is. The 6g of saturated fat is on par with about 1.5 tablespoons of butter. Against a regular wafer cookie it wins clearly on protein and portability; against whole-food protein — eggs, Greek yogurt, a chicken breast — it loses badly on saturated fat and ingredient simplicity. The right slot for it is a treat-leaning protein snack: the thing you reach for when you want something that tastes like dessert and happens to carry 13g of protein, not the foundation you build a daily protein target on.

Scope

This page covers Power Crunch Original Mocha Crème in the 1.4 oz (40 g) single-bar format (UPC 644225727207, USDA FDC 1904336). The “Original” Power Crunch line runs a dozen-plus flavors — Peanut Butter Creme, Triple Chocolate, French Vanilla Creme, Cookies & Creme, Red Velvet, Strawberry Creme, and others — all sharing this same hydrolyzed-whey wafer formula and near-identical macros, so expect ~13g protein, ~6g saturated fat, and ~200-210 calories across the range. Power Crunch also sells a separate “Power Crunch Pro” line with more protein per bar and a different formula — don’t conflate the two. The Mocha Crème flavor has been intermittently stocked, so check current listings, and always verify the actual wrapper — especially the saturated fat line if you’re tracking it.

Ingredients

Proto Whey protein blend (micro peptides from high-DH hydrolyzed whey protein [40% di- and tripeptides], whey protein isolate, milk protein isolate), palm oil, enriched flour (wheat flour, malted barley flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), palm kernel oil, sugar, cocoa processed with alkali, canola oil, fructose, natural flavors, decaffeinated coffee concentrate, maltodextrin, soy lecithin, salt, stevia leaf extract, baking soda, ammonium bicarbonate, monk fruit. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 1904336.)

Where to buy

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 1 bar (40 g)

Size 1.4 oz (40 g) bar
UPC 644225727207
Verified 2026-05-28 · checked monthly
205
Calories
13g
Protein 26% DV
10g
Carbs 4% DV
13g
Fat 17% DV
per 100 g
33g protein · 513 cal ·13g sugar ·300mg sodium
per oz (1 oz)
9.2g protein · 145 cal ·3.5g sugar ·85mg sodium
Sugar 5g
Fiber 1g · 4% DV
Saturated fat 6g
Trans fat 0g
Sodium 120mg · 5% DV
Cholesterol 10mg
Calcium 100mg · 8% DV
Iron 1.08mg · 6% DV
Potassium 250mg · 5% DV
Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (1 bar (40 g))
Calories205
Protein13g
Total Fat13g
Saturated Fat6g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates10g
Dietary Fiber1g
Total Sugars5g
Sodium120mg
Cholesterol10mg
Calcium100mg
Iron1.08mg
Potassium250mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Power Crunch Protein Energy Bar, Mocha Creme (1.4 oz (40 g) bar) · UPC 644225727207. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.

How this fits each diet

Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.

Vegan
F 0/100

contains animal-derived ingredients

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
F 0/100

contains a gluten-bearing ingredient

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein is in a Power Crunch Mocha Creme bar?

13g of protein per 1.4 oz (40g) bar (USDA FDC 1904336) — about 32.5g per 100g, which is dense for a snack. The protein is Power Crunch's 'Proto Whey' blend, led by high-DH hydrolyzed whey (whey broken into di- and tripeptides), plus whey protein isolate and milk protein isolate. Hydrolyzed whey is the most pre-digested form of whey, marketed for fast absorption.

Why is the saturated fat so high for such a small bar?

The wafer. Power Crunch is a crème-filled wafer, not a dense protein bar, and the crisp shell plus creamy filling come from palm oil and palm kernel oil — two of the most saturated fats in a baking pantry. The result is 6g of saturated fat (30% of the FDA 20g daily limit) and 13g total fat in just 40g of bar, so roughly 57% of the 205 calories come from fat. That single fact is why a bar with A+ protein density and A- sugar still lands at B-.

Is the 'no sugar' impression accurate? Does it contain added sugar?

No — it is not sugar-free. The total is a low 5g, but the ingredient list includes both sugar (the fifth ingredient) and fructose, which are added sugars, alongside stevia and monk fruit doing most of the sweetening. The USDA entry doesn't break out an 'added sugars' line, but the formula makes it clear: this is a low-sugar bar that still uses real sugar, not a no-added-sugar bar. Any 'no added sugar' framing would be incorrect.

How is Power Crunch different from a Quest or Barebells bar?

It's a different category of bar. Quest (21g protein, 3g sat fat) and Barebells (20g protein, 3g sat fat) are dense, chewy bars engineered for max protein and minimal fat. Power Crunch is a light, crisp 13g wafer carrying 6g sat fat — more saturated fat in a smaller bar, for less protein. You're trading macros for a genuinely different (cookie-like) eating experience. If the texture is why you'd buy it, that's a fair reason; just don't expect best-in-class numbers.

Is it actually low-carb / keto-friendly?

On carbs, yes — 10g total minus 1g fiber is about 9g net, only 5g of it sugar. But carbs are almost beside the point here: this is a fat-forward bar, not a low-everything bar. A keto eater watching saturated fat specifically should note 6g per bar is unusually high for the category, even though the net carbs fit.

What does 'hydrolyzed whey' mean, and does it matter?

Hydrolyzed whey has been enzymatically broken into shorter peptide chains (here, 40% di- and tripeptides) — the most pre-digested form of whey, pitched for faster absorption than concentrate or isolate. For a recreational lifter the real-world difference of one snack's absorption speed is small; total daily protein matters far more. Where it does matter is texture: the hydrolysate is what gives Power Crunch its smooth, non-chalky crème filling, which is most of the appeal.

Is it 'high in protein' under FDA rules, and how much sodium does it have?

Yes on protein — 13g is 26% of the FDA 50g Daily Value, above the 20% threshold for a 'high in protein' claim, even though the absolute 13g is lower than a full-size 20-30g bar. Sodium is a non-issue: 120mg per bar is about 5% of the daily limit. With this bar, saturated fat is the line to watch, not sodium.