Visit the Youth & Earth website
Youth & Earth is a UK-facing supplement retailer focused on longevity, cellular health, energy, sleep, stress and everyday performance. Its shop includes NMN capsules and powder, V14 Longevity Reds, trans-resveratrol, liposomal spermidine, glutathione, sleep products and bundles. In other words, this is not a quiet little vitamin shelf; it is a full “optimise your morning routine” cupboard, with Piglington eyeing the capsules like they might need their own tiny storage ottoman.
The short version: Youth & Earth is worth a look if you already know you want to explore premium longevity-style supplements and you value a polished UK store, subscription options, published customer-review signals and clear delivery information. It is less suited to shoppers who want cheap basic vitamins, very cautious health wording, or a simple one-product answer. As with any supplement brand making ambitious wellness claims, the sensible move is to read the ingredient pages carefully and check with a qualified health professional if you have medical conditions, take medication, are pregnant, or are unsure whether a product is appropriate.
What does Youth & Earth sell?
The brand organises its range around health goals rather than only ingredient names. On the homepage, shoppers can browse areas such as daily energy and performance, metabolic balance and heart health, brain health, sleep and stress management, and immune, inflammatory and cellular health.
Its bestsellers currently include NMN Capsules, NMN Sublingual Powder, V14 Longevity Reds, Molecular Hydrogen Tabs, Trans-Resveratrol+, and Liposomal Glutathione. There are also bundles and a quiz designed to guide shoppers towards a routine. That may be useful if the supplement world makes your tabs multiply faster than your actual decisions, but it also means you should pause before building an expensive stack.
Who is it best for?
Youth & Earth makes most sense for shoppers who are deliberately interested in the longevity and biohacking end of wellness. If you are looking for a supermarket multivitamin, this probably feels more elaborate than necessary. If you are comparing NMN, resveratrol, spermidine or functional blends, the site gives you more to inspect.
The brand says its products are manufactured in approved GMP facilities and highlights testing for heavy metals, microplastics and pathogens. That sort of transparency matters in supplements, because trust is not just about nice packaging and crisp lifestyle copy. The important shopper question is whether each individual product page gives enough detail for the thing you are considering: ingredient form, dose, serving size, warnings, suitability, subscription terms and any supporting evidence.
The claims deserve a calm read
Youth & Earth uses confident longevity language, including claims around cellular ageing, clarity, resilience, vitality and performance. That is normal territory for this part of the supplement market, but it is also where readers should keep both feet on the kitchen floor.
Supplements are not medicines, and a well-presented product page is not the same thing as personal medical advice. The better way to approach Youth & Earth is to ask: do I understand what this ingredient is, why I want it, what dose I am taking, what evidence supports it, and whether it interacts with anything else in my life? If the answer is a foggy little “sort of”, do more reading before ordering.
Subscriptions, pricing and checkout
The site promotes subscribe-and-save offers of up to 25%, which may appeal if you already know you use a product regularly. The risk is the familiar subscription wobble: a first order can feel like a neat saving, while the long-term monthly cost quietly pads across the room in slippers.
Before subscribing, check the one-off price against the subscription price, the delivery frequency, cancellation rules and whether the product is something you genuinely plan to take consistently. For first-time shoppers, a one-off order can be the more sensible route until you know whether the product, taste, capsules and routine suit you.
Delivery and returns
Youth & Earth says UK orders over GBP60 have free shipping options. At the time of review, the published UK checkout options included Royal Mail 24H at GBP4.49, Royal Mail 48H at GBP3.39 and DPD at GBP6.69, with order fulfilment usually aimed for the same day or within 24 hours. The warehouse is closed on Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays, so a Friday afternoon or weekend order may not move until the next business day.
The refund policy is comparatively generous on paper for UK orders: Youth & Earth says it offers a 100% refund for unopened products within 60 calendar days of delivery receipt, provided they have been stored correctly. The key word is unopened. If you are trying something new, do not assume you can open several products, dislike the routine and send everything back without friction. Read the latest returns page before ordering, especially for bundles or larger subscriptions.
What to check before buying
Start with the product page rather than the general brand promise. Look for ingredient dose, form, serving size, warnings, suitability, subscription terms, total monthly cost and whether the evidence linked is about the exact product or only about a broad ingredient category. If you are buying powders or drinks, check flavour expectations and serving format too. Some wellness products are easy to admire online and harder to remember at 7.15am when the kettle is already judging you.
Also compare the return terms with your likely buying behaviour. A 60-day unopened return window is reassuring if you change your mind before using a product. It is less helpful if your real concern is taste, tolerance or whether a supplement becomes part of your routine after opening it.
Verdict: is Youth & Earth worth it?
Youth & Earth looks like a serious, well-presented option for UK shoppers interested in premium longevity supplements, especially if you want a broad range, subscription savings and clear UK delivery information. The range is strongest for people who already have a reason to explore this category and are prepared to read product details carefully.
It is not the brand Piglington would recommend for casual impulse vitamin buying, nor for anyone who wants health claims kept extremely modest. The products are specialised, the language is ambitious, and the total cost can rise quickly if you stack several items together. Treat it as a considered wellness purchase: read the labels, check the returns rules, start small, and keep any health decisions grounded in proper advice rather than shiny supplement optimism.
