Jamba Juice Smoothie Kits
May 2015: A federal judge granted final approval of the settlement.
March 2015: A federal judge preliminarily approved the settlement of this class-action lawsuit.
December 2014: Jamba Juice agreed to settle a false advertising class-action lawsuit filed against them in 2013. The complaint alleged that the company deceptively labeled its smoothie kits – including the Mango-a-go-go, Strawberries Wild, Caribbean Passion, Orange Dream Machine, and Razzmatazz flavors – as “all natural” when they actually contain non-natural, processed, and synthetic ingredients. According to the settlement terms, Jamba Juice agreed to stop describing the challenged products as “all natural” in marketing materials, including the packaging, advertisements, and company website. The settlement terms do not provide the class members with any monetary relief. (Lilly et al v. Jamba Juice Company and Inventure Foods, Inc., Case No. 13-cv-02998, N. D. CA.).
For more information about other class-action lawsuits regarding Jamba Juice’s smoothie kits and TINA.org’s coverage of the product, click here.
Class-Action Tracker
Jamba Juice Smoothie Kit
The Latest
How Marketers Trick Kids, and Why Parents Should Worry
Herb Weisbaum, Consumers’ Checkbook
Saatva
TINA.org pulls back the covers on this company’s Made in USA marketing.
Monetizing Minors: Eric Befumo (aka Big Justice)
Brand partnerships worthy of a big “doom!”
Instacart’s AI-Enabled Pricing Experiments May Be Inflating Your Grocery Bill, CR and Groundwork Collaborative Investigation Finds
Derek Kravitz, Consumer Reports
Most Deceptive Ads of 2025
Here were some of the worst ads TINA.org investigated this year.