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Why Relaxation Beverages Require a Different Flavor Strategy

The relaxation beverage category is evolving quickly as consumers look for products that support stress relief, emotional balance, sleep, and alcohol-free unwinding rituals. But from a formulation perspective, these products present a very different challenge than traditional functional beverages.

In a recent feature published by Beverage Industry, the Imbibe team explored why developing successful relaxation beverages requires more than simply masking difficult ingredients — it requires designing flavor systems that feel intentional, balanced, and aligned with the emotional experience consumers expect.

Relaxation Beverages Present a Unique Formulation Challenge

Many functional beverages rely on bold flavor systems to help suppress bitterness, metallic notes, or astringency from ingredients like caffeine, vitamins, or protein systems. Citrus, tropical fruit, and high-impact flavor profiles often provide enough intensity to offset challenging sensory characteristics.

Relaxation beverages operate under a different set of expectations.

Ingredients commonly associated with calm and relaxation — including ashwagandha, magnesium, valerian root, reishi, l-theanine, and other botanicals — can introduce earthy, woody, bitter, savory, sulfurous, or lingering off-notes. At the same time, consumers are not looking for a loud or stimulating sensory experience. They expect something smooth, approachable, comforting, and easy to drink.

That creates a unique formulation tension:

  • The ingredient system may require aggressive masking
  • The sensory target requires restraint

Balancing those competing demands is what makes relaxation beverage development particularly complex.

Why Taste Modulation Matters in Functional Beverage Development

Successful relaxation beverages are rarely formulated through a single masking solution. Off-notes can shift depending on:

  • ingredient combinations
  • sweetener systems
  • acidity levels
  • carbonation
  • serving format
  • shelf-life conditions

Ingredients like magnesium may contribute metallic or drying sensations, while adaptogens and mushrooms can create earthy or lingering bitterness that evolves over time. Certain botanicals also introduce aromatic complexity that can become overpowering if not carefully integrated into the full sensory profile.

As a result, taste modulation becomes a systems-level formulation challenge rather than a one-dimensional flavor exercise.

Instead of simply asking, “How do we mask this ingredient?” beverage developers increasingly need to ask:

“What flavor system makes this ingredient feel intentional?”

That shift in mindset can significantly improve both drinkability and consumer perception.

Flavor Systems That Support Calm and Familiarity

Across the market, successful relaxation beverages often rely on familiar flavor foundations paired with subtle functional complexity.

Several approaches continue to gain traction:

  • Citrus and berry flavors layered with calming botanicals
  • Tea-inspired and herbal infusion profiles
  • Botanical-citrus pairings with restrained brightness
  • Dessert-inspired flavors like chocolate, caramel, and vanilla
  • Flavor systems that reinforce comfort, ritual, and emotional familiarity

These strategies help position functional ingredients as part of a cohesive sensory experience rather than something consumers need to “tolerate.”

For brands developing products in this space, flavor plays an important role not only in taste — but also in communicating the intended emotional experience.

Consumer Expectations Are Continuing to Evolve

As interest in functional beverages expands, consumers increasingly expect products to deliver both efficacy and enjoyment. That is especially true in relaxation-focused categories, where flavor credibility directly impacts whether consumers trust the product experience.

At the same time, trends such as reduced alcohol consumption, clean-label preferences, and growing interest in multifunctional wellness beverages are increasing formulation complexity even further.

This is creating new opportunities for beverage developers — but also raising the bar for flavor performance.

Designing Functional Beverages for Long-Term Success

As relaxation beverages continue to evolve, successful products will likely be those that approach flavor as a core part of the formulation strategy rather than a final add-on.

At Imbibe, we believe effective taste modulation requires balancing functionality, sensory performance, stability, and consumer expectation together from the start.

The result is a beverage experience that feels more intentional, approachable, and aligned with the moments consumers are seeking to support.

Read the full article in Beverage Industry.

For more insights, or to kick off your next innovation, connect with Imbibe experts.

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