Our Pick: FijiKava

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Fiji Kava Review (2026): The Farm-to-Shelf Flagship, Tested

FijiKava is the premium, science-forward sister brand to Taki Mai — both owned by The Calmer Co. (ASX: CCO) — built around a company-owned Fijian farm, a no-strain instant powder, and standardized-dose capsules. We ran it through our transparency check. The vertically integrated sourcing story is one of the most ambitious in the category; the published lab paperwork is where it leaves points on the table. Here's the honest verdict.

By The Kava Review Desk · ~8 min read · Updated 2026-06-17

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Most kava brands buy root from someone in the Pacific and put their label on it. FijiKava set out to do something different: own the farm. It bills itself as "the world's first listed kava company" — the flagship consumer brand of The Calmer Co. (ASX: CCO), the same publicly traded parent behind Taki Mai — and the centerpiece of its pitch is a 111-acre company-run "Nucleus Farm" in Levuka, Fiji, feeding a vertically integrated, "100% farm-to-shelf" supply chain. Where Taki Mai is the mainstream, flavored-shot face of the company, FijiKava is the science-forward line: a no-strain instant powder and standardized-dose capsules positioned on purity and traceability rather than convenience-store flavor.

Here's what's genuinely impressive, and it's the part we lead with: FijiKava's sourcing is about as documented and controlled as it gets in kava. The root is exclusively Fijian noble, the company says it is the first and only foreign operator approved by the Fijian government to work in the kava industry, and it claims over a decade of plant-technology work selecting noble varieties from the roughly 200 cultivars across the South Pacific. The capsules and powder are made with a water-extraction process, and the brand states it controls every step from planting to packing inside Fiji. For a buyer who cares where the root comes from — and who grows it — that vertical integration is a real, verifiable point of difference from anonymous imported powder.

This review is independent and unpaid. Kava Review has no affiliate relationship with FijiKava at publication — we earn no commission if you buy, and nobody at the company reviewed this before it went up. We verified everything below against FijiKava's own site, its parent company's public disclosures, and live product listings in June 2026: the Fijian noble sourcing, the Nucleus Farm, the formats and stated doses, and the testing language. The result is a brand we rate highly on sourcing ambition and traceability, with one honest knock on the metric we weigh most heavily — published lab paperwork — that you should know before you order. Ground rules: kava is for adults 21+, it can cause drowsiness, don't drive after drinking it, and if you take medications or are pregnant, talk to a doctor first. None of this is medical advice.

The short version

  • FijiKava is the premium, science-forward flagship of The Calmer Co. (ASX: CCO) — the same publicly listed parent as Taki Mai, but a separate brand with its own catalog and positioning.
  • Its calling card is vertical integration: a company-owned 111-acre "Nucleus Farm" in Levuka, Fiji, and a stated "100% farm-to-shelf" supply chain — one of the most controlled sourcing stories in the category.
  • The core line is a no-strain Instant Kava Powder (100% noble root, sizes 50g / 150g / 250g / 500g) and standardized-dose Noble Kava Capsules (600mg kavalactones per serving, 60-count, vegan & non-GMO); tinctures and shots round it out.
  • The capsules' fixed 600mg-per-serving figure is genuinely useful — it's a per-dose number most loose-powder vendors can't give you, since brewed kava potency depends on how you prepare it.
  • Honest knock: despite a "third-party tested for purity" claim, we couldn't find publicly posted per-product certificates of analysis (COAs) or kavalactone-percentage sheets at publication — the receipts our top-rated COA-first vendors link straight from the page.
  • If you've already read our Taki Mai review: same company, different bet. Taki Mai sells flavored convenience; FijiKava sells controlled sourcing and standardized dosing. Both share the lab-transparency gap.
  • Net verdict: a strong, traceable Fijian noble brand with a standout farm-to-shelf story and a rare standardized capsule dose — buy it for the sourcing and the dosing certainty; just know the published-paperwork transparency trails the best in the category.
ProductType & originFormatBest for
Instant Kava PowderFijian noble · micronized whole rootNo-strain — blend into water · 50 / 150 / 250 / 500gAt-home convenience, controlling your own serving
Noble Kava CapsulesFijian noble · water-extracted600mg kavalactones / serving · 60-count · vegan, non-GMOA fixed, no-measuring dose; taste-averse drinkers
Tinctures & shotsFijian noble · The Calmer Co. lineLiquid concentrate / ready-to-drinkPortability; see our Taki Mai review for the shot range

The FijiKava range at a glance — formats and sourcing verified June 2026. All products are stated to be 100% Fijian noble kava. The official site lists the instant powder from $19.99 (varies by size); prices vary by retailer, so check the live listing. We did not find publicly posted per-product COAs or kavalactone-percentage sheets at publication.

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Question 1 of 6

First things first — what do you want kava to do for you?

01 · Best Vertically Integrated No-Strain Powder

Our Pick

FijiKava Instant Kava Powder (100% Noble Root)

4.2From $19.99 (varies by size & retailer)

Farm-to-shelf Fijian noble root, micronized so you blend and drink — no strainer bag, traceable sourcing.

Lab report: Brand states 100% Fijian noble kava, third-party tested for purity and 100% traceable from its own Levuka farm; we did not find a publicly posted per-product COA or kavalactone percentage at publication.

If you want real Fijian noble kava without owning a strainer bag, this is the centerpiece of the brand. FijiKava's Instant Kava Powder is 100% noble root milled fine enough to skip the bag entirely — the brand's own instructions are to blend roughly a teaspoon (about 5g) into cold water for a minute or two and drink, straining only "if desired." It comes in a clean size ladder — 50g, 150g, 250g, and 500g — so you can buy a small pouch to trial it before committing to the big bag. The official site lists it from $19.99, with the price climbing by size.

Why it earns our pick: it's the lowest-friction format attached to the most controlled sourcing in the category. This isn't anonymous imported powder repackaged — FijiKava grows the root on its own 111-acre Levuka "Nucleus Farm," processes and packs it in Fiji, and uses a water-extraction method, all under a publicly listed parent (The Calmer Co., ASX: CCO). For a no-strain powder, that's an unusually traceable supply chain.

On the experience: expect the convenience of a stir-and-drink instant — no kneading, no makas to dispose of — with the gritty, whole-root texture micronized kava always carries, plus the characteristic earthy taste and tongue-tingle. Blending it into something cold (or a smoothie) smooths the mouthfeel. The honest limitation is the same one we flag everywhere: the powder doesn't publish a per-serving kavalactone figure, so you'll calibrate potency by feel rather than by a number on the bag, and new drinkers should know about kava's reverse tolerance — the first session or two often feel mild. Start small, see how it sits, and don't drive afterward.

Origin
Fiji — noble kava (piper methysticum), company-owned Levuka farm
Type
Instant / micronized whole root — no-strain (blend & drink)
Pack sizes
50g (1.76oz) · 150g (5.3oz) · 250g (8.8oz) · 500g (17.6oz)
Sourcing
Vertically integrated, "100% farm-to-shelf"; water-extraction method
Testing
Brand states "third-party tested for purity"; no public per-product COA found at publication
Starting price
From $19.99 (varies by size & retailer)

What we like

  • No-strain convenience — blend into water and drink, no bag required
  • Most controlled sourcing in the category: company-owned Fijian farm, farm-to-shelf
  • Clean size ladder (50–500g) with a low-risk 50g trial pouch
  • Backed by a publicly listed parent (The Calmer Co., ASX: CCO)

Worth noting

  • No published per-serving kavalactone figure — can't dose by the numbers
  • Gritty whole-root texture; "from $19.99" is the smallest size only

Who should buy it: Buy the instant powder if you want at-home control over your own serving without the strainer-bag ritual, and you care that the root is grown and packed by the company selling it. The 50g pouch is the smart entry — it's a low-risk way to learn whether you like the FijiKava profile before stepping up to the 250g or 500g size.

What we don't like: Per-serving potency is undisclosed: there's no published kavalactone figure on the powder, so you can't dose by the numbers. Micronized kava is also grittier than a strained brew and sits heavier for some drinkers, and the "from $19.99" entry is for the smallest pouch — the larger, better-value sizes cost meaningfully more.

Bottom line: The Instant Kava Powder is the heart of the FijiKava line and our pick of the range: micronized 100% noble root you blend straight into water and drink without a strainer bag, drawn from the company's own Levuka farm. It earns the nod for pairing genuine no-strain convenience with the most controlled sourcing story in the category. The catch is transparency, not authenticity: the farm-to-shelf provenance is well-documented, but a per-batch kavalactone figure isn't published.

How we chose

We judge a kava vendor on its paper trail and its provenance first. For FijiKava we separated two questions brands often blur together: can it document where the root comes from, and can it document what's in the bottle. On sourcing, we verified the exclusively Fijian noble origin, the company-owned 111-acre Levuka Nucleus Farm, the "farm-to-shelf" vertical integration, and the water-extraction method against FijiKava's own statements and its parent company's public disclosures. On testing, we looked specifically for published certificates of analysis (COAs) and kavalactone percentages — and we report honestly what we could and couldn't find rather than treating "third-party tested" as if it were a posted lab sheet.

Then we verified the catalog. We confirmed the formats — the no-strain Instant Kava Powder and its size range, and the Noble Kava Capsules at a stated 600mg kavalactones per serving — against the brand's own pages and live Amazon listings in June 2026. We cite only the official "from $19.99" starting figure for the powder and flag that price varies by size and retailer; we don't print a number we can't pin to a current listing. We did not find a verifiable product image we could host, so we omit one. We don't invent kavalactone figures for the powder, fabricate tasting panels, or estimate a purity the brand didn't publish.

Finally we assess it as a drink and a buying decision, in plain experiential terms. A no-strain instant powder and a fixed-dose capsule are two of the most beginner-friendly ways to take kava; both are legitimate, and the right pick depends on whether you want to control your serving in a glass or skip the taste entirely. What we never do is make health claims. Kava is a centuries-old Pacific social drink that many adults find relaxing; it is not a treatment for anything, it can cause drowsiness, and anyone on medications should check with a doctor first. That's general caution, not medical advice — and this review is not sponsored.

Key terms

Noble kava
The traditional cultivars Pacific growers raise for everyday drinking, prized for a smooth, agreeable effect with minimal next-day heaviness. FijiKava states all of its kava is Fijian noble — the opposite of tudei.
Farm-to-shelf / vertical integration
When one company controls the whole chain — growing, processing, and packing the root itself rather than buying it. FijiKava's calling card: a company-owned 111-acre Nucleus Farm in Levuka, Fiji, with the root planted, processed, and packed in-country.
Water extraction
Drawing the active compounds from kava root using water rather than solvents. FijiKava states it uses a water-extraction method for its powder and capsules, which it positions as a purity feature.
COA (Certificate of Analysis)
A lab document reporting what's actually in a batch — for kava, the chemotype, total kavalactone percentage, and contaminant screen. The trust ladder runs: published per product and linked from the page (best), available on request (acceptable), "third-party tested" with nothing posted (a claim, not evidence). FijiKava sits in the last bucket today.
Instant / micronized kava
Root milled ultra-fine so it stirs or blends straight into liquid and is drunk without straining — you ingest the whole root. FijiKava's Instant Kava Powder is this format: more convenient than traditional grind, grittier in texture.
Standardized dose (capsules)
A fixed, repeatable amount of active compound per serving. FijiKava's Noble Kava Capsules state 600mg kavalactones per serving — a per-dose number loose powder can't provide, since brewed potency depends on preparation.

Questions, answered

Is FijiKava the same as Taki Mai?

They share a parent but they're different brands. Both FijiKava and Taki Mai are owned by The Calmer Co. (ASX: CCO), the publicly listed Fijian-kava company. FijiKava is the premium, science-forward flagship — built around a company-owned Fijian farm, a no-strain instant powder, and standardized-dose capsules. Taki Mai is the mainstream, flavored ready-to-drink-shot brand sold widely on Amazon and in retail. Same root supply and the same lab-transparency gap; different products and positioning. See our separate Taki Mai review for the shot range.

Is FijiKava real, pure noble kava?

Yes. FijiKava states its products are 100% Fijian noble kava (piper methysticum), grown on its own 111-acre Nucleus Farm in Levuka, Fiji, and processed and packed in-country in a vertically integrated, "farm-to-shelf" operation. As the flagship brand of The Calmer Co. (ASX: CCO), it has corporate disclosure most small kava sellers don't. By the sourcing test, it's genuine noble kava. (Kava can cause drowsiness; don't drive after drinking it, and check with a doctor if you take medications.)

Does FijiKava publish lab tests or COAs?

This is the brand's weak spot. FijiKava says its products are "third-party tested for purity" and "100% traceable," and given its owned-farm sourcing we have no reason to doubt the kava is noble. But at publication we could not find publicly posted certificates of analysis (COAs) or kavalactone-percentage sheets for the individual powder and capsule products — the per-batch lab sheets our top-rated vendors link from the product page. "Third-party tested" is a claim; a published COA is the evidence, and that's the box FijiKava doesn't tick today. The capsules' stated 600mg-per-serving figure is a partial exception, but it isn't the same as a posted lab certificate.

What's the difference between FijiKava's powder and capsules?

The Instant Kava Powder is 100% noble root milled fine enough to blend straight into water and drink — no strainer bag — in 50g, 150g, 250g, and 500g sizes, from $19.99 on the official site (price rises with size). The Noble Kava Capsules are a 60-count, vegan, non-GMO supplement stating 600mg kavalactones per serving, water-extracted. Choose the powder if you want to drink a prepared shell and control your serving; choose the capsules for a fixed, no-measuring, no-taste dose. Both come from the same Fijian noble root.

Where does FijiKava source its kava?

Exclusively from Fiji, through one of the most controlled supply chains in the category. FijiKava grows the root on its own 111-acre Nucleus Farm in Levuka, processes and packs it in-country, and uses a water-extraction method — a true farm-to-shelf operation. It states it is the first and only foreign company approved by the Fijian government to operate in the kava industry. That owned, traceable sourcing is the brand's strongest feature and a real point of difference from sellers of anonymous imported powder.

What should I buy first from FijiKava?

If you want to drink kava the social way, start with the Instant Kava Powder in the small 50g pouch — it's a low-risk way to learn the FijiKava profile before stepping up to a 250g or 500g bag, and it needs no strainer. If you'd rather skip the taste and preparation entirely, or you want a fixed, repeatable serving, start with the Noble Kava Capsules (600mg kavalactones per serving). For flavored ready-to-drink shots from the same parent company, look at the Taki Mai line instead.

How does FijiKava compare to COA-first kava brands?

FijiKava wins on sourcing control and beats most of the field on traceability — an owned Fijian farm and a vertically integrated, farm-to-shelf chain are claims few brands can make, and being part of an ASX-listed company adds accountability. The capsules' standardized 600mg-per-serving dose is also a real advantage. Where it trails: brands that publish a per-varietal COA with the chemotype and kavalactone percentage clear a bar FijiKava doesn't today. If traceable, owned-supply sourcing and dosing certainty matter most to you, it's an easy pick; if a published lab number is your top priority, look to a COA-first vendor.

Is this review sponsored by FijiKava?

No. Kava Review has no affiliate relationship with FijiKava at publication — we earn no commission if you buy, and the company did not review or approve this article. We verified every fact against FijiKava's own site, its parent company's public disclosures, and live product listings in June 2026, and our verdict reflects the Kava Review transparency standard, not a paid placement.