Celsius Holdings is rolling out a three-brand energy drink portfolio in 2026, targeting low- and zero-sugar shelf space as major retailers reconfigure the energy category, according to MSN market analysis. The company is moving beyond its flagship Celsius line to introduce complementary brands, each positioned to occupy distinct slots in the zero-sugar segment that now represents the fastest unit growth in energy drinks.
The play is straightforward: as consumers shift away from high-sugar energy drinks, retailers are resetting planograms to reflect demand. Celsius is claiming multiple facings in that reset by offering brands at different price points and use occasions, backed by distribution muscle from its PepsiCo partnership. The result is more total linear shelf feet for the company, even as legacy high-sugar SKUs lose placement.
Why this works comes down to category economics. Zero-sugar energy commands higher margin per ounce than traditional formulations because the input cost delta between cane sugar and artificial sweeteners favors the latter, while retail pricing remains at parity or higher. Retailers earn more gross profit per sale. Simultaneously, the zero-sugar buyer skews higher income and purchases more frequently, according to category data. A brand that controls three SKUs in this segment captures more of that basket than a single-SKU competitor, even if that competitor has stronger brand recognition.
The multi-brand approach also solves a positioning problem. A single brand cannot simultaneously own "performance energy" and "casual refreshment" without diluting its core message. Celsius keeps its flagship in the performance lane while deploying sister brands for different occasions, flavors, or demographics. This mirrors Coca-Cola's playbook with Coke Zero, Sprite Zero, and Powerade Zero occupying separate mental and physical shelf real estate.
For a small physical-product brand, the steal is simpler than it looks. You do not need three brands, but you do need to own a micro-category that is expanding while legacy products contract. Identify the format or formulation shift happening in your category: refillable instead of disposable, unscented instead of fragranced, plant-based instead of synthetic. Launch or reposition one SKU to own that micro-niche. Then, when a retailer or platform resets the category, you are the default choice for the new slot.
Concretely: if you sell protein bars, create a zero-added-sugar line while competitors still lean on dates and honey. If you sell candles, launch a fragrance-free option as scent sensitivity grows. Price it 10-15% above your core SKU to signal premium positioning and protect margin. Approach buyers during their annual category review with pull-through data from your DTC channel showing the format is moving. You are not asking for more shelf space; you are asking to fill the hole they are already planning to create when they cut the legacy SKU.
The broader pattern: when a category shifts from an old standard to a new one, the transition period is when small brands can wedge in. The incumbent is still defending the old SKU and slow to cannibalize. You show up as the pure play in the new format and become the proof of concept the buyer needs to justify the reset.
The takeaway
Multi-SKU zero-sugar strategy captures margin and shelf space as retailers reset away from legacy high-sugar energy.
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