Life Plus International Review 2026
Arkansas supplement MLM — $200M+ revenue, no income disclosure
Last updated: April 4, 2026
What is Life Plus International?
Life Plus International (Lifeplus) is a nutritional supplement MLM based in Batesville, Arkansas, founded in 1992 by pharmacist Bob Lemon (1942-2022), Bill Evans, and Robert Christian (current CEO). Lemon, working as a pharmacist, became interested in nutritional science after noticing patients in cycles of treatment, and began formulating his own supplements with an emphasis on ingredient quality control. The company manufactures 65-140+ products across supplements, personal care, weight management, sports nutrition, and superfoods in its own USDA NOP-certified facility. Flagship products include Daily BioBasics (nutritional drink with vitamins, minerals, herbal extracts, and fiber), TVM-Plus (multivitamin from natural fruit/vegetable concentrates), Proanthenols (antioxidant supplement), and OmeGold (omega supplement). The company holds USDA NOP (National Organic Program) certification with EU/UK Equivalence Status and broke ground on a $24 million facility expansion in December 2022, with plans to create 150 new jobs. Annual revenue is estimated at $200-270 million. Lifeplus uses a unilevel compensation plan requiring 40 PV (~$40-50) per month in autoship purchases to qualify for commissions. Retail bonus is the difference between wholesale and retail price, with unilevel commissions of 25% on Level 1, 10% on Level 2, and 5% on Level 3. Distributors must recruit and maintain at least 3 affiliates to qualify for unilevel commissions. The company has a stronger presence in European markets (UK and Netherlands distribution hubs) than in the United States, with approximately 600 employees split between Batesville and Europe. Notably, Lifeplus does not publish an income disclosure statement — a significant transparency gap. Some distributors have allegedly made health claims about products curing or alleviating diseases including cancer, which is a serious regulatory concern. The company holds a BBB A+ rating but has complaints on file regarding product quality and customer service.
Pros
- 30+ years in business — founded 1992 by pharmacist Bob Lemon
- Own USDA NOP-certified manufacturing facility in Arkansas
- $24M facility expansion underway — company investing in growth
- Per-customer residual ~$8-12/mo on autoship subscriptions
- BBB A+ rating and accredited business
- $200-270M annual revenue — financially stable
- Strong European presence with UK and Netherlands distribution hubs
- 25% Level 1 unilevel commission is above average for MLM
- $24M facility expansion underway with gummy and soft gel manufacturing capabilities
- Pharmacist-founded heritage (Bob Lemon) with emphasis on ingredient quality control
- New corporate HQ opened October 2025 — tripling corporate footprint in downtown Batesville
- Facility expansion adds contract manufacturing (gummies, soft gels) — additional revenue stream beyond MLM distribution
- USDA NOP certification with EU/UK Equivalence Status means products meet rigorous international organic standards
- Relatively low autoship minimum ($40-50/month) compared to many MLMs requiring $100-300/month
Cons
- No income disclosure statement published — major transparency gap
- Low per-customer residual (~$8-12/mo)
- Must recruit 3+ affiliates just to qualify for unilevel commissions
- Mandatory 40 PV/month autoship (~$40-50) to maintain distributor status
- Premium pricing vs mass-market supplement alternatives
- Some distributors allegedly make illegal health claims (disease curing)
- Low US brand awareness makes domestic recruiting difficult
- Reviewers note opportunity offers "little to the average person" for full-time income
- BBB complaints about product quality and customer service
- Received FTC Notice of Penalty Offenses in October 2021 — deceptive claims could trigger $43,792/violation penalties
- Founder Bob Lemon passed away June 2022 (age 80) — company under sole ownership of Robert Christian
- Glassdoor reviews describe "pyramid selling" and low pay — reports of employee exploitation
- Private company with no public financial audits — revenue estimates of $200-270M cannot be independently verified
- Three-affiliate recruitment requirement creates a hard gate on earning any unilevel commissions — pure retail-only selling is unrewarded
- European distributor complaints about difficulty canceling ASAP autoship subscriptions — recurring charge issues
Rating Breakdown
Potential for ongoing passive income
Easy to understand and execute
Clear about costs, requirements, and income
Quality of training and community
Worth the investment