











🍧 Chill with the classics—pure, clean, and irresistibly zesty!
Otter Pops Freezer Bars offer 80 individually wrapped 2oz ice pops made from 100% fruit juice concentrate with no artificial flavors, colors, or high fructose corn syrup. Featuring six iconic flavors, these low-calorie, fat-free, and dye-free treats are perfect for health-conscious professionals seeking nostalgic refreshment without compromise.








| ASIN | B07RWRQWGW |
| Allergen Information | Fat-Free |
| Best Sellers Rank | #25,578 in Grocery & Gourmet Food ( See Top 100 in Grocery & Gourmet Food ) #43 in Popsicles & Juice Bars |
| Brand | Otter Pops |
| Brand Name | Otter Pops |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 2,545 Reviews |
| Diet Type | Gluten Free, Kosher, Vegan |
| Flavor | Apple,Raspberry,Orange,Lime,Grape,Strawberry |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00072392853793 |
| Item Form | Pops |
| Item Package Weight | 5.21 Kilograms |
| Item Type Name | 100% Juice |
| Item Weight | 2 Ounces |
| Manufacturer | The Jel Sert Company |
| Number of Pieces | 80 |
| Specialty | No Artificial Flavors |
| UPC | 072392853793 |
| Unit Count | 160 Fluid Ounces |
M**S
Yummy
What a great purchase. Great value, dye free otter pops, that taste looks je fruit juice!!
C**S
great product
Kids love them and no dye or gross ingredients!
R**O
Good
Taste good and dye free
A**W
Delicious
How can these be so delicious and have no dyes! Love them!!!
L**N
Bought 4 boxes and counting
I've bought four boxes of these, and when I'm done with my current box, I'll buy more, so in all, I think this is a very good product that is worth getting. I appreciate that they don't have any artificial dyes, and the lack of corn syrup is one of the reasons I keep coming back. They taste like... I wouldn't say healthy, exactly, because I consider them a treat, but they've got a good fruity-ness going on. I do like the texture - when they are just under frozen solid or have been left out for a minute before eating, when I bite into them, they separate into little crystals which I find very satisfying. I really wanted to give these five stars, but I couldn't quite justify it. Of the four boxes I've gotten, two have had issues with leakage, but I've only lost two or three individual sticks, so I don't know if they were the issue or if my boxes were being stored next to something else that had a bigger leak. Also I think there's a slight consistency issue - this last box has been a little more sugary tasting than the others.
L**A
Dye free favorite
My kids eat these year round and I enjoy them too! Tasty and dye free.
C**Y
After taste
I bought these for my mom. She didn't care for them. Grandkids didn't either. They leave an after taste.
A**A
LOVED the popsicles...Now I hate the company..
LOVED the popsicles. ..Now I hate the company... (mixed feelings) The fruit-juice Otter Pops taste great. About 3g of added sugar, $15 a box — not too bad AT ALL! compared to other juice popsicles. With four kids, I thought it was a solid middle ground: better ingredients than pure junk, and still affordable. Then I found the other version — the $6 box?! At first I thought maybe I’d made a mistake, obviously this conpany has a good handle on ingredients... maybe in exhange for an extra sugar or two I’d overpaid? But no. That cheap version is loaded with high fructose corn syrup, artificial dyes, and preservatives. And that’s where I lost all respect for this company. It’s not even just “sugar.” They’re still using HFCS — something so many companies have already moved away from. Coca-Cola and other major brands have reformulated. Yet here’s Otter Pops, stuck in the worst of the 1990s food industry playbook, selling “fruit” pops full of corn syrup. And here’s what makes it worse: they could sell the fruit-juice pops in smaller boxes, at a lower price point, so families on a budget could still access the healthier version. But instead, they keep the good stuff expensive and push the HFCS junk in giant cheap boxes — knowing exactly who’s going to buy them. That feels intentional, and it feels wrong. So yes, the fruit-juice pops are tasty. But when a company proves it knows how to “get it” — and then still sells poison to the people least able to avoid it — that’s not just disappointing. That’s betrayal to children's well being.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
3 days ago