Every Ventura County local has Opinions about their juice bar. Here’s the unofficial, completely biased, locals-only breakdown — now covering all twelve corners of the county, because apparently one round wasn’t enough.
Channel Islands Juice Company in Ventura is the gold standard for a reason — cold-pressed, organic, locally sourced, served in reusable glass jars because apparently they care about the planet too. Edenic Smoothies is the cozy one — the kind of place where the staff remembers your order and hands you the wifi password before you even ask. And if you’re already at the gym, The Fixx Juice Bar inside LA Fitness on Victoria Avenue means you don’t even need a membership to get your post-workout fix.
Cross into Oxnard and Jungle Juice takes the “customizable” crown, with a build-your-own approach to cold-pressed juice and high-vibe food that feels almost like a science experiment in the best way. Over at The Collection RiverPark, The Blend Superfood Bar handles the grab-and-go crowd — açaí bowls and smoothies made to order with no shortcuts taken, perfect for squeezing in between errands.
Ojai Roots on Montgomery Street earns its name honestly — there’s a quiet, rooted-in-the-valley quality to the place that matches the town itself. Order the seasonal green juice, grab a patio seat, and try not to stay for an hour. Most people fail at that last part.
Fresco Juice Bar is exactly the kind of spot you’d miss if a friend didn’t tip you off. Owner Stephanie keeps the menu tight and the açaí bowls generous, with a rotating monthly smoothie that keeps regulars guessing. It’s a beach-town juice bar in the truest sense — small, unpretentious, and better than it has any right to be for the price.
Natural Juice on Las Posas Road does double duty as a juice bar and a torta counter, which sounds like an odd pairing until you’ve had both in the same sitting. Locals come for the agua frescas as much as the smoothies, and the staff treats first-timers like regulars from minute one.
Alebrijes Juice Bar grew out of the old Rainbow Snow Cones stand on Yale Street, and it still has that neighborhood-fixture energy — fresas con crema, fresh fruit, and juice that draws people in from well outside city limits. This is the place longtime Santa Paula families already know about; everyone else is catching up.
Fruity Culture has been parked on West Ventura Street since 2017, which in juice-bar years is practically an institution. The cucumber-lime juice gets singled out for a reason, and the açaí bowls hold their own against bigger-city competition without trying too hard.
Simply Healthy, tucked just off the 101 on Wendy Drive, leans into the protein-and-nutrition side of the smoothie world — every shake hits a minimum protein count, low in carbs, no added dairy or sugar. It’s less “treat yourself” and more “fuel up,” which is exactly what a lot of Newbury Park mornings call for.
JÜGO Wellness inside Oakbrook Plaza is a family-run operation that treats juice like a daily ritual rather than a quick stop. Organic, nearly seed-oil-free, and unmistakably calm inside — the Goddess juice and the Signature smoothie are the two orders regulars default to without thinking twice.
JOi Café on Agoura Road has been a neighbor-owned fixture since 2014, serving smoothies and fresh juice alongside a fully plant-based menu and an organic coffee bar that gives the drinks just as much attention. It’s the rare spot where the matcha drinkers and the green-juice purists are equally happy to linger.
Ubatuba Açaí started with one homesick Brazilian expat missing real açaí and importing her own — the Moorpark location keeps that authenticity intact, with unlimited toppings and a build-your-own bowl that locals treat as a personality test. (What you pile on says a lot about you.)
The Core on Madera Road is family owned and operated, and it shows in the way the staff actually remembers your usual order. Smoothies double as meal replacements here — low sugar, high protein, paired with a metabolism-boosting tea that’s become a quiet local obsession.
None of these are national chains pretending to care about “wellness.” They’re independently owned, they’re run by people who actually live here, and your money stays in the county. From the coast in Ventura to the inland edge of Simi Valley, that’s the whole point — your guide to living well in Ventura County, body, mind, and everything in between.