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sugar calculator

A professional, all-in-one sugar tool for clinicians, dietitians, athletes, and informed consumers. Calculate daily added sugar intake versus WHO/FDA limits, compute sugar in beverages from nutrition labels, and convert blood glucose units accurately.

Number of portions you consume today.

From the label: “Sugars” or “Added sugars” per serving.

Used to compute 10% and 5% of energy as sugar reference.

From the nutrition label (EU style): grams of sugars per 100 mL.

Conversion uses \\(\mathrm{mmol/L} = \\frac{\mathrm{mg/dL}}{18.0182}\\).

Results

Total Added Sugar

0 g

Teaspoons

0 tsp

Calories from Sugar

0 kcal

% of WHO 10% limit

0%

% of WHO 5% (≈25 g)

0%

% of FDA Added Sugars DV (50 g)

0%

Sugar in Drink

0 g

Teaspoons

0 tsp

Calories from Sugar

0 kcal

mg/dL

0

mmol/L

0

Data Source & Methodology

  • WHO Guideline (2015): “Guideline: Sugars intake for adults and children.” Recommends free sugars <10% of energy; conditional <5% (~25 g/day at 2000 kcal). Official WHO publication. Tutti i calcoli si basano rigorosamente sulle formule e sui dati forniti da questa fonte.
  • FDA % Daily Value for Added Sugars: Nutrition Facts uses 50 g/day reference on a 2,000 kcal diet. See FDA Food Labeling regulations and guidance. FDA Added Sugars.
  • Glucose Conversion: Standard factor 18.0182 between mg/dL and mmol/L for glucose (molecular weight basis). Commonly used by ADA and clinical references.

The Formula Explained

Daily added sugar total:

\\[ G_{\\text{total}} = \\sum_i s_i \\cdot g_i \\]

\\(s_i\\): servings of item \\(i\\); \\(g_i\\): grams of sugar per serving.

Teaspoons (4 g per tsp default): \\[ \\text{tsp} = \\frac{G_{\\text{total}}}{g_{\\text{tsp}}} \\]

Calories (4 kcal per gram): \\[ \\text{kcal} = 4 \\cdot G_{\\text{total}} \\]

WHO energy thresholds for a baseline \\(E\\) kcal/day:

10% limit (grams): \\[ G_{10\\%} = \\frac{0.10\\,E}{4} \\quad ; \\quad 5\\% \\text{ (grams)}: \\; G_{5\\%} = \\frac{0.05\\,E}{4} \\]

FDA %DV (50 g/day): \\[ \\%\\text{DV} = 100\\times \\frac{G_{\\text{total}}}{50} \\]

Glucose unit conversion:

\\[ \\mathrm{mmol/L} = \\frac{\\mathrm{mg/dL}}{18.0182} \\quad ; \\quad \\mathrm{mg/dL} = 18.0182\\times \\mathrm{mmol/L} \\]

Glossary of Variables

Symbol / FieldMeaning
siServings of item i consumed today
giGrams of sugar per serving for item i
G_totalTotal added sugar (g) for the day
g_tspGrams per teaspoon (default 4 g)
EDaily energy baseline (kcal)
G_10%, G_5%WHO thresholds at 10% and 5% of energy

Come Funziona: Un Esempio Passo-Passo

Scenario: 1 can of soda (330 mL, 10.6 g/100 mL) and 1 yogurt (1 serving × 12 g).

  1. Soda sugar: \\( 330\\,\\text{mL} \\times 10.6/100 = 34.98\\,\\text{g} \\approx 35.0\\,\\text{g} \\)
  2. Yogurt sugar: \\( 1\\times 12 = 12\\,\\text{g} \\)
  3. Total: \\( G_{\\text{total}} = 35.0 + 12 = 47.0\\,\\text{g} \\)
  4. Teaspoons (4 g/tsp): \\( 47/4 = 11.75\\,\\text{tsp} \\)
  5. Calories: \\( 4\\times 47 = 188\\,\\text{kcal} \\)
  6. Against limits for 2000 kcal: \\( G_{10\\%}=50\\,\\text{g},\\; G_{5\\%}=25\\,\\text{g} \\Rightarrow 94\\% \\text{ of FDA DV},\\; 188\\% \\text{ of WHO 5%}. \\)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is “free sugar” the same as “added sugar”?

Free sugars include added sugars plus sugars naturally present in honey, syrups, and fruit juices. Many labels report “added sugars,” which largely overlap but are not identical to “free sugars.”

Does this calculator cover intrinsic sugars from whole fruit?

We focus on added/free sugars for limit comparisons. Whole fruit intrinsic sugars are generally not counted toward WHO “free sugar” thresholds.

Is 4 g per teaspoon always correct?

Nutrition references commonly use 4 g; some culinary sources use ≈4.2 g. You can switch between both.

Are the results medical advice?

No. This tool provides educational estimates. For diagnostics or treatment decisions, consult a qualified health professional.

What about A1C?

This tool only converts glucose units. A1C/eAG relationships (e.g., Nathan et al.) are approximate and should be interpreted by clinicians in context.

Why compare to both WHO and FDA?

WHO gives intake recommendations (10% and conditional 5% of energy). FDA’s 50 g/day is a labeling reference used for %DV in the U.S. market.

Tool developed by Ugo Candido. Content reviewed by the CalcDomain Editorial Board.
Last accuracy review: October 29, 2025

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