Added Sugar Percent of Calories Calculator

Last updated:  |  View sources
Jump to Calculator

Added Sugar Percent of Calories Calculator

See what percent of your calories come from added sugar—useful for WHO-style “keep sugars under 10% of energy” guidance.

Some guidelines discuss sugar in percent of calories rather than grams. For example, the WHO recommends keeping free sugars below 10% of total energy (and ideally below 5%). This calculator converts sugar grams into sugar calories and shows what percentage of your total calories that represents.

If you’re starting from a label, you can get grams using the added sugar label calculator or convert %DV using %DV to grams. Need help locating the right line? See how to read the added sugar label.

Calculator

Tip: if you’re doing a label-based per-serving check, use the product’s calories per serving here.

Quick examples:

Sugar cals: % energy: WHO band:

Result

of calories from added sugar
Sugar calories
sugar grams × 4 kcal/g
Percent of calories
(sugar calories ÷ total calories) × 100
WHO interpretation
under 5% (ideal), 5–10% (upper), above 10% (over)
Teaspoons equivalent
grams ÷ 4

Want the calorie math only? Use sugar calories calculator. Want teaspoons? Use grams to teaspoons.

On this page

WHO “Free Sugars” Energy Bands (5% Ideal, 10% Upper)

The WHO guideline is framed as a percentage of total energy (calories), not just grams. The calculator uses your sugar grams to compute sugar calories (4 kcal/g), then reports the % of total calories. WHO refers to free sugars (which includes sugars in juices, honey, syrups). Labels report added sugars, so treat this as educational context.

Ideal target
Under 5% of energy
WHO notes additional health benefits when free sugars are kept below 5% of total calories.
Upper guideline band
5% to 10% of energy
Within WHO’s upper guideline. Many people aim to stay toward the lower end when possible.
Above guideline
Over 10% of energy
Above WHO’s recommended upper limit for free sugars (as a share of total calories).
Infographic showing WHO free sugars bands: under 5 percent ideal, 5 to 10 percent upper, over 10 percent above guideline
WHO energy bands (5% ideal, 10% upper) visualized as a simple scale.

Quick Reference: Sugar Grams at 2,000 Calories

On a 2,000 kcal day, 5% energy from sugar equals 25g and 10% equals 50g (because 10% of 2,000 = 200 kcal, and 200 ÷ 4 = 50g).

Sugar grams Sugar calories % of 2,000 kcal WHO band Teaspoons
25g100 kcal5%Ideal target6.25 tsp
40g160 kcal8%Upper band10 tsp
50g200 kcal10%Upper limit12.5 tsp
60g240 kcal12%Above guideline15 tsp
Chart showing added sugar percent of calories based on grams for a 2000 calorie diet
Chart linking sugar grams to percent-of-calories (2,000 kcal reference).
Worked Examples (Load buttons)

Click a button to autofill the calculator inputs (sugar grams + total calories).

Example 1 — 25g sugar on a 2,000 kcal day

25g × 4 = 100 kcal. 100 ÷ 2,000 = 5% (WHO ideal target). Teaspoons = 6.25.

Example 2 — 50g sugar on a 2,000 kcal day

50g × 4 = 200 kcal. 200 ÷ 2,000 = 10% (WHO upper limit). Teaspoons = 12.5.

Example 3 — 12g sugar in a 180 kcal snack

12g × 4 = 48 kcal. 48 ÷ 180 = 26.7% (high share of snack calories). Teaspoons = 3.

Questions People Ask

Why does WHO talk about percent of calories from sugar?

Percent-of-energy scales with your diet. 10% of 1,600 kcal is a smaller sugar allowance than 10% of 2,500 kcal. This calculator makes that framing easy.

How many calories are in 1 gram of sugar?

About 4 calories per gram. Sugar calories = grams × 4.

What is the WHO 10% limit in grams?

On a 2,000 kcal diet, 10% = 200 kcal from sugar. 200 ÷ 4 = 50g (about 12.5 tsp).

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

Not exactly. WHO uses “free sugars” (includes sugars in juices, honey, syrups). Labels provide “added sugars.” The percent-of-energy result is still useful as a practical approximation.

How do I get added sugar grams from a label?

Use the added sugar label guide or the added sugar label calculator.

Important Disclaimer (Read Before Using)

This calculator is educational and math-based. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. WHO guidance refers to “free sugars,” while labels report “added sugars.” Use the result as general context, not a personal prescription. Read the full policy here: Full Disclaimer.

Key takeaways

  • Sugar calories ≈ grams × 4.
  • Percent of calories from sugar ≈ (sugar calories ÷ total calories) × 100.
  • WHO bands: <5% ideal, 5–10% upper band, >10% above guideline.
  • On a 2,000 kcal day, 25g = 5% and 50g = 10%.
  • For grams from labels, use added sugar label calculator and %DV to grams.
Sources
  1. World Health Organization — Sugars intake for adults and children (2015). Link
  2. U.S. FDA — Added sugars on the Nutrition Facts label. Link