Calculate your recommended daily sugar limit based on calorie intake using WHO and AHA guidelines. Convert between grams, teaspoons, and percent of calories.
Added sugars are among the biggest contributors to excess calorie consumption, weight gain, and chronic disease. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that added sugars make up less than 10% of total daily calories, with an ideal target below 5%. The American Heart Association (AHA) sets even stricter limits: no more than 25 grams (6 teaspoons) per day for women and 36 grams (9 teaspoons) per day for men.
This calculator personalizes your daily sugar limit based on your calorie intake, sex, and chosen guideline (WHO 10%, WHO 5%, or AHA). It converts between grams, teaspoons, and calories so you can quickly gauge how a food label's sugar content fits into your daily budget.
Understanding your sugar limit is the first step toward reducing excessive intake. The average American consumes about 77 grams (19 teaspoons) of added sugar per day — more than three times the AHA limit for women and more than twice the limit for men.
Sugar is hidden in countless "healthy" foods — sauces, yogurts, granola bars, breads, and drinks. Without a concrete personalized limit, it's almost impossible to know where you stand. This calculator gives you a clear daily budget and unit conversions that make reading nutrition labels actionable rather than abstract. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
WHO Guidelines: • Standard: Added Sugar ≤ 10% of total daily calories • Ideal: Added Sugar ≤ 5% of total daily calories AHA Guidelines: • Women: ≤25 g/day (100 kcal) • Men: ≤36 g/day (150 kcal) • Children 2–18: ≤25 g/day Conversions: • 1 gram of sugar = 4 calories • 1 teaspoon of sugar ≈ 4 grams • Sugar grams = (Calories × Percentage) ÷ 4
Result: 50 g / 12.5 tsp / 200 kcal per day
With a 2,000-calorie diet under the WHO 10% guideline: 2,000 × 0.10 = 200 kcal from added sugar. At 4 kcal/g: 200 ÷ 4 = 50 grams. At ~4 g per teaspoon: 50 ÷ 4 = 12.5 teaspoons. Under the stricter WHO 5% guideline, the limit drops to 25 g (6.25 tsp). The AHA limit for men is 36 g (9 tsp), regardless of calorie intake.
The average American consumes 77 grams of added sugar per day — equivalent to 19 teaspoons or about 60 pounds per year. This is 2–3 times higher than recommended limits. Sugar-sweetened beverages alone account for about 47% of all added sugar consumed. This excessive intake is a major driver of the obesity and type 2 diabetes epidemics.
Since January 2020, US nutrition labels must list "Added Sugars" separately from "Total Sugars" — a significant improvement for consumers. Look at the grams of added sugar and compare them to your daily limit. The % Daily Value is based on 50 grams (the FDA's 10% of 2,000 calories guideline). Products with 20% DV or more per serving are considered high in added sugar.
Many foods marketed as healthy contain surprising amounts of added sugar: flavored yogurt (12–25 g per serving), granola bars (8–15 g), pasta sauce (6–12 g per 1/2 cup), salad dressing (4–8 g per 2 tbsp), and "healthy" cereals (10–18 g per serving). Even whole wheat bread can have 3–6 g of added sugar per slice. Reading labels is the only reliable way to know.
The WHO recommends less than 10% of calories from free sugars (added + honey + juice), with a conditional recommendation of less than 5% for additional health benefits. The AHA sets absolute limits: 25 g for women and 36 g for men. Both organizations agree that current intake levels are too high and that reduction would yield significant public health benefits. For practical purposes, aiming for the stricter limit is best for long-term health.
Total sugar includes both naturally occurring sugars (like lactose in milk and fructose in whole fruit) and added sugars (sweeteners added during processing or preparation). Health guidelines target added sugars specifically because they provide calories without beneficial nutrients. On US food labels, both are listed separately since 2020.
Metabolically, they are almost identical. Honey, maple syrup, agave, and coconut sugar all contain roughly the same amount of sugar per teaspoon (4–5 grams) and are processed similarly by the body. They may contain trace minerals, but not in amounts that provide meaningful health benefits. All count equally toward your added sugar limit.
One level teaspoon of granulated sugar is approximately 4 grams, providing 16 calories. This conversion is useful for interpreting nutrition labels: if a product has 20 grams of added sugar per serving, that's 5 teaspoons — about the AHA's entire daily limit for women.
Whole fruit does NOT count as added sugar. The sugar in fruit (fructose) comes packaged with fiber, water, vitamins, and phytochemicals that slow absorption and provide health benefits. However, fruit juice and dried fruit are more concentrated in sugar with less fiber, so they should be consumed in moderation. Fruit juice can count as added sugar in some guidelines.
Chronic excess sugar consumption is linked to weight gain, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, tooth decay, and inflammation. Sugar-sweetened beverages are the single largest contributor to obesity. Even short-term excess can cause blood sugar spikes, energy crashes, increased hunger, and poor sleep quality.
Artificial sweeteners (aspartame, sucralose, stevia) provide sweetness without calories and don't raise blood sugar. They can help reduce total sugar and calorie intake. However, some studies suggest they may maintain sugar cravings and potentially affect gut bacteria. The FDA considers approved sweeteners safe at normal consumption levels. Using them as a bridge to reduce overall sweetness preference is a reasonable approach.
The AHA recommends children aged 2–18 consume no more than 25 grams (6 teaspoons) of added sugar per day. Children under 2 should avoid added sugars entirely. Currently, the average American child consumes about 65 grams of added sugar daily — nearly three times the recommended limit. Major sources include fruit drinks, candy, cereals, and desserts.
Table sugar (sucrose) has a glycemic index (GI) of about 65, which is moderate. Pure glucose has a GI of 100, fructose about 19, and lactose about 46. High-GI foods cause rapid blood sugar spikes. However, in practice, the GI of a meal depends on the entire food composition (fiber, fat, protein), not just the sugar component.