Sugar & Sweeteners: 25 Complete Nutrition Profiles

A comprehensive, evidence-based reference for 25 Indian and international sugars and sweeteners — covering macronutrients, vitamins, minerals, per-serving data, bioactive compounds, glycemic index, and key health notes. All data sourced from USDA FoodData Central, ICMR-NIN, FSSAI, JECFA, and peer-reviewed literature.

Introduction

Sugar and sweeteners are among the most widely consumed food components globally — and among the most misunderstood. From refined white sugar to ancient Indian jaggery, from natural honey to zero-calorie steviol glycosides, the sweetener landscape spans an enormous nutritional and chemical spectrum. Understanding their individual profiles is essential for informed dietary choices.

In India, per capita sweetener consumption includes both refined sugar (~20 kg/annum) and traditional sweeteners like jaggery and khandsari (~4.1 kg/annum, ICMR data). Globally, the WHO recommends limiting free sugars to less than 10% of total energy intake — roughly 50 g/day for a 2,000 kcal diet. Yet average consumption in most countries far exceeds this threshold.

Key Insight

All sugars — refined or “natural” — ultimately deliver 4 kcal/gram of carbohydrate and raise blood glucose to varying degrees. The meaningful differences lie in glycemic index, mineral content, bioactive compounds, and processing level. Jaggery and molasses are genuinely more nutritious than white sugar. Stevia and monk fruit offer zero-calorie alternatives with no glycaemic impact.

This guide profiles 25 sweeteners across five categories: refined sugars, Indian traditional sweeteners, natural international sweeteners, sugar alcohols (polyols), and artificial non-nutritive sweeteners. All primary nutrient data is sourced from USDA FoodData Central (2023–24) and ICMR-NIN Nutritive Value of Indian Foods (2017), cross-validated with FAO/INFOODS and peer-reviewed literature.

What Makes Sweeteners Nutritionally Unique?

Unlike most food groups, sweeteners range from nutritionally empty (refined white sugar, artificial sweeteners) to genuinely mineral-rich (blackstrap molasses, jaggery) and bioactive-laden (raw honey, maple syrup). The category a sweetener belongs to sets appropriate nutritional expectations.

🧂

Refined Sugars

Highly processed sucrose with minimal micronutrients. Include white, brown, powdered, raw/turbinado sugar, and HFCS. Nutritionally near-empty beyond calories.

🌿

Indian Traditional Sweeteners

Less-processed sweeteners that retain native minerals. Jaggery, palm jaggery, khandsari, mishri, and coconut sugar retain iron, magnesium, potassium, and phytochemicals.

🍯

Natural Sweeteners (International)

Honey, maple syrup, molasses, agave, date sugar, monk fruit, stevia. Many contain significant antioxidants, minerals, or bioactive compounds beyond sugar.

🔬

Sugar Alcohols (Polyols)

Erythritol, xylitol, sorbitol, maltitol. Low-calorie derivatives with reduced glycaemic impact. May cause GI distress in excess. Xylitol is uniquely anti-cariogenic.

⚗️

Artificial / Non-nutritive

Aspartame, sucralose, saccharin, Ace-K. Zero or negligible calories. Up to 60,000× sweeter than sucrose. Approved by FDA, EFSA, and FSSAI within established ADI limits.

Macronutrient Profile (per 100 g)

All values per 100 g edible portion. Data sourced primarily from USDA FoodData Central (2023) and ICMR-NIN Nutritive Value of Indian Foods (2017). GI values referenced to glucose = 100.

SweetenerCategoryEnergy
(kcal)
Water
(g)
Total Carbs
(g)
Total Sugars
(g)
Sucrose
(g)
Fructose
(g)
Glucose
(g)
Dietary Fiber
(g)
Protein
(g)
Total Fat
(g)
Glycemic
Index (GI)
Relative
Sweetness
(Sucrose=100)
AspartameArtificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener400.00*0.0085.000.000.000.000.000.0011.100.00020000
Powdered Sugar (Icing Sugar)Refined Sugar389.000.2099.7097.4097.400.000.000.300.000.0065100
White Sugar (Sucrose / Table Sugar)Refined Sugar387.000.0399.9899.7799.770.000.000.000.000.0065100
Raw Sugar (Turbinado / Demerara)Refined Sugar387.000.5099.5099.0099.000.000.000.000.000.0065100
Mishri / Rock Sugar (Kalkandu)Indian Traditional Sweetener385.000.5099.0098.0098.000.000.000.000.100.006498
Jaggery / Gur (Sugarcane)Indian Traditional Sweetener383.005.0088.0075.0065.005.005.000.400.400.108470
Khandsari Sugar (Desi Khand)Indian Traditional Sweetener382.001.5097.5095.0093.001.001.000.000.100.006498
Brown SugarRefined Sugar380.001.3498.0997.0295.100.970.950.000.030.006497
Palm Jaggery (Palmyra / Tal Gur)Indian Traditional Sweetener375.006.0086.0072.0060.006.006.001.000.500.308265
Coconut SugarIndian Traditional Sweetener375.003.0092.0089.0073.008.008.001.001.000.505490
Agave Nectar / SyrupNatural Sweetener (International)310.0023.4076.4068.003.0056.708.300.200.000.5019140
Honey (Raw)Natural Sweetener (International)304.0017.1082.4082.100.8940.9035.800.200.300.0061110
Molasses (Blackstrap)Natural Sweetener (International)290.0021.9074.7053.8038.007.608.200.000.000.105550
Date SugarNatural Sweetener (International)282.0013.0075.0064.002.0033.0029.008.002.000.204260
High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS-55)Refined Sugar281.0024.0075.7075.700.0042.0033.700.000.000.006290
Maple Syrup (Grade A)Natural Sweetener (International)260.0032.4067.0060.5058.400.301.500.000.000.105460
SorbitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)260.000.00100.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00960
XylitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)240.000.00100.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.007100
MaltitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)210.000.00100.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.003690
ErythritolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)20.000.00100.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00170
Monk Fruit Extract (Luo Han Guo)Natural Sweetener (International)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00020000
Stevia (Steviol Glycosides, pure)Natural Sweetener (International)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00030000
Sucralose (Splenda)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00060000
Saccharin (Sweet'N Low)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00040000
Acesulfame-K (Ace-K)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00020000

*Aspartame ~400 kcal/100 g in pure form but used at 0.3–1 g per serving — contributing negligible calories in practice. | GI reference: glucose = 100.

Highest-Calorie Sweeteners

389kcal
Powdered Sugar
per 100 g
387kcal
White / Raw Sugar
per 100 g
383kcal
Jaggery (Gur)
per 100 g
310kcal
Agave Nectar
per 100 g
304kcal
Raw Honey
per 100 g
0kcal
Stevia / Monk Fruit / Sucralose
per 100 g

Vitamin Content of Sweeteners (per 100 g)

Most refined sugars are devoid of vitamins. Indian traditional sweeteners and natural sweeteners retain B-vitamins and trace amounts of other vitamins from their source plants. All artificial sweeteners and sugar alcohols contain zero vitamins.

Best Vitamin Sources Among Sweeteners

Blackstrap molasses leads in B-vitamins (B3: 0.93 mg, B6: 0.67 mg). Palm jaggery and coconut sugar provide meaningful B2, B3, and Vitamin C. Date sugar retains folate (15 µg), B6 (0.24 mg), and Vitamin K (2.7 µg) from whole dates. Refined sugars and artificial sweeteners contain zero vitamins.

SweetenerCategoryVit B1
Thiamine
(mg)
Vit B2
Riboflavin
(mg)
Vit B3
Niacin
(mg)
Vit B5
Pantothenic
Acid (mg)
Vit B6
(mg)
Vit B9
Folate
(µg)
Vit B12
(µg)
Vit C
Ascorbic
Acid (mg)
Vit K
(µg)
Choline
(mg)
White Sugar (Sucrose / Table Sugar)Refined Sugar0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Brown SugarRefined Sugar0.0080.0070.0820.0470.02610.0000.0000.0002.300
Raw Sugar (Turbinado / Demerara)Refined Sugar0.0050.0050.0500.0300.01000.0000.0000.0000.500
Powdered Sugar (Icing Sugar)Refined Sugar0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS-55)Refined Sugar0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Jaggery / Gur (Sugarcane)Indian Traditional Sweetener0.0100.0600.5000.8000.040100.0007.0000.0003.000
Palm Jaggery (Palmyra / Tal Gur)Indian Traditional Sweetener0.0200.0800.6000.9000.050120.00010.0000.0004.000
Khandsari Sugar (Desi Khand)Indian Traditional Sweetener0.0050.0100.0500.0200.01010.0001.0000.0000.500
Mishri / Rock Sugar (Kalkandu)Indian Traditional Sweetener0.0000.0050.0200.0100.00000.0000.5000.0000.200
Coconut SugarIndian Traditional Sweetener0.0500.0900.7000.5000.080100.0005.0000.0004.500
Honey (Raw)Natural Sweetener (International)0.0000.0380.1210.0680.02420.0000.5000.0002.200
Maple Syrup (Grade A)Natural Sweetener (International)0.0060.0120.0810.0360.00200.0000.0000.0001.600
Molasses (Blackstrap)Natural Sweetener (International)0.0410.0020.9300.8000.67000.0000.0000.00013.000
Agave Nectar / SyrupNatural Sweetener (International)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Date SugarNatural Sweetener (International)0.0500.0601.2000.7000.240150.0000.4002.7009.900
Monk Fruit Extract (Luo Han Guo)Natural Sweetener (International)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Stevia (Steviol Glycosides, pure)Natural Sweetener (International)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
ErythritolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
XylitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
SorbitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
MaltitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
AspartameArtificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Sucralose (Splenda)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Saccharin (Sweet'N Low)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000
Acesulfame-K (Ace-K)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.0000.0000.0000.0000.00000.0000.0000.0000.000

Mineral Content of Sweeteners (per 100 g)

Minerals are where the greatest nutritional gap between sweetener types exists. Blackstrap molasses, jaggery, palm jaggery, and coconut sugar provide genuinely useful amounts of iron, magnesium, potassium, and calcium. Maple syrup is outstanding for manganese and zinc.

SweetenerCategoryCalcium
(mg)
Iron
(mg)
Magnesium
(mg)
Phosphorus
(mg)
Potassium
(mg)
Sodium
(mg)
Zinc
(mg)
Copper
(mg)
Manganese
(mg)
Selenium
(µg)
White Sugar (Sucrose / Table Sugar)Refined Sugar1.000.010.000.002.001.000.010.010.000.60
Brown SugarRefined Sugar83.001.9129.0022.00346.0039.000.180.300.281.20
Raw Sugar (Turbinado / Demerara)Refined Sugar10.000.305.003.0050.005.000.040.040.020.60
Powdered Sugar (Icing Sugar)Refined Sugar1.000.020.000.004.002.000.010.010.000.60
High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS-55)Refined Sugar0.000.030.000.000.002.000.000.000.000.00
Jaggery / Gur (Sugarcane)Indian Traditional Sweetener80.0011.0070.0040.001050.0030.000.300.300.301.50
Palm Jaggery (Palmyra / Tal Gur)Indian Traditional Sweetener100.0013.0090.0050.001200.0035.000.400.350.402.00
Khandsari Sugar (Desi Khand)Indian Traditional Sweetener20.001.5010.005.00100.008.000.050.050.050.50
Mishri / Rock Sugar (Kalkandu)Indian Traditional Sweetener5.000.202.002.0020.005.000.020.020.010.30
Coconut SugarIndian Traditional Sweetener8.002.3029.0079.001030.0045.000.210.230.480.80
Honey (Raw)Natural Sweetener (International)6.000.422.004.0052.004.000.220.040.080.80
Maple Syrup (Grade A)Natural Sweetener (International)102.000.1121.002.00212.0012.004.160.012.770.60
Molasses (Blackstrap)Natural Sweetener (International)205.004.72242.0031.001464.0037.000.290.431.5317.80
Agave Nectar / SyrupNatural Sweetener (International)1.000.091.001.004.004.000.090.040.020.60
Date SugarNatural Sweetener (International)39.001.0254.0062.00696.002.000.440.210.303.50
Monk Fruit Extract (Luo Han Guo)Natural Sweetener (International)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
Stevia (Steviol Glycosides, pure)Natural Sweetener (International)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
ErythritolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
XylitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
SorbitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
MaltitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
AspartameArtificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
Sucralose (Splenda)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
Saccharin (Sweet'N Low)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00
Acesulfame-K (Ace-K)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener0.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.00

Mineral Champions at a Glance

1464mg
Potassium
Blackstrap Molasses
242mg
Magnesium
Blackstrap Molasses
205mg
Calcium
Blackstrap Molasses
13.0mg
Iron
Palm Jaggery
4.16mg
Zinc
Maple Syrup
1200mg
Potassium
Palm Jaggery

Macronutrients Per Typical Serving

Per-100 g values can be misleading since serving sizes vary dramatically — from 1 g (stevia packet) to 21 g (honey tablespoon). The table below shows what you actually consume in a real-world serving. % DV Sugars is based on the WHO/FDA recommended limit of 50 g free sugars per day.

SweetenerServingGramsCaloriesCarbs (g)Sugars (g)% DV SugarsTypical Use
White Sugar1 tsp415.54.03.998.0%Tea, coffee, baking
Brown Sugar1 tsp415.23.923.887.8%Baking, desserts
Powdered Sugar1 tbsp1038.99.979.7419.5%Frosting, dusting
HFCS-551 tbsp2056.215.1415.1430.3%Processed beverages
Jaggery / Gur1 small piece1038.38.807.5015.0%Chai, Indian sweets
Palm Jaggery1 small piece1037.58.607.2014.4%South Indian sweets
Coconut Sugar1 tsp415.03.683.567.1%Coffee, baking
Mishri2–3 crystals519.34.954.909.8%Mouth freshener, milk
Honey (Raw)1 tbsp2163.817.3017.2434.5%Spreads, tea, dressing
Maple Syrup1 tbsp2052.013.4012.1024.2%Pancakes, oatmeal
Molasses (Blackstrap)1 tbsp2058.014.9410.7621.5%Baking, iron source
Agave Nectar1 tsp721.75.354.769.5%Tea, baking
Date Sugar1 tbsp1028.27.506.4012.8%Baking, smoothies
Monk Fruit Extract1 packet10000%Beverages, baking
Stevia1 packet10000%Beverages, baking
Erythritol1 tsp40.84.0000%Baking, beverages
Xylitol1 tsp49.64.0000%Baking, gum
Sucralose1 packet10000%Beverages, baking
Aspartame1 packet1~40.8500%Diet drinks, tabletop

Bioactive Compounds & Chemical Nature

Beyond basic macros, several sweeteners contain clinically relevant bioactive compounds that differentiate them nutritionally and pharmacologically from refined sugar.

🍯 Raw Honey

GI: 61 | ADI: None established
Key Compounds:    H₂O₂, Glucose oxidase
Antioxidants:           Quercetin, Luteolin
ORAC Score:            ~5,677
Special Note:          ⚠ Not for infants <1 yr

🍁 Maple Syrup

GI: 54 | ADI: None established
Unique Compound:  Quebecol (phenolic)
Other Phenolics:       Catechins, Gallic acid
Best Mineral:             Mn 2.77 mg/100 g
Property:                   Anti-inflammatory potential

🌿 Stevia

GI: 0 | ADI: 4 mg/kg bw/day
Active Compound:   Reb A, Stevioside
Type:                         Diterpenoid glycosides
Heat Stability:           Up to 200°C
Status:                      GRAS (FDA) | FSSAI ✓

🥥 Coconut Sugar

GI: 54 | ADI: None
Prebiotic:         Inulin (FOS) ~1.5–2 g
Polyphenols:   Flavonoids present
Potassium:      1030 mg/100 g
Property:         Mild prebiotic effect

🌱 Jaggery / Gur

GI: 84 | ADI: None
Wax Compounds:   Octacosanol
Co-factor:                 Chromium (trace)
Iron:                          11 mg/100 g
Property:                  Antitoxic micronutrients

⚗️ Aspartame

GI: 0 | ADI: 40 mg/kg bw/day
Chemical:       Aspartyl-Phe methyl ester
Metabolites:    Asp, Phe, Methanol
⚠ Avoid in:     PKU (Phenylketonuria)
IARC 2023:     Group 2B*

*IARC Group 2B = “possibly carcinogenic.” JECFA and EFSA maintain the current ADI as safe. Classification is under ongoing review.

SweetenerCategoryKey Active
Compounds / Chemicals
Notable Phytochemicals
/ Antioxidants
Glycemic
Index
Insulin
Index
Cariogenic
(Tooth Decay)
Prebiotic
Effect
ADI
(mg/kg bw/day)
Relative
Sweetness
(Sucrose=100)
Regulatory
Status (India
/ FSSAI)
Key Health Notes & Cautions
Jaggery / Gur (Sugarcane)Indian Traditional SweetenerSucrose (~65%), Reducing sugars (10–15%), Invert sugar; melanoidins; wax estersOctacosanol (wax); chromium; sucrose phenylpropanoids84~75YesNoNo ADI70Traditional food (FSSAI Schedule)Rich in Fe, Mg, K; retains sugarcane micronutrients; still high GI; antitoxic phytochemicals reported
Palm Jaggery (Palmyra / Tal Gur)Indian Traditional SweetenerSucrose, glucose, fructose; amino acids (glutamic acid); riboflavin; nicotinic acidAscorbic acid; riboflavin; inositol82~74YesNoNo ADI65Traditional food (FSSAI)Higher mineral content than cane jaggery; contains inositol (B-vitamin-like compound); good source of ascorbic acid
White Sugar (Sucrose / Table Sugar)Refined SugarSucrose (α-D-glucopyranosyl β-D-fructofuranoside)Nil65~65YesNoNo ADI (GRAS)100Permitted (FSSAI)Raises blood glucose; promotes dental caries; high intake linked to obesity & T2 diabetes
Raw Sugar (Turbinado / Demerara)Refined SugarSucrose; trace molassesTrace phenolics65~65YesNoNo ADI100PermittedVirtually same GI and caloric impact as white sugar; trace minerals negligible
Powdered Sugar (Icing Sugar)Refined SugarSucrose + 3% cornstarch (anti-caking)Nil65~65YesNoNo ADI100PermittedCornstarch often added; same metabolic profile as table sugar
Brown SugarRefined SugarSucrose + residual molasses (melanoidins, phenolics)Trace phenolics64~64YesNoNo ADI97PermittedSlightly more minerals than white sugar; nutritionally similar
Khandsari Sugar (Desi Khand)Indian Traditional SweetenerSucrose (~93–95%); residual molassesTrace phenolics64~64YesNoNo ADI98Permitted (IS: 1476)Less refined than white sugar; retains trace minerals; similar GI to white sugar
Mishri / Rock Sugar (Kalkandu)Indian Traditional SweetenerSucrose (~98%); trace invert sugarsNegligible64~64YesNoNo ADI98Traditional food (FSSAI)Cooling effect cited in Ayurveda; similar metabolic impact to white sugar; used in Ayurvedic formulations
High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS-55)Refined SugarFructose (~55%), Glucose (~42%), WaterNil62~62YesNoNo ADI90PermittedHigh fructose → hepatic lipogenesis, triglyceride elevation, potential NAFLD risk
Honey (Raw)Natural Sweetener (International)Fructose (~40%), Glucose (~30%), Water, Enzymes (invertase, glucose oxidase, catalase), Hydrogen peroxideFlavonoids (quercetin, luteolin, kaempferol); phenolic acids; antioxidants (ORAC~5677); gluconic acid61~58YesMildNo ADI (not for infants <1yr)110Permitted (FSSAI)Antimicrobial (H₂O₂, methylglyoxal in Manuka); hygroscopic; NOT for infants <1 yr (botulism risk); antioxidant-rich compared to refined sugar
Molasses (Blackstrap)Natural Sweetener (International)Sucrose, Glucose, Fructose; organic acids (acetic, propionic); betaine; inositolPhenolics; betaine; inositol; significant iron, calcium, magnesium55~50YesNoNo ADI50PermittedHighest mineral density of all sugar-based sweeteners; useful dietary iron & Ca source; strong flavour limits use
Coconut SugarIndian Traditional SweetenerSucrose (~73%), Fructose, Glucose; Inulin (prebiotic FOS); amino acidsPolyphenols; flavonoids; zinc; inulin (FOS)54~50YesMild (inulin)No ADI90Permitted (FSSAI)Contains inulin (prebiotic fibre, ~1.5–2 g/100 g); lower GI than white sugar; still calorie-dense
Maple Syrup (Grade A)Natural Sweetener (International)Sucrose (~87% of sugars), Glucose, Fructose; Quebecol (unique phenolic); abscisic acidQuebecol; catechins; gallic acid; manganese (excellent source)54~50YesNoNo ADI60PermittedUnique phenolic quebecol (anti-inflammatory potential); rich in Mn & Zn; lower GI than white sugar
Date SugarNatural Sweetener (International)Fructose + Glucose; dietary fibre (cellulose, pectin); tannins; flavonoidsTannins; β-glucan; anthocyanins; lutein; zeaxanthin; polyphenols42~40YesYes (pectin, β-glucan)No ADI60PermittedWhole food sweetener; retains fibre & polyphenols; lower GI; does not dissolve readily in liquids
MaltitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)4-O-α-D-Glucopyranosyl-D-glucitol (C₁₂H₂₄O₁₁); disaccharide polyolNil36~35NoNoNo ADI90PermittedHigher GI than other polyols; some insulin response; GI distress at high doses; common in diabetic chocolates
Agave Nectar / SyrupNatural Sweetener (International)Fructose (~56–90%), Glucose; fructans (hydrolyzed during processing)Trace saponins; minimal phenolics; low mineral content19~12YesNoNo ADI140PermittedVery high fructose → potential hepatic lipogenesis & hypertriglyceridemia at high doses; low GI but not metabolically neutral
SorbitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)D-Glucitol (C₆H₁₄O₆); derived from glucose by hydrogenationNil9~9NoNoNo ADI60Permitted (FSSAI)Laxative at >20–50 g/day; used in sugar-free products; 2.6 kcal/g
XylitolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)D-Xylose-derived polyol (C₅H₁₂O₅); insulin-independent metabolismNil7~7No (anti-cariogenic)NoNo ADI established100Permitted (FSSAI)Remineralises tooth enamel; anti-cariogenic; GI distress at >50 g/day; TOXIC to dogs (hepatic failure)
ErythritolSugar Alcohol (Polyol)Meso-erythritol (C₄H₁₀O₄); 4-carbon sugar alcohol; produced by fermentation of glucoseAntioxidant properties (scavenges hydroxyl radicals)1~2NoNoNo ADI (GRAS)70Permitted (FSSAI)90% absorbed in small intestine then excreted in urine unchanged; minimal laxative effect vs other polyols; 2023 study noted possible CV risk association (needs further research)
Monk Fruit Extract (Luo Han Guo)Natural Sweetener (International)Mogrosides (V, IV, III) — triterpene glycosides (active sweet compounds); Vitamin C in raw fruitMogrosides (antioxidant, anti-inflammatory); cucurbitane-type triterpenoids00NoNoNo ADI established20000GRAS (FDA); Permitted (FSSAI 2022)Zero calorie; heat stable; no glycaemic impact; rare hypersensitivity reported; often blended with erythritol
Stevia (Steviol Glycosides, pure)Natural Sweetener (International)Rebaudioside A (Reb A), Stevioside, Reb C, Reb D — diterpenoid glycosides; steviol (aglycone)Stevioside; isosteviol; anti-hyperglycaemic properties reported00NoNo4 mg/kg bw/day (JECFA/EFSA); 9 packets/day (FDA)30000GRAS (FDA); Permitted (FSSAI)Steviol aglycone may have mild diuretic effect; bitter aftertaste at high doses; hypotensive effect at pharmacological doses; stable up to 200°C
AspartameArtificial / Non-nutritive SweetenerL-Aspartyl-L-phenylalanine methyl ester (C₁₄H₁₈N₂O₅); metabolises to aspartate, phenylalanine, methanolNil00NoNo40 mg/kg bw/day (JECFA); 50 mg/kg (FDA)20000Approved (FSSAI); WHO Group 2B possible carcinogen (IARC 2023, disputed)CONTRAINDICATED in phenylketonuria (PKU); stable below 150°C; metabolite methanol at trace levels; IARC 2B classification pending full review; current ADI considered safe by EFSA & JECFA
Sucralose (Splenda)Artificial / Non-nutritive SweetenerTrichlorogalactosucrose (C₁₂H₁₉Cl₃O₈); chlorinated derivative of sucrose; not metabolizedNil00NoNo5 mg/kg bw/day (JECFA/FDA/EFSA)60000Approved (FSSAI); FDA GRASHeat stable (baking use); not metabolised; passes through gut unchanged; some studies suggest gut microbiome alteration at high doses; 2023 study linked ditetra-acetylsucralose to DNA strand breaks (under review)
Saccharin (Sweet'N Low)Artificial / Non-nutritive SweetenerBenzoic sulfimide (C₇H₅NO₃S); sodium/calcium/potassium salts used commerciallyNil00NoNo5 mg/kg bw/day (JECFA); 15 mg/kg (FDA)40000Approved (FSSAI)Oldest artificial sweetener (1879); bitter metallic aftertaste; bladder cancer link in rodents NOT confirmed in humans; FDA delisted from hazardous substances list (2000); heat stable
Acesulfame-K (Ace-K)Artificial / Non-nutritive Sweetener6-Methyl-1,2,3-oxathiazine-4(3H)-one 2,2-dioxide potassium salt (C₄H₄KNO₄S)Nil00NoNo15 mg/kg bw/day (JECFA/EFSA)20000Approved (FSSAI)Often combined with aspartame or sucralose to mask aftertaste (synergistic); heat stable; excreted unchanged; generally considered safe at approved levels

Glycemic Index Comparison

The glycemic index (GI) measures how rapidly a food raises blood glucose relative to pure glucose (GI = 100). Low GI (<55) sweeteners cause a slower, more gradual rise — preferable for diabetes management and metabolic health.

GI Classification Summary

Low GI (<55):Coconut sugar (54), Maple syrup (54), Date sugar (42), Agave nectar (19), Erythritol (1), Stevia / Monk fruit / Sucralose / Saccharin / Ace-K (0).
Medium GI (55–69):Molasses (55), Honey (61), HFCS-55 (62), Brown sugar (64), Khandsari / Mishri (64), White & Raw sugar (65).
High GI (≥70):Palm Jaggery (82), Jaggery / Gur (84).

⚠ Agave Nectar Caution

Despite a very low GI of 19, agave nectar is 56–90% fructose. Fructose bypasses normal glucose regulation, is metabolised primarily by the liver, and at high doses promotes hepatic lipogenesis, elevated triglycerides, and potential insulin resistance. A low GI does not mean agave is metabolically harmless.

Indian Traditional Sweeteners: A Closer Look

India is unique in its rich tradition of unrefined sweeteners, many of which are documented in Ayurvedic texts for thousands of years. Unlike refined sugar, these sweeteners retain the mineral and phytochemical matrix of sugarcane juice or palm sap, offering genuine nutritional advantages.

Jaggery (Gur) vs. White Sugar

The nutritional gap between jaggery and white sugar is significant. Per 100 g, jaggery provides 11 mg of iron versus <0.01 mg in white sugar; 1,050 mg of potassium versus 2 mg; 80 mg calcium versus 1 mg; and 70 mg magnesium versus 0. It also retains trace chromium, octacosanol (a wax ester with reported cholesterol-modulating effects), and melanoidins with antioxidant activity. However, jaggery’s GI of 84 is actually higher than white sugar’s 65 — it is not suitable as a low-glycaemic substitute for people managing diabetes.

Palm Jaggery (Tal Gur / Palmyra Sugar)

Palm jaggery from palmyra palm (Borassus flabellifer) or date palm sap is common across Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, and West Bengal. It surpasses sugarcane jaggery in calcium (100 mg), iron (13 mg), and potassium (1,200 mg) per 100 g. It uniquely contains inositol (a B-vitamin-like compound), riboflavin, nicotinic acid, and ascorbic acid — compounds largely absent from sugarcane products. A 2023 ScienceDirect review described it as “a significantly better choice of added sugar” compared to refined sucrose.

Coconut Sugar

Coconut sugar has a lower GI (54) than white sugar and contains about 1.5–2 g of inulin (fructooligosaccharides) per 100 g — a prebiotic fibre that supports gut microbiome diversity. Its potassium content (1,030 mg/100 g) is notably high, as is phosphorus (79 mg). While still calorie-dense, it offers a more nutritionally complete profile than any refined sugar.

Mishri (Rock Sugar / Kalkandu)

Mishri is crystallised sugarcane or palm sap sugar consumed as a mouth freshener, added to milk, and used in Ayurvedic formulations. Traditional khandsari mishri retains trace minerals and is considered cooling (Pitta-pacifying) in Ayurveda. Nutritionally, white mishri is near-identical to refined sugar; its primary benefits are cultural, digestive, and flavour-based rather than nutritional.

Artificial Sweeteners & Sugar Alcohols

Non-nutritive sweeteners are approved for use by FDA, EFSA, JECFA, and FSSAI within defined acceptable daily intakes. They offer sweetness without raising blood glucose — useful for diabetes management and calorie control.

🌿

Stevia (Reb A)

200–400× sweeter than sucrose. GRAS (FDA), FSSAI-approved. ADI 4 mg/kg bw/day. Zero GI. Heat stable to 200°C. Best-tolerated natural non-nutritive sweetener.

🍈

Monk Fruit (Luo Han Guo)

100–250× sweeter via mogrosides. Zero calories, zero GI. No ADI established. Anti-inflammatory mogroside compounds. FSSAI approved since 2022.

🧪

Erythritol

0.2 kcal/g, GI ≈ 1. 90% absorbed and excreted unchanged — minimal laxative effect. Has antioxidant properties. 2023 cardiovascular association is observational; causality unconfirmed.

🦷

Xylitol

Same sweetness as sucrose, 2.4 kcal/g, GI 7. Anti-cariogenic: remineralises tooth enamel. ⚠ Highly toxic to dogs. Common in dental products and sugar-free gum.

⚗️

Sucralose

600× sweeter. Zero calories. Heat stable — suitable for baking. Not metabolised; excreted unchanged. ADI 5 mg/kg bw/day. Approved by FDA and FSSAI.

⚠️

Aspartame

200× sweeter. Negligible calories at used doses. Contraindicated in phenylketonuria (PKU). IARC Group 2B (2023). Current JECFA ADI: 40 mg/kg bw/day — unchanged.

Key Health Notes & Practical Guidelines

WHO & ICMR Recommendations

The WHO recommends limiting free sugars to <10% of total energy intake, with a further reduction to <5% for additional health benefits (~25 g/day for a 2,000 kcal diet). ICMR-NIN (2020) recommends added sugar at no more than 5% of total caloric intake. The American Heart Association limits added sugars to 24 g/day for women and 36 g/day for men.

The Bottom Line on “Healthier” Sugars

No sugar — refined or natural — is a health food. Jaggery, coconut sugar, and molasses are more nutritious than white sugar, but consuming larger quantities to obtain minerals is counterproductive. The most effective strategy is to reduce overall sweetener consumption while choosing whichever sweetener best fits your culinary, cultural, and metabolic needs.

For Diabetes Management

People managing type 2 diabetes should prefer sweeteners with zero or very low GI: stevia, monk fruit, erythritol, and sucralose do not raise blood glucose or require insulin. Low-GI natural options like coconut sugar (GI 54) and date sugar (GI 42) are preferable to white sugar if a natural sweetener is desired, but portion control remains essential.

For Dental Health

All sucrose-based and fermentable sugars are cariogenic — they feed oral bacteria that produce enamel-eroding acids. Xylitol actively remineralises enamel and inhibits Streptococcus mutans. Erythritol and other polyols are non-cariogenic. Stevia and artificial sweeteners do not promote tooth decay.

⚠ Important Safety Notes

Honey: Never feed to infants under 12 months — risk of Clostridium botulinum spore germination. 

Aspartame: Must be avoided by individuals with phenylketonuria (PKU).

Xylitol: Extremely toxic to dogs; even small amounts cause hepatic failure.

Cyclamate: Banned in the USA (FDA); permitted in India (FSSAI) and EU.

Common Myths About Sugar & Sweeteners — Debunked

The sweetener space is full of misleading marketing claims and health myths. Here are four of the most persistent ones, corrected with evidence.

🚫 Myth 1: Jaggery is a “safe” sugar for diabetics

❌ The Myth

“Jaggery is natural and unprocessed, so diabetics can freely substitute it for white sugar without raising blood sugar.”

✅ The Fact

Jaggery has a glycemic index of 84 — actually higher than white sugar’s 65. It is ~88% carbohydrate. While it does contain more minerals than white sugar, these amounts are nutritionally modest relative to the carbohydrate load. Replacing white sugar 1:1 with jaggery will cause the same or greater blood glucose spike. People managing diabetes should treat jaggery like any other sugar — use it sparingly — and prefer genuinely low-GI alternatives like stevia, monk fruit, or erythritol.

🚫 Myth 2: Agave nectar is healthier because it has a low glycemic index

❌ The Myth

“Agave syrup has a GI of just 19, making it a superior, diabetes-friendly sweetener that won’t spike blood sugar.”

✅ The Fact

Agave’s low GI is because it is 56–90% fructose, which is not measured by the standard GI test (which only tracks blood glucose). Fructose bypasses insulin regulation and is metabolised almost entirely in the liver. At high doses, excess fructose promotes hepatic lipogenesis, elevated triglycerides, increased LDL, and fatty liver disease — outcomes arguably worse than a sugar spike. Agave is not a “safe” sweetener for metabolic conditions; it is simply a differently risky one.

🚫 Myth 3: Brown sugar and raw (turbinado) sugar are significantly more nutritious than white sugar

❌ The Myth

“Brown sugar and raw sugar are healthier choices because they are less processed and contain more vitamins and minerals.”

✅ The Fact

Brown sugar is essentially white sugar with molasses added back — typically 95–97% sucrose. Per teaspoon (4 g), the extra minerals are negligible: about 3.3 mg calcium and 0.076 mg iron. Turbinado/demerara sugar retains trace molasses from minimal processing, but USDA data confirms the mineral differences are “clinically insignificant” — as Healthline notes, you would need to consume over 3 kg to meet daily iron needs from turbinado alone. For meaningful mineral benefit from a sweetener, blackstrap molasses, jaggery, or palm jaggery are the evidence-based choices.

🚫 Myth 4: Artificial sweeteners cause cancer and must be avoided

❌ The Myth

“Aspartame and saccharin are proven carcinogens. All artificial sweeteners are toxic and should be completely avoided.”

✅ The Fact

The evidence is more nuanced. Saccharin was once linked to bladder cancer in rats; over 30 human studies found this irrelevant to humans, and the US National Toxicology Program removed it from its carcinogen list in 2000. Aspartame received IARC’s “Group 2B — possibly carcinogenic” classification in 2023, but this is the same category as pickled vegetables and aloe vera extract. JECFA and EFSA reviewed the same evidence and left the ADI (40 mg/kg bw/day) unchanged, concluding current consumption levels are safe. Approved artificial sweeteners are safe within their ADI limits for healthy individuals — the key is moderation, not blanket avoidance.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Answers to the five most commonly asked questions about sugars, sweeteners, health, and nutrition — based on current scientific evidence.

Q1. How much sugar is safe to eat per day?

The WHO recommends limiting free sugars to less than 10% of total energy intake — about 50 g/day on a 2,000 kcal diet — and suggests a further reduction to under 5% (≈25 g/day) for additional health benefits. ICMR-NIN (India, 2020) recommends added sugar at no more than 5% of total caloric intake. The American Heart Association sets limits at 24 g/day for women and 36 g/day for men. To put this in perspective: one tablespoon of honey (21 g) already provides 17 g of sugar, and a single 330 ml can of cola contains about 35 g — nearly the entire daily limit for women.

Nutritionally yes — but not for blood sugar. Jaggery is superior to white sugar in mineral content: it provides approximately 11 mg iron, 1,050 mg potassium, 80 mg calcium, and 70 mg magnesium per 100 g, versus near-zero in white sugar. It also retains chromium, phytochemicals, and melanoidins with antioxidant activity. However, jaggery’s GI (84) is actually higher than white sugar’s (65), meaning it raises blood glucose faster. For people without metabolic conditions, replacing white sugar with jaggery in moderate amounts is a small net positive. For people with diabetes or insulin resistance, neither is appropriate in significant quantities — low-GI or zero-GI substitutes should be preferred.

The best sweeteners for diabetes management are those with zero or very low glycemic index that require no insulin response. In order of evidence strength: Stevia (GI 0, natural, GRAS-approved, anti-hyperglycaemic effects reported in studies) is the top recommendation. Monk fruit extract (GI 0, zero calories, anti-inflammatory mogrosides) is a close second. Erythritol (GI 1, 0.2 kcal/g, does not raise blood glucose) is widely used in India. If a natural sugar-based sweetener is preferred, coconut sugar (GI 54) and date sugar (GI 42) cause the slowest blood glucose rise among caloric sweeteners. Always consult your diabetologist or registered dietitian before making significant dietary changes.

Sugar itself does not directly cause weight gain — excess calories do, regardless of source. However, sugar-rich foods promote weight gain through several indirect mechanisms: they are energy-dense (387 kcal/100 g), provide minimal satiety, and stimulate dopamine reward pathways that encourage overeating. Fructose-heavy sweeteners like HFCS and agave are metabolised in the liver and can promote fat storage and elevated triglycerides. Liquid sugars — sodas, sweetened juices, packaged drinks — are particularly associated with weight gain because liquid calories do not suppress appetite the way solid food does. Replacing caloric sweeteners with zero-calorie alternatives like stevia or monk fruit can meaningfully support weight management.

Stevia is safe for daily use within its ADI of 4 mg/kg body weight per day (JECFA/EFSA) — for a 60 kg adult, that is approximately 9–12 standard packets/day. The FDA has granted GRAS status and FSSAI has approved its use in India. It does not raise blood glucose, does not affect insulin, and shows no toxicity in long-term human studies. For other approved artificial sweeteners: Sucralose (ADI 5 mg/kg, GI 0) is heat-stable and safe at normal intake. Aspartame (ADI 40 mg/kg) is safe for most people but is contraindicated in phenylketonuria (PKU). All approved sweeteners are safe within their ADI limits — the key is moderation. When in doubt, stevia and monk fruit have the cleanest evidence profiles among all non-nutritive sweeteners.

Data Sources & References

  • USDA FoodData Central (2023–24). National Agricultural Library, USDA ARS.fdc.nal.usda.gov
  • ICMR-NIN.Nutritive Value of Indian Foods. National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad. 2017 Edition.
  • FAO/INFOODS.Food Composition Database for Biodiversity. Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome.
  • NIFTEM-T Technical Bulletin.Processing of Jaggery Powder. niftem-t.ac.in (2020).
  • Panche, A.N. et al. (2021). “Value Addition and Fortification in Non-Centrifugal Sugar (Jaggery).”PMC8314846, NCBI/NIH.
  • Bhosale, S. et al. (2023). “Palmyrah Palm NCS — Nutritional Value and Functional Food Potential.”ScienceDirect: Food Bioscience.
  • Bhagat, A.R. et al. (2023). “Nutritional, Pharmacological Properties of Maple Syrup.”PMC10469071, NCBI/NIH.
  • JECFA.Monographs on Non-Sugar Sweeteners(Aspartame, Sucralose, Saccharin, Stevia). WHO/FAO.
  • FDA.Aspartame and Other Sweeteners in Food. fda.gov/food. Updated 2023.
  • FSSAI.Food Safety and Standards (Food Products Standards and Food Additives) Regulations, 2011 (amended 2022).
  • IARC Monograph Vol. 132.Aspartame Hazard and Risk Assessment. World Health Organization, 2023.
  • Witkowski, M. et al. (2023). “The artificial sweetener erythritol and cardiovascular event risk.”Nature Medicine.

This article is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical or dietary advice. Consult a registered dietitian for personalised nutrition guidance.

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