Added sugar is not the same as the natural sugar found in whole fruit or plain dairy. The bigger concern is sugar added during processing or preparation, especially when it crowds out nutrient-rich foods or raises calorie intake over time [1][2].
Key takeaways
- Added sugar can hide in drinks, sauces, cereals, yogurts, snacks, and desserts.
- U.S. guidance recommends keeping added sugars under 10 percent of daily calories [1].
- Sugary drinks are one of the easiest places to cut back.
- Whole fruit is not the problem for most people.
- Small repeatable swaps work better than panic rules.
What counts as added sugar
Added sugar includes sugar added during processing, cooking, or at the table. It can appear as cane sugar, corn syrup, honey, agave, dextrose, maltose, and many other names.
Nutrition Facts labels list added sugars so you can compare products more easily [1].
Why too much added sugar matters
Too much added sugar can make it harder to meet nutrient needs while staying within calorie limits [1]. Sugar-sweetened drinks can add calories quickly without much fullness.
The goal is not zero sugar forever. The goal is fewer default sweet drinks and snacks, and more foods that actually nourish you.
How to cut back without going extreme
Start with one swap: unsweetened tea instead of soda, plain yogurt plus fruit instead of sweetened yogurt, or smaller dessert portions after real meals. If you fast, keep sweet drinks in the eating window and log them honestly in GoFasting if you use it.
FAQ
Is fruit sugar bad?
Whole fruit also provides fiber, water, and nutrients. Added sugar in processed foods and drinks is the bigger concern for most people.
How much added sugar is too much?
U.S. guidance recommends less than 10 percent of daily calories from added sugars.
Bottom line
Small repeatable swaps work better than panic rules.
Medical disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Talk with a qualified healthcare professional before fasting if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, take medication, have diabetes, have a medical condition, have a history of disordered eating, or feel unwell during fasting.
References
- FDA. Added Sugars on the Nutrition Facts Label https://www.fda.gov/food/nutrition-facts-label/added-sugars-nutrition-facts-label
- CDC. Tips for Healthy Eating for a Healthy Weight https://www.cdc.gov/healthy-weight-growth/healthy-eating/index.html