Know your limit — before your sweet tooth does
Added sugar is one of the most over-consumed nutrients in modern diets, yet most people have no idea how much they're eating or what their daily ceiling should be. This calculator gives you a clear, personalised number — in grams and teaspoons — so you can make smarter choices at every meal.
What Is a Sugar Intake Calculator?
A sugar intake calculator estimates how much added sugar you should consume per day based on your individual profile — including your sex, age, body weight, activity level, and specific health goal. It translates abstract guidelines from the AHA and WHO into a personalised, actionable daily number.
This tool focuses on added sugars (sugars added during food processing or preparation), not natural sugars found in whole fruits, vegetables, or plain dairy. Natural sugars come packaged with fibre and micronutrients that slow absorption and provide additional benefits.
How to Use This Sugar Intake Calculator
- Select your biological sex: The AHA recommends different limits for men (36 g) and women (25 g) of added sugar per day.
- Enter your age: Caloric needs and sugar limits shift across life stages, especially after 50.
- Choose metric or imperial and enter your body weight and height.
- Select your activity level: This estimates your total daily energy expenditure (TDEE), which the WHO limit is based on as a percentage of calories.
- Pick your health goal: Weight loss, blood sugar management, or athletic performance all call for different adjustments.
- Read your results: Your personalised daily sugar cap in grams and teaspoons, a per-meal budget, calorie context, and actionable tips.
How the Sugar Limit Is Calculated
AHA Guideline Approach
The American Heart Association sets a fixed daily maximum of 36 g (9 tsp) for men and 25 g (6 tsp) for women. These are upper limits for added sugars only and are used as a baseline in this calculator.
WHO Calorie-Based Approach
The World Health Organization recommends keeping free sugars below 10% of total daily energy intake, with additional benefits below 5%. This calculator estimates your TDEE using the Mifflin-St Jeor equation and derives your WHO-based limit from that figure.
Goal Adjustment
Your selected health goal adjusts the baseline. Weight loss and blood sugar management goals apply a stricter cap (closer to or below the WHO 5% ideal). Athletic performance goals allow slightly more room within the AHA/WHO range to support carbohydrate fuelling.
The Final Number
Your personalised limit is the most appropriate value given your sex, caloric needs, and goal — typically the most conservative guideline that applies to your situation, expressed in both grams and teaspoons (1 tsp ≈ 4.2 g).
Daily Added Sugar Limits by Guideline
| Guideline / Scenario | Daily limit (grams) | Daily limit (teaspoons) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| AHA — Men | ≤ 36 g | ≤ 9 tsp | Upper limit, added sugar only |
| AHA — Women | ≤ 25 g | ≤ 6 tsp | Upper limit, added sugar only |
| WHO — 10% of energy | ~50 g (2000 kcal diet) | ~12 tsp | Free sugars; scales with calorie intake |
| WHO — 5% of energy (ideal) | ~25 g (2000 kcal diet) | ~6 tsp | Additional health benefits below this |
| Weight loss goal | ≤ 20–25 g | ≤ 5–6 tsp | Conservative; minimises empty calories |
| Children (2–18 yrs) | < 25 g | < 6 tsp | AHA recommends under 6 tsp for all children |
Note: 1 teaspoon of granulated sugar ≈ 4.2 g. Guidelines refer to added/free sugars, not naturally occurring sugars in whole foods.
Frequently Asked Questions about Sugar Intake
Learn More About Sugar Intake Calculator
Want to understand your results better? Explore these useful guides related to Sugar Intake Calculator. Each question below opens a real blog page with deeper explanations, practical examples, and extra tips.
How much sugar should you have a day?
Understand healthy daily sugar targets using AHA and WHO recommendations, plus how calorie needs and lifestyle affect your ideal range.
Read full guide → Weight LossDoes cutting sugar help with weight loss?
Learn how sugar affects appetite, calorie intake, fat loss, and how to reduce it without making your diet unsustainable.
Read full guide → Fruit vs Added SugarIs fruit sugar bad for you?
See the difference between sugar in whole fruit, fruit juice, and added sugars in processed foods — and why fibre matters so much.
Read full guide → Hidden SourcesWhat foods have hidden added sugar?
Find common packaged foods, sauces, drinks, and snacks that quietly push sugar intake above your daily limit.
Read full guide →