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How Much Sugar Is in Your Fruit?

A bowl of colorful, chopped fresh fruits.

Fresh fruits are healthy, nutritious foods that are good sources of vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals, and fiber. Plus, they’re instrumental in maintaining a net alkaline-yielding diet. So should you worry about the sugar content in your fruit?

Generally, the answer is no. Fruit contains a good amount of fiber and seeds that lower the glycemic load from the sugars contained in fruit. As a result, eating whole fruit helps keep blood sugar normalized.

However, it’s important to note that the common fruits we eat today have little resemblance to their wild ancestors. Domesticated fruits are almost always larger, sweeter, and contain less fiber than their wild counterparts. Compare a Golden Delicious apple to a crab apple, and you get the idea!

Should I Limit Fruit if I’m Overweight?

The Paleo Diet founder Dr. Loren Cordain recommends that most people eat fresh fruit as their appetite dictates. However, if you are overweight or insulin-resistant, he recommends that you initially limit your consumption of high-sugar fruits, like grapes, bananas, mangos, sweet cherries, apples, pineapples, pears, and kiwis.

If you are overweight, a good rule of thumb is to avoid eating fruits with high sugar content until your weight starts to normalize and your health improves. Instead, try to eat more vegetables.

Note that some fruits, like avocados, lemons, and limes, are very low in total sugar and don’t need to be restricted.

Can I Eat Fruit If I’m Insulin Resistant?

If you’re insulin-resistant, eating fructose may be particularly problematic.

Take a look at the table below. It’s important to know that in the gut, table sugar (or sucrose) is split into two parts before it enters the bloodstream: fructose and glucose. That’s why sucrose’s contribution to the total dietary fructose load must be considered.

Beware of Dried Fruits!

You’ll also want to take note of the high levels of sugar dried fruits contain. As you can see from the table below, dried fruits more closely resemble commercial candy than fresh, whole fruit.

For example, Zante currents have 70 grams of sugar, while Milk Duds contain only 50 grams!

Most fresh fruits fall way below those numbers, as you can see in our Fruits and Their Sugar Content table below.

Foods and Their Sugar Content

 In grams (g)Total SugarsGlucoseGalactoseFructoseSucroseLactoseMaltoseTot. Met. Fructose
Apples13.32.3 7.63.3  9.3
Apricots9.31.6 0.75.2 3.13.3
Avocado, California0.90.5 0.20.1  0.3
Avocado, Florida0.90.5 0.20.1  0.3
Banana15.64.2 2.76.5  6
Bit O Honey42.45 0.5272.5514
Blackberries8.13.1 4.10.4  4.3
Blueberries7.33.5 3.60.2  3.7
Brown sugar89.75.2  84.1  42.1
Cantaloupe8.71.2 1.85.4  4.5
Casaba melon4.7     0.30
Cherries, sour8.14.2 3.30.5  3.6
Cherries, sweet14.68.1 6.20.2 1.36.3
Dates64.2   44.6  22.3
Dried apricots38.920.3 12.26.4  15.4
Dried figs62.326.93.924.46.1  27.5
Dried mango73       
Dried papaya53.5       
Dried peaches44.615.8 15.613.2  22.2
Dried pears49       
Dried prunes4428.7 14.80.5  15.1
Elderberries7       
Figs6.93.7 2.80.4  3
Grapefruit, pink6.21.3 1.23.4  2.9
Grapefruit, white6.21.3 1.23.4  2.9
Grapes18.16.50.47.6  0.17.6
Guava61.2 1.91 0.72.4
Guava, strawberry61.2 1.91  2.4
High fructose corn syrup (42)7136.9 29.8  2.129.8
High fructose corn syrup (55)7730.8 42.4  2.342.4
High fructose corn syrup (90)807.2 72   72
Honey81.933.8 42.41.5 4.243.2
Honeydew melon8.2       
Jackfruit8.41.4 1.45.4  4.1
Kiwi fruit10.55 4.31.1  4.9
Lemon2.51 0.80.6  1.1
Lifesavers66.5   66.5  33.3
Lime0.40.2 0.2   0.2
Mamey Apple6.51.1 3.71.6  4.5
Mango14.80.7 2.99.9  7.9
Maple sugar85.24.3 4.375  41.8
Molasses6011.2 12.934.7  30.3
Nectarine8.51.2  6.2  3.1
Orange9.22.2 2.54.2  4.6
Papaya5.91.4 2.71.8 0.43.6
Peach8.71.2 1.35.6  4.1
Pear10.51.9 6.41.8  7.3
Pear, Bosc10.51.9 6.41.8  7.3
Pear, D’Anjou10.51.9 6.41.8  7.3
Pineapple11.92.9 2.13.1  3.7
Plum7.52.7 1.83  3.3
Pomegranate10.15 4.70.4  4.9
Purple Passion Fruit11.24 3.13.3  4.8
Raisins6531.2 33.8   33.8
Raisins, Golden70.632.7 37.10.8  37.5
Raspberries9.53.5 3.22.8 14.6
Sorghum syrup65.7   33.5   
Starfruit7.13.1 3.20.8 0.13.6
Strawberries5.82.2 2.51  3
Sucrose (table sugar)97   97  48.5
Tangerine7.7       
Tomato2.81.1 1.4   1.4
Watermelon91.6 3.33.6  5.1
Zante currants70.632.7 37.10.8  37.5
(grams sugar per 100 grams; Tot. met. = Total metabolic)

The information on this page was compiled using the Nutritionist V Database.

The Paleo Diet Team

The Paleo Diet® team consists of a group of scientists, journalists, experts, and recipe creators who stay at the forefront of nutrition science.

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