The sugar substitute aisle is overwhelming. Twenty different brands. A dozen ingredient names that sound like science experiments — erythritol, allulose, sucralose, monk fruit extract, stevia rebaudiana. Some bake well. Some don't. Some have a cooling effect that ruins coffee. Some cause digestive distress in larger amounts. And the marketing on every package promises to be "just like sugar," which is almost universally untrue.
This guide cuts through it. Below you'll find every major sugar substitute on the U.S. market, what it actually does in cooking, what it tastes like, where to use it, and where it fails. By the end, you'll know exactly which one to reach for whether you're sweetening coffee, baking cookies, making caramel, or feeding a diabetic family member.
What sugar actually does in a recipe
Before substituting, it's worth understanding what sugar contributes beyond sweetness. This is where most "I tried a substitute and it was terrible" stories come from — people swap one for the other and discover sugar was doing six other jobs.
- Sweetness — the obvious one.
- Bulk and structure — sugar is roughly 200 grams per cup. It fills space in a recipe.
- Moisture retention — sugar holds onto water, keeping cakes and cookies tender.
- Browning — sugar caramelizes at high heat, providing color and complex flavor.
- Tenderizing — sugar interferes with gluten formation, making baked goods softer.
- Yeast food — yeast eats sugar to produce carbon dioxide for rising.
A good sugar substitute matches as many of these as possible. The best — monk fruit blends and allulose — match most. The worst — pure stevia extract or sucralose — match only sweetness, which is why they ruin most baked goods.
The sugar substitutes worth knowing
Monk fruit (the front-runner for baking)
Monk fruit is a small Asian gourd containing compounds called mogrosides that are 150-200 times sweeter than sugar. Pure monk fruit extract is essentially calorie-free.
Calorie content: Effectively 0 calories per gram (pure extract); 0 calories per cup (in 1:1 sugar-replacement blends).
Taste: Clean, sweet, with very minor fruity notes. The least bitter aftertaste of any zero-calorie sweetener.
How to buy it: Almost always sold as a blend with erythritol (a sugar alcohol that adds bulk). Look for "1:1" or "cup-for-cup" blends, which measure exactly like sugar.
Where it works: Cookies, muffins, cakes, brownies, sweetened beverages, sweetened sauces, no-bake desserts, sweetened yogurt and oatmeal.
Where it fails: Caramel and toffee (won't caramelize), yeast breads (yeast can't eat it), meringues (won't dissolve cleanly into egg whites the way sugar does), candy (won't crystallize or harden the same way).
The category leader. Blended with erythritol for 1:1 sugar replacement, with both classic (white) and golden (brown sugar) varieties. Lakanto is consistent batch-to-batch, widely available, and the version most lower-carb baking recipes are tested with.
Check current price →Allulose (the underrated all-rounder)
Allulose is a "rare sugar" — a real sugar that occurs in tiny amounts in figs, raisins, and wheat. It tastes like sugar, browns like sugar, and dissolves like sugar, but the human body doesn't metabolize it for energy, so it provides essentially no calories.
Calorie content: ~0.4 calories per gram (about 90% fewer calories than sugar).
Taste: Closer to sugar than any other substitute. Slightly less sweet (about 70% the sweetness), so recipes need a little more by volume. No aftertaste, no cooling effect.
Where it works: Almost everywhere sugar goes — cookies, cakes, syrups, ice cream, caramel, candy. It actually caramelizes, which monk fruit and stevia cannot.
Where it falls short: Slightly less sweet than sugar (use 1¼ cups allulose for every 1 cup sugar). Can cause digestive upset in amounts above ~30g per serving — fine in moderation, problematic in concentrated desserts.
Why it's underrated: Allulose is genuinely a 1:1 sugar substitute for most cooking applications, including caramel, which monk fruit can't do. It's not as widely available as monk fruit but worth seeking out for advanced baking.
Granulated, behaves identically to white sugar in most baking. Good for caramel, ice cream, and any recipe where browning matters. Sometimes sold blended with monk fruit for extra sweetness without using more volume.
Check current price →Stevia (the original natural zero-calorie sweetener)
Stevia comes from the leaves of Stevia rebaudiana, a South American plant. The sweet compounds (steviol glycosides) are 200-400 times sweeter than sugar, with zero calories.
Calorie content: 0 calories.
Taste: Distinctly different from sugar. Most people detect a slight licorice or bitter aftertaste, especially with the cheaper extracts. Highly refined stevia (RebM, RebD) tastes much cleaner than older RebA-only versions.
Where it works: Sweetening drinks (coffee, tea, lemonade), some cold desserts, recipes designed around it.
Where it fails: Most baking. Without bulk, it leaves baked goods flat and dense. Stevia blends (with erythritol) work in baking; pure stevia extract does not.
Honest assessment: Stevia was the first widely-available natural zero-calorie sweetener and pioneered the category, but monk fruit has largely surpassed it for taste. Stevia still wins on cost — pure extract is cheaper than monk fruit per equivalent sweetness — and works fine for sweetening drinks where the cooling/bitter notes don't compound with other flavors.
Pure stevia extract in liquid form. The vanilla version is excellent in coffee and yogurt. A few drops sweetens a whole mug. Lasts months even with daily use.
Check current price →Erythritol (the sugar alcohol)
Erythritol is a sugar alcohol made by fermenting corn or other plant sugars. It's about 70% as sweet as sugar with roughly 5% of the calories, and it's the bulk ingredient in most commercial monk fruit and stevia blends.
Calorie content: ~0.2 calories per gram.
Taste: Slightly less sweet than sugar with a noticeable cooling effect on the tongue (similar to mint). Not unpleasant, but distinctive.
Where it works: Baking (it provides the bulk that pure-extract sweeteners lack), candy-making with care, frostings and glazes.
Where it falls short: The cooling effect is more pronounced in cold or frozen applications (ice cream, popsicles), where it can be unpleasant. Best to use it blended with another sweetener.
Important caveat: A 2023 study suggested potential cardiovascular risks at high blood erythritol levels — though it didn't establish causation. The science is still developing. People with cardiovascular concerns should discuss erythritol use with their doctor. For most people, occasional use in baking is generally considered safe.
Xylitol (delicious, dangerous to dogs)
Xylitol is another sugar alcohol, found naturally in birch trees and some fruits. About as sweet as sugar with 40% fewer calories.
Calorie content: 2.4 calories per gram (vs. 4 for sugar).
Taste: Almost identical to sugar — less aftertaste than erythritol, no cooling effect. Tastes more like sugar than monk fruit blends.
Where it works: Sugar-free chewing gum (its original mass-market use, where it actively prevents cavities), baked goods, beverages.
Major warning: Xylitol is extraordinarily toxic to dogs — even small amounts can cause severe hypoglycemia and liver failure. If you have dogs, avoid it entirely. Don't bake with it for guests who have pets at home.
Coconut sugar (a partial swap, not a zero-calorie one)
Coconut sugar is made from the sap of coconut palm flower buds. It's still sugar — same calories — but with a slightly lower glycemic index and more minerals than refined white sugar.
Calorie content: ~3.7 calories per gram (vs. 3.87 for white sugar — roughly identical).
Taste: Caramel-like, similar to brown sugar but less molasses-forward.
Where it works: 1:1 swap for brown sugar in baking. Excellent in caramel, cookies, banana bread.
Honest disclosure: Coconut sugar is marketed as a "healthier" sugar, but the calorie difference is negligible. It's a flavor swap with marginal health benefits, not a calorie-saving swap.
Honey, maple syrup, agave, dates
These are all natural alternatives that contain sugar (and therefore calories) but bring different flavors and slightly different glycemic profiles to recipes.
- Honey — slightly sweeter than sugar by volume; contributes moisture; turns recipes browner.
- Maple syrup — distinctive flavor, similar sweetness, slightly fewer calories per cup than sugar.
- Agave — sweeter than sugar (use ⅔ the amount); high in fructose; widely (and somewhat fairly) criticized as no healthier than sugar.
- Dates / date paste — whole-food sweetener with fiber; works in energy bars, oatmeal, smoothies; dramatically changes texture in baking.
The decision tree
If you're not sure which substitute to grab, work through these questions:
Sweetening a drink? Use stevia liquid drops or pure monk fruit extract. Both dissolve cleanly, both are zero calorie. Stevia is cheaper; monk fruit tastes cleaner.
Baking cookies, cakes, or muffins? Use a 1:1 monk fruit blend (Lakanto is the most reliable) for 95% of cases. Use allulose if you need browning or caramelization.
Making caramel, brittle, or candy? Use allulose. It's the only zero-calorie option that caramelizes properly. Monk fruit will fail.
Making ice cream? Use allulose. It prevents ice crystals (giving smoother texture) and avoids the cooling effect of erythritol. Genuinely revolutionary for low-calorie ice cream.
Yeasted bread? Don't substitute — use a small amount of real sugar to feed the yeast. Or use honey or maple syrup, which yeast can also metabolize.
Just want fewer calories from sugar without complicated substitutes? Reduce the sugar in the recipe by 25-30%. Most baked goods won't notice.
Honest cost comparison
Sugar substitutes cost considerably more than sugar. A pound of granulated sugar is about $1.50; a pound of Lakanto monk fruit blend is roughly $15. Allulose runs about $10 per pound. Stevia is the most economical extract.
For an occasional dessert, the price barely matters. For someone baking regularly, the math is real — replacing a cup of sugar a week with monk fruit costs about $200 a year. Many people use blends or partial substitutions (50% sugar + 50% monk fruit) to balance cost and calorie reduction.
What about diabetes and blood sugar?
This is medical territory, and we're not doctors — please consult yours. That said, the broad consensus is:
- Monk fruit, stevia, allulose, and erythritol have minimal-to-zero impact on blood glucose for most people, making them generally suitable for diabetic baking.
- Coconut sugar and agave still raise blood glucose, just slightly less than refined sugar.
- Dates and honey raise blood glucose meaningfully despite being "natural" — they're not diabetic-friendly substitutes.
If you're managing diabetes, work with your healthcare team on what works for your specific situation. The science around individual responses to sweeteners varies more than packaging claims suggest.
The bottom line
For nearly all home cooking, the answer is simple: keep a bag of Lakanto monk fruit blend for 1:1 baking substitution, and a small bottle of stevia drops for sweetening drinks. That covers 90% of needs. Add allulose when you start making caramel, ice cream, or candy and want a sugar substitute that actually behaves like sugar.
Avoid the temptation to chase exotic substitutes you've never heard of just because the marketing is aggressive. The category is mature now. Monk fruit and allulose are the winners; the rest are second-tier or deprecated. Stick with what works.