This keto sweeteners and additives table is the quick reference I wanted after getting burned by sugar-free labels, tiny serving sizes, maltitol, maltodextrin, and blends that looked harmless on the front of the package.
How I read this table
Glycemic index can be useful, but it is not perfect. It works best for foods that contain meaningful digestible carbohydrate. It is less useful for high-intensity sweeteners like stevia, monk fruit, sucralose, and aspartame because those are used in tiny amounts. With those, the bigger issue is often the carrier, filler, or blend.
So I use the table this way:
- Green-light does not mean unlimited.
- Low impact does not mean craving-proof.
- “Sugar-free” does not mean carbohydrate-free.
- Blends matter more than marketing words.
- My own response matters more than someone else’s perfect chart.
Keto sweetener and additive table
| Sweetener / additive | What it is | Glycemic impact shorthand | What I do |
|---|---|---|---|
| Erythritol | Sugar alcohol | Commonly cited as very low / near 0 | One of my safer bulk-sweetener options, but I still do not treat keto sweets as unlimited. |
| Allulose | Rare sugar metabolized differently than traditional sugar | Very low; FDA allows 0.4 calories per gram for labeling | Useful when I want something closer to sugar, especially for recipes. |
| Stevia, pure extract | High-intensity plant-derived sweetener | Usually treated as 0 for practical keto use | Fine in small amounts, but too much tastes bitter to me. I check blends. |
| Monk fruit, pure extract | High-intensity fruit-derived sweetener | Usually treated as 0 for practical keto use | Good taste for me, but most products are blends, so I read the ingredients. |
| Sucralose, pure | High-intensity artificial sweetener | Usually treated as 0 by itself | I worry less about pure sucralose than about packets or powders with fillers. |
| Aspartame | High-intensity artificial sweetener | Usually treated as 0 by itself | Not my favorite taste. People with PKU need to avoid or restrict it. |
| Xylitol | Sugar alcohol | Lower than sugar, but not zero | I treat it as a sometimes ingredient. It can bother digestion, and it is dangerous for dogs. |
| Sorbitol | Sugar alcohol | Lower than sugar, but not zero | I usually skip it because stomach issues are not worth it for me. |
| Isomalt | Sugar alcohol | Lower than sugar; product tolerance varies | I treat it carefully, especially in candy, and still check total carbs. |
| Maltitol | Sugar alcohol | Moderate to high for a sugar alcohol; product response varies | My biggest sugar-free candy warning sign. I usually avoid it. |
| Maltodextrin | Fast-digesting carbohydrate filler/additive | High | Sneaky trap in powders, packets, and mixes. I treat it like real carb impact. |
| Dextrose / glucose | Sugar | High; glucose is the reference point | If I see it, I do not pretend it is keto magic. |
| Sucrose / table sugar | Sugar | High | Not hidden if I am honest, but it shows up under many names. |
The labels I slow down for
These are the words that make me stop and read more carefully:
- maltitol
- maltodextrin
- dextrose
- glucose
- corn syrup
- rice syrup
- starch
- “sugar alcohol” without knowing which one
- tiny serving sizes that make the numbers look better
Not every one of those means “never eat it.” It just means I do not let the front of the package make the decision for me.
My simple rule
If the sweetener helps me stay consistent, does not wreck my stomach, does not wake up cravings, and fits the label, I can use it sometimes.
If it turns into a loophole for eating dessert every night, I do not care how good the table looks. It is not helping me.
That is the part no glycemic index chart can decide for me.
The bottom line
For keto, the best sweetener is not always the one with the prettiest number. The best sweetener is the one that fits my carbs, does not keep cravings loud, and helps me repeat the plan tomorrow.
For me, that usually means allulose, erythritol, monk fruit, or stevia in modest amounts. It usually means skipping maltitol-heavy candy and watching hard for maltodextrin, dextrose, and tiny-serving label tricks.
Boring? Yes. Useful? Also yes.
Related reading
- Artificial vs Natural Sweeteners on Keto: What I Actually Use Now
- The Hidden Carb Traps That Still Got Me (Even When I Thought I Was Strict)
- Keto Bloating, Fiber, and Sugar-Free Candy: What I Learned the Hard Way
- Keto Cravings at Night: What Helped Me Stop Raiding the Kitchen
- Almond Flour vs Coconut Flour on Keto: What Actually Worked for Me
- Eating Out on Keto Without Making It Weird

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