#TICTAC #Sugar #nutrition #food #calories #sugarfree

Tic Tacs: Nature’s Perfect Sugar-Free Food?

Tic Tacs are among the simpler joys of human existence. Since the candyโ€™s inception in 1968, the small, hard mints have been released in many flavors in over 100 countries. Anyone who is counting calories will take comfort in the nutritional information, which proudly proclaims 1.9 calories per serving and 0% sugar. Given that each Tic Tac is made almost entirely of sugar, it would seem that something is amiss. As it turns out, it is a true statement that a candy that is almost entirely sugar is also sugar-free. Confused? Read on, and we’ll explain.

#TicTacs #TicTac #SugarFree #Sugar #nutrition #calories

The recipe for Tic Tacs includes sugar, fructose, maltodextrin, peppermint essential oil, rice starch, gum arabic, filling agent (magnesium salts of fatty acids), and glazing agent (carnauba wax). The flavor may change the ratios of these ingredients somewhat, but the primary ingredient, sugar, makes up over 94% of every delicious piece.

The reason the nutrition information can be reported as 0% sugar rests with the way the relevant government regulation is worded. If you look carefully at the Nutrition Facts on the back of the package, you will see that the information is reported on a per-serving basis. The serving size is one piece.

Federal regulations require that any amount of sugar in excess of 0.5 grams per serving must be reported. Each Tic Tac weighs in at 0.49 grams. That means none of the sugar needs to be reported, allowing the candy to be legally marketed as “sugar-free.”

The company’s website acknowledges this on its FAQ page:

14-year-old boy casually eating Tic Tacs. He is sitting at a table with a mischievous grin as he pops a Tic Tac into his mouth.

The Nutrition Facts for Tic Tacยฎ mints state that there are 0 grams of sugar per serving. Does this mean that they are sugar-free?

Tic Tacยฎ mints do contain sugar as listed in the ingredient statement. However, since the amount of sugar per serving (1 mint) is less than 0.5 grams, FDA labeling requirements permit Nutrition Facts to state that there are 0 grams of sugar per serving.

The typical package of Tic Tacs contains 38 candies. If you gulp down all of them, you will have ingested about 18.5 grams of sugar and 74 calories. If it helps ease your conscience, however, just eat one at a time, and comfort yourself in the mathematical truth that zero multiplied by 38 is still zero, so you shouldn’t have anything to worry about.



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19 responses to “If Tic Tacs Contain 94.5% Sugar, Why Are They Labeled as “Sugar-Free”?”

  1. Yikes! That much sugar!!! I need to read labels more often!

    1. You missed the entire point of the post. The label does not disclose sugar.

  2. I like these kind of fun facts; thanks.

  3. That, I didn’t not know. I’ll think twice before eating a tic tac in the future. I’ll still eat them, but only after thinking twice.

  4. lol pog rofl pepega ayaya

  5. Ah, another reason to hate this world!

    1. Sometimes ignorance is bliss.

  6. well, there goes my habit of eating a small box of tic tacs at a time lol

  7. If they say it’s safe to consume, who are the consumers to question big business?

  8. Oh, those clever bastards.

  9. In Europe, declaration must be on 100 grams of product, so customers can compare declaration from diferent manufactures.

  10. Thanks Amazonka. One of the many health related things that make more sense in Europe.

  11. Well now I’m sad! Now I also know why they are so Yummy. This was my go to when trying to be a little healthier but craving sweets!

  12. I do not do sugar crashes well. I love tic tacs. Well I should say I used to have a tic tac addiction. I could not figure out why I would get the sugar crash feeling after eating a few tic tacs at work during the day. So I looked it up today. I am so disappointed…………..

    1. We feel your pain. Thereโ€™s nothing quite like the exquisite sensation of a mouthful of orange Tic Tacs, immediately followed by the stomach-dropping sugar crash afterward.

  13. Great post! Hehe. Besides the serving size trick, there are other sneaky things hidden in the Nutrition Facts label. The “Added Sugars” line is a prime example. Another spot for producers’ trickery is the ingredients list. If you’re mindful about what you eat, make sure to read the fine print on the packageโ€”and learn to read between the lines too. Hereโ€™s something interesting on a related topic: Genetically Modified Corn: Does it Make its Way to Your Table? (https://snip101.wordpress.com/2024/02/01/bioengineered-corn/)

    1. Thank you, and thanks for the link to the article. It is very information. Appreciate you sharing!

      1. You are very welcome! I also forgot to mention that the FDA requires producers to list ingredients in descending order by weight, regardless of serving size. This means the ingredient that is present in the largest amount is listed first, followed by the next largest, and so on. So if “sugar” appears first on the list, it means one thing: sugar is the most abundant ingredient in that product (even in a single tiny Tic Tac pill), no matter what the Nutrition Facts label says. This knowledge comes in handy. For example, when I pick up a bar of chocolate at the store and see sugar listed as the first ingredient, it goes right back on the shelfโ€”because thatโ€™s not chocolate, itโ€™s a brown-colored lump of sugar.

  14. Here’s a related article on trans fats–missing from a per-serving list but present in large quantities in a package: https://health.clevelandclinic.org/why-trans-fats-are-bad-for-you

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