Keto7 min read

Best Keto Sweeteners Ranked: Our 2025 Taste Test Results

We blind-tested 12 popular keto sweeteners in coffee, cookies, and ice cream. See our rankings, taste notes, and which ones we actually keep in our kitchens.

JT
JacaSugar Team
March 18, 2025
Best Keto Sweeteners Ranked: Our 2025 Taste Test Results

Best Keto Sweeteners Ranked: 2025 Taste Test

We assembled a panel of 8 people — keto dieters, professional bakers, a food scientist, and a few self-described sugar addicts — and blind-tested 12 popular keto sweeteners in three applications: black coffee, chocolate chip cookies, and vanilla ice cream.

Here are the results, ranked from best to worst.

The Methodology

Each sweetener was prepared in three formats:

  1. Coffee: Dissolved in hot black coffee, served at equal sweetness levels
  2. Cookies: Used in the same chocolate chip cookie recipe, 1:1 sugar substitution (adjusted for sweetness intensity)
  3. Ice cream: Churned in the same vanilla custard base

Panelists rated each on a 1–10 scale for taste, aftertaste, and overall satisfaction. They also ranked them against each other. Sweetness was normalized — every sample was targeted to the same sweetness level as sugar.

The Rankings

1. Allulose — Score: 9.2/10

Coffee: Clean sweetness, dissolved completely. Multiple panelists couldn't distinguish it from sugar.

Cookies: Soft, chewy, perfectly browned. "These are just... cookies. Good cookies." Best texture of all samples.

Ice cream: Creamy and scoopable straight from the freezer. Clear winner in this category.

Pros: Most sugar-like experience across all applications. Excellent baking properties.

Cons: 70% as sweet as sugar (need slightly more), mild GI effects at high doses, most expensive option tested.

2. Allulose-Monk Fruit Blend — Score: 8.8/10

Coffee: Very clean, slightly sweeter per gram than pure allulose.

Cookies: Nearly identical to the pure allulose batch, perhaps marginally sweeter.

Ice cream: Same excellent texture as pure allulose.

Pros: Gets you to full sugar-sweetness with less total product. Best of both worlds.

Cons: Harder to find, slightly less predictable in recipes.

3. Erythritol-Monk Fruit Blend — Score: 7.5/10

Coffee: Clean sweetness with a very slight cooling sensation. Most panelists found it acceptable.

Cookies: Good flavor but noticeably different texture — drier, more crumbly than sugar cookies. Some detected cooling.

Ice cream: Okay flavor but texture was harder and more crystalline than allulose versions.

Pros: Widely available, zero calories, affordable. The monk fruit masks some of erythritol's cooling effect.

Cons: Cooling sensation, crystallization in frozen/cold applications, GI issues for some.

4. Pure Erythritol — Score: 6.8/10

Coffee: Noticeable cooling sensation. Clean sweetness otherwise.

Cookies: Dry, crunchy texture. Cooling aftertaste more pronounced when warm.

Ice cream: Hard, crystalline texture. Clear grainy mouthfeel. Several panelists ranked this last in ice cream.

Pros: True zero calories, widely available, inexpensive.

Cons: Cooling taste, crystallization, only 70% as sweet as sugar, texture issues in baking and frozen applications.

5. Xylitol — Score: 6.5/10

Coffee: Clean, sweet, slight cooling. Comparable to erythritol in coffee.

Cookies: Better texture than erythritol — closer to sugar cookies. Less cooling.

Ice cream: Decent. Not as scoopable as allulose but better than erythritol.

Pros: Good baking properties, prevents tooth decay, 1:1 sweetness with sugar.

Cons: Contains calories (2.4/g), cooling sensation, dangerous for dogs, GI issues common.

6. Liquid Stevia — Score: 6.0/10

Coffee: Acceptable. Slight bitterness detected by 5 of 8 panelists.

Cookies: Flat, lacking depth. Needed bulking agents. Aftertaste became more apparent when baked.

Ice cream: Bitter aftertaste was most noticeable in cold applications. Texture issues without bulk.

Pros: Zero calories, widely available, very concentrated.

Cons: Bitter aftertaste, no bulk for baking, metallic notes for some people.

7. Stevia-Erythritol Blend — Score: 5.8/10

Coffee: Better than pure stevia, worse than monk fruit blends.

Cookies: Acceptable but "diet-y" according to several panelists.

Ice cream: Combination of stevia bitterness and erythritol crystallization.

8. Sucralose (Liquid) — Score: 5.5/10

Coffee: Initially good, but lingering artificial sweetness.

Cookies: Unusual flavor — "tastes like a diet product."

Ice cream: Overly sweet with a chemical aftertaste.

9. Swerve (Erythritol Blend) — Score: 5.3/10

Performed similar to pure erythritol but with marginally less cooling due to oligosaccharide additions.

10. Aspartame — Score: 4.5/10

Coffee: Acceptable (this is its natural habitat). Classic diet soda sweetness.

Cookies: Degrades with heat. Lost sweetness during baking.

Ice cream: Thin, artificial taste.

11. Saccharin — Score: 3.8/10

Strong metallic and bitter aftertaste across all applications. Several panelists refused to finish samples.

12. Acesulfame-K — Score: 3.5/10

Bitter, metallic aftertaste that was unpleasant in all three applications. Worst performer overall.

Key Takeaways

  1. Allulose dominates — In every single application, allulose or allulose-based blends came out on top. The gap was especially dramatic in baking and frozen desserts.
  1. Natural vs. artificial is real — The natural sweeteners (allulose, monk fruit, erythritol, stevia) consistently outperformed artificial ones (sucralose, aspartame, saccharin, acesulfame-K) in taste tests.
  1. Application matters — Erythritol is fine in coffee but fails in ice cream. Stevia works in beverages but not in baking. Only allulose performed well across all three applications.
  1. Blends beat singles — Combining sweeteners (allulose + monk fruit, erythritol + monk fruit) generally produced better results than using any single sweetener alone.

Our Recommendation

Stock these three and you're covered:

  • Allulose (granulated) — Your primary baking and cooking sweetener
  • Allulose-monk fruit blend — For when you want extra sweetness
  • Liquid monk fruit — For quick sweetening of beverages

This trio handles 99% of kitchen situations with consistently excellent results.

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