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:
- Coffee: Dissolved in hot black coffee, served at equal sweetness levels
- Cookies: Used in the same chocolate chip cookie recipe, 1:1 sugar substitution (adjusted for sweetness intensity)
- 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
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.