How many grams of sugar do you eat in a day?
gracetillman
Posts: 190 Member
I do not have a problem with diabetes and I have never monitored my sugar consumption before. I read the American Heart Association recommends women consume no more than 24g of sugar in a day -- MFP has auto-calculated my plan at 25g per day. The problem is -- even when trying to eat clean -- I am NEVER below that number. I enjoy fruit, greek yogurt, whole multigrain bread, and usually one or two other items with some form of sugar in it on a daily basis. I have radically changed my eating habits in the past two months and continue to make changes as I find new things. I have really become label conscious and prepare most of my food from scratch at home. I am eating well.
My question is does anyone who doesn't have "issues" with sugar actually stay below the recommended amount regularly?
I don't think it is hurting my progress one way or another, but I was just wondering what others were doing.
My question is does anyone who doesn't have "issues" with sugar actually stay below the recommended amount regularly?
I don't think it is hurting my progress one way or another, but I was just wondering what others were doing.
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Replies
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I was just going to post a similar topic and decided I'd better search the topics first.Today is my 2nd day of recording my food intake, although I got on the site about a year ago.
According to the website's calculations, my goal is 33 grams of sugar today. Yesterday, it was 29 grams. I can hit that with a cup of nonfat milk, a slice of whole grain bread, and a couple of fruits. I don't see how I can stay at or under that limit. I know that I should limit sugar intake but 33 grams seems impossible.
Also, I wonder why the goal was higher today than yesterday. Maybe it has something to do with the amount of exercise? Or, maybe it's based on my totals from yesterday? I hit 61 grams yesterday and thought that I was eating pretty healthy. Today, I'm at 29 grams already and I haven't had dinner or any snacks yet. I've lost weight before by counting calories and limiting fat and sugar but not at the rate the website gives me.0 -
AHA recommendation is for *added* sugars.0
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That's added sugar, not sugar found in whole foods naturally. I'm pretty much added sugar free, except maple syrup and honey, which are for specific recipes.......No I lied I do add sugar when I bake, but I don't bake much, oh and when I make ice cream.......ok I eat added sugar.0
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I don't even watch the sugar number, I turned it off in favor of showing other nutrients. I eat a lot of fruit and vegetables, no doubt going over the sugar allotment from MFP. I did my own research and have set the nutrients I want to track at a level that works well for me. Example, I set my protein higher than the default on MFP. It sounds like you are eating a healthy diet and the sugar is coming from fruits, milk, etc. not added sugar. I think AHA is most concerned with added sugar.0
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I switched sugar for fiber in my diary since I was sick of seeing the big red number in my sugar column every day. You can barely eat 2 pieces of fruit a day without going over and that is ridiculous. Unless you are a diabetic or have some other medical condition, I would ignore it.0
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Between 120 - 200. Typically around 130.0
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I don't even track sugar and never have. I'm certain I'd be over every single day.0
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I was just going to post a similar topic and decided I'd better search the topics first.Today is my 2nd day of recording my food intake, although I got on the site about a year ago.
According to the website's calculations, my goal is 33 grams of sugar today. Yesterday, it was 29 grams. I can hit that with a cup of nonfat milk, a slice of whole grain bread, and a couple of fruits. I don't see how I can stay at or under that limit. I know that I should limit sugar intake but 33 grams seems impossible.
Also, I wonder why the goal was higher today than yesterday. Maybe it has something to do with the amount of exercise? Or, maybe it's based on my totals from yesterday? I hit 61 grams yesterday and thought that I was eating pretty healthy. Today, I'm at 29 grams already and I haven't had dinner or any snacks yet. I've lost weight before by counting calories and limiting fat and sugar but not at the rate the website gives me.
Your macros change when you add exercise calories, so that's probably why you've got a different number.0 -
I don't even track sugar and never have. I'm certain I'd be over every single day.
Ditto. If you're eating a reasonable diet (like you're not drinking 2,000 calories of soda and calling that a balanced diet) and it sounds like you are then there's really no reason to fret about it outside of, like you mentioned, medical issues.0 -
I had to look at my full report for today.....140g0
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You mean carbs not sugar? 25g of sugar is over when you eat greek yogurt or fruit. Doesn't matter. As long as you dont over do it. I eat about 150-175g of carbs per day0
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I have No Clue.... Never tracked it........ Just watch Carbs, Proteins, and Fats......... Best of Luck0
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All of them.0
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I do not have a problem with diabetes and I have never monitored my sugar consumption before. I read the American Heart Association recommends women consume no more than 24g of sugar in a day -- MFP has auto-calculated my plan at 25g per day. The problem is -- even when trying to eat clean -- I am NEVER below that number. I enjoy fruit, greek yogurt, whole multigrain bread, and usually one or two other items with some form of sugar in it on a daily basis. I have radically changed my eating habits in the past two months and continue to make changes as I find new things. I have really become label conscious and prepare most of my food from scratch at home. I am eating well.
My question is does anyone who doesn't have "issues" with sugar actually stay below the recommended amount regularly?
I don't think it is hurting my progress one way or another, but I was just wondering what others were doing.
Please go check the AHA's recommendations again. They specifically address added sugars, not naturally occurring sugars in fruits and other foods. That said, even that is probably overkill as sugar is simply a carbohydrate and will not make you fat unless your calorie intake exceeds your calories burned. I personally don't bother to track sugar at all and while I do not eat sweets throughout the day, I do eat a lot of fruit and I have ice cream or some other sweet most nights.0 -
I've never tracked the sugar before, since I eat a high fat / low carb diet, but I just added the column in to see since I really had no idea. Based on my diary for the past couple of weeks, I eat less than 20g of sugar a day. It's usually around 12 - 13.
Then again, I don't eat any foods that have added sugar or foods that are naturally high in sugar (like bananas) so that's why my numbers are so low. I certainly don't miss it!0 -
I have thought about this too. I do not think fruit sugars should really be including in this on MFP because your fruit recommendations alone will probably cover this amount. I go over my sugar amount 99% of the time (25 grams a day is nothing when it comes to fruit - there is double that in a mango). I think this sugar refers to added sugars in breads, pastas, cookies, and the like. You may have to keep these sugars separate from each other on a list and make sure you aren't eating 25 grams of processed sugars in baked goods and whatnot. Fruit is separate.0
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Between 120 - 200. Typically around 130.
I don't track it but when I have a look for sh!ts and giggles, mine is about the same0 -
I have No Clue.... Never tracked it........ Just watch Carbs, Proteins, and Fats......... Best of Luck
same here.0 -
I'm generally about 120-180 but I don't really pay attention either0
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You could save yourself a lot of trouble and just track total carbs.0
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I have about 40 - 60 grams a day, the difference being whether I put an extra piece of fruit in my afternoon blueberry kale smoothie or not. I don't worry about it, as long as it's from real unprocessed foods: fruit, mostly. The only thing I eat that has added sugar in it is a bit of yogurt once or twice a month. My carbs are currently at 102 grams a day.0
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If you mean added sugar, like anything processed food or white sugar, honey, HFCS etc, then I limit mine to 50 grams a day. They don't mean natural sugar in fruit or dairy. Just sugar added to any food. If you go by MFP's total, then my sugar is about 130 a day but that is because they are including all sugars. Not just the added variety.0
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I didn't know about the AHA and the added sugar factor. I'm glad I found out about this because it was very dis-heartening to be going over the limit so easily. I went ahead and changed my nutrient tracker for sugar to fiber.
Thanks to all who answered this question for us.
I think I'll go have some more blueberries.0 -
I've yet to make it below my sugar goal... I'm usually around 50-140g, on average about 80g I guess... it seems every I eat has a few grams of sugar, it adds up fast, then add one sugary snack and its all over!0
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I do not monitor sugar for the reasons many mention above ^^^ the RDA is added sugars, most if not all of my sugar comes from natural sources such as fruit, occassionally raw honey.0
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MFP sugars are way too low. ADA reccomended sugars are for ADDED sugars not sugars coming naturally from fruit and dairy. I have a piece of fresh fruit, yogurts and milk every day and dont sweat it myself : )0
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Normally I am over by anything from about 20 -50 grams. Today quite surprisingly, I am under. Most of my sugar comes from natural sources (fruit and milk) though so I am really not too concerned. As other people said, I believe the recommendation is for ADDED sugars, not NATURAL sugars.0
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Sugar is sugar people, it's doesn't matter the source. Your body still creates insulin when you eat it. If you eat fruits from only the berry family you can manage sugars better. Instead of getting your yogurt with fruit in it get plain yogurt and add your own berries. Much better for you.
I tried staying below 30 grams for 30 days and I did it but it wasn't easy and I pretty much ate the same freaking thing.
Overall, God created fruit and intends for us to eat it but don't over do it. I try to only eat 2 pieces a day. Everyone is different and if you don't have blood sugar issues you should be fine. I hope this helps.0 -
You can create another meal category to track natural sugars as opposed to added sugars. That makes the numbers a little easier to decipher.0
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