What it calculates
The Dietary Guidelines reference is less than 10% of daily calories from added sugars. Because sugar has about 4 calories per gram, the calculator converts the calorie share into grams and compares your entry with that limit.
Convert a calorie target into a practical added-sugar gram reference.
The Dietary Guidelines reference is less than 10% of daily calories from added sugars. Because sugar has about 4 calories per gram, the calculator converts the calorie share into grams and compares your entry with that limit.
This does not judge total diet quality. A low added-sugar total can still sit inside a poor diet, and natural sugars in whole fruit are not the same as added sugars on a label.
Nutrition labels can show total sugars and added sugars. Added sugar is the part added during processing, preparation or at the table. Fruit, milk and plain whole foods may contain natural sugars, so total sugar alone does not tell the whole story.
The less-than-10-percent reference is based on calories, not a fixed gram number for everyone. The calculator converts 10 percent of daily calories into sugar grams using 4 calories per gram. That makes the reference scale with the calorie level you entered.
A lower added-sugar total does not automatically mean a good diet, and a single higher day does not define the whole pattern. The more useful question is which food or drink is using most of the added-sugar room and whether there is an easy swap.
Start with drinks, breakfast foods, desserts and snacks because they are common places for added sugar to cluster. Use the number as a weekly awareness tool rather than a reason to obsess over every gram.
The most useful added-sugar check is the repeated pattern, not the occasional birthday cake or special meal. If the same drink, cereal, snack or dessert appears every day, it can use a large share of the weekly total even when each serving looks ordinary.
A lower-sugar swap is only useful if it still fits the way you eat. Replacing one item with something you dislike usually fails. Start with changes that feel easy: smaller serving, less frequent purchase or a similar product with less added sugar.
Write down the result, the source of the input and one realistic change you would be willing to test. That small note is what turns the page from a one-time calculator into a useful health planning record. If the input came from memory, treat the result as a rough direction. If the input came from a label, measurement, diary or device record, it is usually stronger.
Do not chase perfect numbers. Choose the next action that is safe, repeatable and easy to review in a week.