Cane Sugar vs. Corn Syrup: How Soda Sweeteners Stack Up for Your Health -- WSJ

Dow Jones
Jul 29, 2025

By Andrea Petersen

Americans love drinking soda, cracking on average about five cans of full-calorie sodas a week.

What is used to sweeten sodas has recently become a thing after President Trump posted about it. This month Coca-Cola said it would launch a new soda sweetened with cane sugar rather than the high-fructose corn syrup the company regularly uses, and PepsiCo said it would consider doing something similar if consumers want the option.

Nutrition researchers say focusing on the two sweeteners is besides the point because scientific studies have found that drinking sugar-sweetened beverages frequently is associated with weight gain and a higher risk of obesity, Type 2 diabetes and heart disease.

"Whether it's high-fructose corn syrup or table sugar, it's soda, and we need to drink a lot less," said Christopher Gardner, a nutrition scientist and professor of medicine at Stanford.

Coca-Cola already sells Mexican-made Coca-Cola sweetened with cane sugar in the U.S., and its Kosher for Passover Coke is made with sugar. PepsiCo sells a "real sugar" option.

What's the difference between high-fructose corn syrup and cane sugar?

Sugars are carbohydrates with a sweet taste, said John Coupland, a professor of food science at Pennsylvania State University. Fructose and glucose are among the simplest of sugars. Other sugars, such as sucrose, are made up of combinations of these simple sugars. High-fructose corn syrup and cane sugar, which is a type of sucrose, are both made up of glucose and fructose.

The high-fructose corn syrup often used in soda is typically made up of 55% fructose and 45% glucose. Table sugar is composed of 50% fructose and 50% glucose. Both sweeteners are highly processed and refined.

"Both of them are just a natural food stripped way down to nothing but sugar," said Kimber Stanhope, a research nutritional biologist at the University of California, Davis.

To make high-fructose corn syrup, starch from corn is first turned into a syrup composed mostly of glucose. Manufacturers add enzymes to convert some of that glucose into fructose, which tastes sweeter, Coupland said.

To make table sugar, manufacturers use machines to squeeze juice out of sugarcane or sugar beets, then purify the liquid and refine it through heating and other processes to turn it into the white crystals we buy in bags at the supermarket.

Does cane sugar affect your health differently from high-fructose corn syrup?

Some studies have found little difference between the health impacts of drinks made with high-fructose corn syrup and those made with sucrose.

"The calories will be the same, the impact on blood sugar is almost the same, and the risk of obesity will be the same," said Eric Rimm, professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

People who drank three servings a day of beverages with high-fructose corn syrup had higher levels of bad cholesterol and triglycerides and more liver fat, markers of decreased insulin sensitivity and increased heart-disease risk, after 12 days, according to a study by Stanhope and colleagues. So did the people who had the same amount of drinks sweetened with sucrose. The study involved 75 participants and was published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism in 2021.

A (slightly) less bad option?

The modestly higher percentage of fructose in drinks with high-fructose corn syrup could make those products slightly worse for health over the long term, compared with ones with sucrose, Stanhope said. This is because of how fructose and glucose are handled by the liver.

The glucose that isn't used by the liver is sent to the rest of the body to be used for energy. But when fructose gets to the liver, it largely stays there, she said. What isn't needed for energy is turned into fat. Fat in the liver can cause inflammation and raise the risk of cardiovascular disease and Type 2 diabetes.

"Maybe the negative consequences are slightly smaller, but don't think you're doing your body any favors," by picking soda with sucrose, she said.

Is there too much sugar in American diets?

U.S. dietary guidelines recommend that Americans limit their consumption of added sugars to 10% of daily calories. For someone with a 2,200-calorie-a-day diet, that could mean one 16.9-ounce bottle of classic Coca-Cola a day or about two-thirds of a pint of Ben & Jerry's Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough ice cream.

The American Heart Association recommends a limit of 6%. Americans average about 13%, federal data shows.

Sugar-sweetened beverages are the top source of added sugars in the American diet, making up 24% of daily added sugar intake, according to federal data. (Added sugars found in processed foods are distinct from sugar that occurs naturally in foods like fruit and dairy products.)

Christina Roberto, director of the Center for Food and Nutrition Policy at the University of Pennsylvania, said sugary beverages are more problematic than other kinds of sweets because they have little nutritional value and aren't filling.

"This is just pure liquid sugar," she said. "At least a Snickers bar has some nuts."

The drinks also deliver sugar quickly and in high doses, which causes them to act potently on the brain's reward system in a way that makes us crave them, said Ashley Gearhardt, a University of Michigan psychology professor who studies food addiction.

Write to Andrea Petersen at andrea.petersen@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

July 29, 2025 05:30 ET (09:30 GMT)

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