If you’ve been told you have prediabetes, you’re essentially getting an early warning from your metabolism. Your body is having a harder time managing blood sugar, but you still have a powerful window to reverse or slow that process. One of the most effective levers you can pull is sugar reduction. Not just the obvious desserts, but the quiet added sugars in yogurt, sauces, coffee drinks, and “healthy” snacks. This is where choosing the right sweeteners becomes a practical daily skill rather than a theoretical nutrition lesson. This guide is written to help you read labels like a pro, understand which sweeteners are typically friendlier for prediabetes, and use options like monk fruit and stevia in a way that supports your long-term health, not just your next A1c test. Before comparing sweeteners, it helps to be clear on what your body needs in prediabetes. In general, the “best” sweeteners for prediabetes: No sweetener is a magic cure. The goal is to create a food environment where your blood sugar isn’t being pushed and pulled all day long. Sweeteners can support that, or quietly undermine it, depending on how you use them. When you pick up a packaged product, use this simple three-step check: On the Nutrition Facts panel, look at: As a working rule for everyday foods (not occasional treats), many clinicians encourage aiming for 0–5 g added sugar per serving, especially if you’re having that food more than once a day. Ingredients are listed in descending order by weight. To understand what’s sweetening your food, scan for: For prediabetes, the goal is to minimize the first group and, when you want sweetness, lean on the second group in a way that agrees with your body and your health care team’s guidance. Many “no sugar added” or “lightly sweetened” products use unrealistically small serving sizes. If you usually eat double the serving, double the sugars and sweeteners in your mental math. Monk fruit (luo han guo) is a small green fruit from Southeast Asia. Its intense sweetness comes from natural compounds called mogrosides, which are many times sweeter than sugar yet contribute essentially no calories and have a negligible glycemic effect at typical use levels. MonkVee’s monk fruit sweeteners, for example, are designed to be 100% natural, zero-calorie, and zero-glycemic, which aligns well with the metabolic goals in prediabetes. Most monk fruit products are actually blends. On the ingredient list, you might see: For prediabetes, look for: If you’re sensitive to digestive changes, start with small amounts and see how you feel, especially if the blend includes sugar alcohols. Stevia comes from the leaves of Stevia rebaudiana. The sweet components, called steviol glycosides, are many times sweeter than sugar and provide negligible calories and carbohydrates per serving. Most retail stevia products are also blends. Common ingredients include: If you’re tightly managing carbs for prediabetes, look for: Again, introduce gradually if you’re new to it, and pay attention to how you feel in terms of digestion and cravings. Sugar alcohols (also called polyols) include erythritol, xylitol, sorbitol, mannitol, and others. They are partially resistant to digestion, so they often contribute fewer calories and have a lower glycemic impact than table sugar. Erythritol is commonly paired with monk fruit or stevia because it provides bulk and a sugar-like texture. Key points: Current research continues to evolve. It’s reasonable to use erythritol-containing products in moderation while staying informed and working with your health care team, especially if you have cardiovascular risk factors. Allulose is a “rare sugar” that tastes similar to sugar but is absorbed poorly and mostly excreted, contributing very few calories and having minimal impact on blood glucose and insulin at typical intakes. For prediabetes, allulose-based products can be another tool, especially in baking, but as with all sweeteners, the focus should stay on overall diet quality, not just the sweetener swap. Honey, maple syrup, coconut sugar, date sugar, and similar sweeteners are often perceived as healthier because they’re less processed and may contain trace minerals or antioxidants. From a blood sugar standpoint, however, they still behave primarily as sugar. For someone with prediabetes, they can raise blood glucose and insulin similarly to table sugar when used in comparable amounts. That doesn’t mean you can never have them. It means: Instead of searching for a single “best sweetener,” think in terms of a layered strategy that supports your metabolic health and your quality of life. Our taste buds adapt. If you gradually reduce how sweet your foods and drinks are, your brain’s “normal” resets. This helps reduce cravings and makes it easier to enjoy less-sweet whole foods. Practical examples: Places where sugar quietly adds up: These are perfect spots to swap in monk fruit or stevia-based sweeteners. A zero-calorie, zero-glycemic blend can remove dozens of grams of sugar from your day without feeling deprived. Having prediabetes doesn’t require perfection. It does reward consistency. Many people find success with an approach like: This pattern can help keep your overall glycemic load lower while preserving cultural and social food traditions. Food packaging can be confusing. Here’s how common front-of-pack phrases translate for someone with prediabetes. People with prediabetes can vary in how they respond to different sweeteners and products. If you have access to a home glucose meter or continuous glucose monitor (CGM), you can run simple personal experiments: Share any patterns or concerns with your health care provider or dietitian; they can help you interpret the data in context with your medications, activity level, and overall diet. For someone living with prediabetes, the “best” sweeteners are those that help you: Monk fruit and stevia-based sweeteners, often blended with ingredients like erythritol or allulose, can be powerful tools because they offer sweetness with little to no glycemic impact. Used thoughtfully, they can help you transition away from a high-sugar pattern while you build a diet centered on vegetables, high-quality protein, healthy fats, and minimally processed carbohydrates. If you’re just starting, you don’t need to overhaul everything overnight. Begin with the foods and drinks you sweeten every day, learn to read labels through a prediabetes lens, and let your taste buds adjust gradually. Over months—not days—you can create a new normal where your sweet tooth and your blood sugar are finally on the same team.Why Sweeteners Matter So Much in Prediabetes
First Principles: What Prediabetes Actually Needs From a Sweetener
How to Read Labels for Prediabetes: A Quick Framework
1. Scan the “Total Sugars” and “Added Sugars” Lines
2. Read the Ingredient List for Sweetener Names
3. Notice Serving Size vs. Real-Life Portion
Monk Fruit: A Zero-Calorie Sweetener That Respects Blood Sugar
Why Monk Fruit Is Often a Strong Fit for Prediabetes
How to Read Labels for Monk Fruit Products
Stevia: Plant-Based Sweetness With Minimal Glycemic Effect
Why Stevia Can Work Well in Prediabetes
Label Tips for Stevia Products
Erythritol and Other Sugar Alcohols: When They’re Useful
Erythritol in Particular
Label Tips for Sugar Alcohols
Allulose and Other Emerging Sweeteners
What About Natural Sugars Like Honey or Coconut Sugar?
Building a “Sweetener Strategy” for Prediabetes
1. Lower the Sweetness Baseline Over Time
2. Use Zero-Glycemic Sweeteners Where They Have the Biggest Impact
3. Keep “Real Sugar” for Truly Special Occasions
Practical Label Guide: Common Sweetener Phrases Decoded
“No Sugar Added”
“Sugar-Free”
“Reduced Sugar”
“Keto” or “Low-Carb”
How to Test Your Personal Response
Putting It All Together