No. Sweet potato’s glycemic index is usually low to medium; boiling tends to lower GI while baking or roasting can push it higher.
Spike Risk: Boiled
Spike Risk: Steamed/Micro
Spike Risk: Baked/Roasted
Low‑GI Build
- Boiled cubes (½–1 cup)
- Skin on; add oil + lemon
- Pair with 20–30 g protein
Steady line
Balanced Plate
- 150 g baked or microwaved
- Big veg side + yogurt/beans
- Season, skip sugar glazes
Medium GL
Treat Mode
- Roasted wedges, small serve
- Add greens + protein
- Cool then reheat if time
Watch spikes
Does Sweet Potato Have A High Glycemic Index? Facts And Numbers
Short answer: it depends on how you cook it and how much you eat. In lab tests that use equal carbohydrate loads, sweet potato ranges from low to high GI based on method and cultivar.
| Preparation | Reported GI | GI Category |
|---|---|---|
| Boiled (Jamaican cultivars) | 41–50 | Low |
| Steamed (Beauregard, flesh) | 63 ± 3.6 | Medium |
| Baked (Beauregard, flesh) | 64 ± 4.3 | Medium |
| Baked (Jamaican cultivars) | 82–94 | High |
| Microwaved (Beauregard, flesh) | 66 ± 5.7 | Medium |
| Roasted (Jamaican cultivars) | 79–93 | High |
| Dehydrated (Beauregard, flesh) | 41 ± 4.0 | Low |
| Raw (flesh) | 32 ± 3.0 | Low |
GI isn’t a single number for all sweet potatoes. It shifts with cooking style, variety, and even how long the tuber sits after harvest. A large USDA ARS trial on the Beauregard variety put steamed, baked, and microwaved samples in the mid‑60s; a Jamaican study found boiled samples on the low end and baked or roasted on the high end. That spread explains why people report different readings at home.
Fiber blunts the curve by slowing starch digestion. Keep the skin when you can, and aim for your recommended fiber intake through the day instead of trying to cram it into one meal.
USDA ARS testing measured GI near 63–66 for steamed, baked, and microwaved Beauregard flesh using equal available‑carb loads. In other work on Caribbean cultivars, boiled landed low while baked and roasted climbed high. Method and cultivar both matter.
Glycemic Load: Portion Size Changes The Picture
GI ranks speed. Glycemic load (GL) adds dose: GL = GI × grams of available carbs ÷ 100. Low GL is ≤10, medium 11–19, high ≥20. That’s why a modest serving of a medium‑GI food can land softly, while a large serving of the same food can hit harder.
For the thresholds and formula, see the Linus Pauling Institute explainer. For carbs, typical USDA entries show ~17.7 g per 100 g boiled and ~20.7 g per 100 g baked, with 2.5–3.3 g fiber. GL uses available carbs, so subtract fiber before you do the math.
| Preparation & Portion | Available Carbs | Estimated GL |
|---|---|---|
| Boiled, 150 g | ~22.8 g | ~10 (low) |
| Baked, 150 g | ~26.1 g | ~17 (medium) |
| Roasted, 150 g | ~26.1 g | ~21 (high) |
What Raises Or Lowers Sweet Potato GI
Cooking Temperature And Time
Higher heat and longer time break down starch granules. That speeds digestion and bumps GI. Gentle, moist heat keeps more intact structure, which slows things down. Steaming or boiling works for that.
Variety, Flesh Color, And Age
Different cultivars store starch in different ways. Orange flesh types often carry more beta‑carotene and can skew a bit lower than dense, dry types. Storage time and curing also shift texture and sugars, which can nudge GI up or down.
Add‑Ins And Pairings
Protein, fat, and acids slow gastric emptying. Simple moves help: add salmon or chicken, spoon on Greek yogurt, finish with olive oil and lemon. You’ll feel the difference on a meter as the rise eases.
Cooling, Resting, And Reheating
Chilling cooked potatoes builds some resistant starch. Let wedges cool, then reheat. The change isn’t huge, but every little lever helps.
How To Eat Sweet Potato Without Spikes
Pick A Lower‑GI Base
Pick boiled cubes or a steamed mash on days you want a steadier line. Keep skins when the recipe lets you, and season with salt, herbs, and citrus instead of sugar.
Mind The Serving
Aim for 100–150 g on your plate. That’s about ½–1 medium potato, depending on size. If you want more, add non‑starchy veg to fill volume without loading carbs.
Build A Balanced Plate
Start with protein, add colorful veg, then place the sweet potato as the side. This simple order slows the rise and keeps energy steady.
Smart Cooking Ideas
Weeknight swap: microwave a whole potato for speed, then split and top with black beans, slaw, and a spoon of yogurt. Weekend treat: roast wedges, let them cool a bit, then toss with olive oil, chili, and lime.
Bottom Line: GI Isn’t Fixed, Your Plate Is
Sweet potato doesn’t wear one label. Boiled tends to sit low, steamed and microwaved land in the middle, and baked or roasted can run high. Portion and pairings decide how it plays out on a real plate.
If you like the caramelized flavor of baked wedges, keep the serving small and park them next to protein and greens. If you’re chasing a gentler rise, lean on boiled cubes or a steamed mash.
Want a broader carb check? Try our rice and blood sugar piece next.