Half a medium Hass avocado has about 114 calories, mostly from monounsaturated fat and fiber-rich flesh.
Smaller Half
Medium Half
Hefty Half
Basic Portion
- 2–3 slices (30 g)
- Great for toast
- About 48 kcal
Light
Everyday Half
- 68 g edible
- Works in bowls
- About 114 kcal
Standard
Share Or Fuel
- 85–100 g
- Split between two plates
- 136–160 kcal
Hearty
Calories In Half An Avocado: Serving Sizes Explained
Most folks eat the flesh from one side after removing the pit and skin. The energy you get from that portion sits in a narrow band. A smaller half lands near 80 calories. A medium Hass half averages 114 calories. A larger half can reach 160 calories when the edible weight gets close to 100 grams.
Why the spread? Calorie counts scale with edible grams. Nutrition databases report values per 100 grams, so once you know the weight of your portion, you can do clean math. Multiply the grams of flesh by 1.6 to estimate calories. That rule of thumb tracks the USDA-sourced 160 kcal per 100 g for raw avocado.
| Portion | Edible Weight (g) | Calories (kcal) |
|---|---|---|
| Half, small Hass | 50 | 80 |
| Half, medium Hass | 68 | 114 |
| Half, large Hass | 100 | 160 |
| Quarter avocado | 34 | 54 |
| 3 slices | 30 | 48 |
| 2 Tbsp mash | 30 | 48 |
Once you anchor the weight, planning gets easier and snacks fit better once you set your daily calorie needs. You can then decide whether your toast needs a thin spread or a full half.
What Drives The Calorie Count
Most of the energy in this fruit comes from fat. Fat carries 9 calories per gram. Protein and carbohydrate carry 4 per gram. A typical edible half has about 10–15 grams of fat, a few grams of carbohydrate, and a gram or two of protein. That mix explains why the number lands above 100 calories for a medium half.
The type of fat matters for heart health. Avocados lean toward monounsaturated fat, the same family linked with better lipid patterns when it replaces saturated fat.
Size, Variety, And Trim
Not every fruit is a Hass clone. Florida types are larger and hold more water, so a half can look big while landing near the same calories as a compact Hass. Trimming changes the math too. If you shave off the dark green layer next to the skin, you lose grams and nutrients. If you scoop deep and keep the bright green layer, your grams—and calories—climb a bit.
How To Weigh Or Estimate Your Portion
A scale gives the cleanest answer. No scale? Use cues. Three even slices are ~30 g. A quarter fruit is a golf-ball scoop, ~34 g. Two tablespoons of mash land near 30 g. Repeat those shapes and you’ll get repeatable numbers.
Peel, Pit, And Edible Weight
Only the flesh counts. The skin and seed can account for a third of the fruit by weight. That’s why a “half avocado” in conversation isn’t the same as a weighed edible half. When you log food, pick an entry that says “peeled” or “edible portion.”
Use The 1.6 Multiplier
Want a quick estimate without a database? Multiply your grams by 1.6. A 60-gram scoop comes to about 96 calories. An 85-gram half comes to about 136 calories. Weighing improves accuracy.
Avocado Calories In Meals
This fruit fits breakfast, bowls, tacos, and sushi. The dial is how much you add and what you replace. Swap it for butter on toast and you may net a similar total with a different fat pattern. Add a full half to a burrito bowl on top of rice and meat and the total can jump by 100–160 calories.
| Meal Add-On | Avocado Amount (g) | Calories Added |
|---|---|---|
| Toast, thin spread | 20 | 32 |
| Toast, generous spread | 40 | 64 |
| Salad, half fruit | 68 | 114 |
| Burrito bowl topping | 85 | 136 |
| Sushi roll slices | 30 | 48 |
| Guacamole, 2 Tbsp | 30 | 48 |
Nutrition Perks Beyond Calories
Calories tell only part of the story. A half brings fiber, potassium, folate, and vitamin E. The fiber helps with fullness, and the fat helps you absorb fat-soluble nutrients in the same meal. If you track potassium, avocados are a steady source; see the NIH’s potassium fact sheet for daily targets and cautions for kidney disease.
Fiber And Fullness
A medium edible half supplies around 4–5 grams of fiber. That’s a helpful nudge toward the 28–34 gram range many adults chase. Pair the fruit with eggs, beans, or Greek yogurt to add protein, which can further steady hunger.
Fats That Fit A Heart-Smart Pattern
Swap avocado for spreads and toppings that are heavy in saturated fat and you keep flavor while shifting your fat pattern. That simple trade is the aim for many heart-healthy eating plans.
Smart Portion Moves
Toast And Sandwiches
Build toast with measured slices. Two or three slices give you flavor without overdoing energy. For sandwiches, fan out thin slices and skip butter or mayo to trade calories, not stack them.
Bowls And Salads
Use a half when the rest of the bowl is light—greens, beans, grilled fish, salsa. When the base already carries rice, cheese, or creamy dressing, drop to a quarter and you’ll still taste it.
Ripeness, Storage, And Waste
Ripeness nudges density a little, not enough to change the math. Waste matters more. Stagger ripeness by buying a few at different stages. Chill ripe fruit to slow softening. For leftovers, press plastic wrap onto the cut surface or cover the mash with a thin layer of lemon juice and a snug lid.
Your Next Step
Want a deeper fiber tune-up to go with your avocado habit? Try our recommended fiber intake primer.