A standard 15-ounce can of chickpeas yields about 350–395 calories: ~352 drained; ~394 with liquid, with small brand-to-brand swings.
Sodium Load
Sodium Load
Sodium Load
Drained & Rinsed
- ~352 kcal per 15-oz can
- ~17.8 g protein
- ~16.2 g fiber
Clean taste
Drained Only
- Similar calories
- More sodium left
- Quicker prep
Fast
With Liquid
- ~394 kcal per can
- Use aquafaba
- Thicker soups
Rich texture
Calories In A Full Can Of Chickpeas: Rinsed Vs. With Liquid
Most pantry cans are 15 to 15.5 ounces. When you pour the beans into a strainer, shake off the brine, and give them a quick rinse, the drained solids weigh ~253 g. That drained can clocks in near 352 calories. If you use everything in the can—beans plus liquid—the total contents are ~448 g and land around 394 calories per can.
Those numbers come from lab-based nutrient tables that list calories for common serving sizes, including “1 can drained” and “1 can (total contents).” A 1-cup portion of canned chickpeas sits at ~211 calories, so two cups from a full can line up with the can-level totals.
Salt level, soak, and brand can nudge the weight a touch, which is why you’ll see a small range. The calorie math itself is stable because it’s grounded in gram weights.
Quick Reference Table: Cans, Weights, And Calories
Use this snapshot to match the exact portion you’re cooking with.
| Portion | Approximate Weight | Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Drained from a 15–15.5 oz can | ~253 g | ~352 kcal |
| Entire can with liquid | ~448 g | ~394 kcal |
| 1 cup canned (with liquid) | 240 g | ~211 kcal |
| 100 g canned, rinsed | 100 g | ~137 kcal |
| Half can, drained | ~125–130 g | ~175 kcal |
| Half can, with liquid | ~220–225 g | ~195–205 kcal |
How These Numbers Were Calculated
Two reference points keep everything consistent: calories per 100 g and calories per common household measures like cups and “per can.” For canned chickpeas, the drained-and-rinsed 100 g value sits near 137 calories, while a cup of the solids-and-liquids entry shows ~211 calories. Both values map cleanly to the can totals through simple proportion, and they’re based on lab assays made available through reputable nutrient databases (100 g drained & rinsed and the solids-and-liquids entry linked in the card above).
Food labels in the U.S. also follow standardized serving-size rules known as Reference Amounts Customarily Consumed, or RACC. Beans carry gram-based servings to help consumers make apples-to-apples comparisons; the regulation lives in 21 CFR 101.12.
What A Whole Can Delivers Beyond Calories
One drained can brings roughly 17.8 g protein and 16.2 g fiber alongside complex carbs and a little fat. That fiber load helps with appetite control and stool regularity, so many meal plans aim for steady daily intake; national targets for fiber give a helpful benchmark if you’re tracking recommended fiber intake.
Portion Planning From A Can
Recipe writers often call for “1 can chickpeas, drained.” In practice, that means ~1½ cups of beans once the liquid is out. If a salad needs a single cup, you’ll have a half-cup left—nice for a quick hummus, a sheet-pan roast, or a grain bowl add-in.
Cooking for one? Split the drained can into two airtight containers. Refrigerate both, and freeze the second for the week ahead. The texture holds up well in soups and stews after a freeze-thaw.
Drained Weight Vs. Net Weight
“Net weight” on the label includes beans and liquid. “Drained weight” is just the solids. Calories track the beans, not the salty brine. That’s why drained numbers line up with what you eat in most dishes.
Single-Serve Math Without A Scale
No scale handy? Use the cup numbers. Scooping ½ cup of canned chickpeas gives ~105 calories from the solids-and-liquids entry, or ~115–120 calories when you’re measuring just the beans in a packed half-cup. Either way, you’ll land in the same ballpark for daily tracking.
Label Reading That Actually Helps
Pick no-salt-added when you can. If you only find the regular can, a 20–40% sodium drop is realistic once you drain and rinse under running water for 30–60 seconds. That rinse doesn’t change the calorie count in a meaningful way; it just makes the beans taste cleaner and trims the salt load. Food-science presenters have reported ~36% from draining and ~41% from a good rinse at industry conferences, echoed by dietitian summaries.
When To Keep The Liquid
That silky liquid—often called aquafaba—adds body to soups and stews. If you keep it, use the higher “total contents” calories for your pot or batch. If you’re whipping aquafaba for a dessert, remember the liquid itself brings a little energy, but most of the calories still sit in the beans.
What You Get Per Can: Macros And Fiber
Here’s a simple view of the protein and fiber you’ll get from one can in the two common scenarios you’ll use at home.
| Scenario | Protein (g) | Fiber (g) |
|---|---|---|
| Drained & rinsed (≈253 g) | ~17.8 | ~16.2 |
| Total contents used (≈448 g) | ~22 | ~19–21 |
Why The Two Rows Look Close
Protein and fiber come from the beans themselves. The brine adds weight but not much macronutrient content. That’s why drained and “with liquid” calories are in the same neighborhood and the macros are only a little higher when the extra liquid bumps the gram weight.
Shopping Tips That Save Effort
Scan for “no-salt-added” or “low sodium” if you’d like to keep salt down without rinsing. If only regular cans are available, a rinse under cool water still trims the salt in a pinch. Brands occasionally list both drained and total contents on the label, which makes batch calorie math quick and tidy.
Batch Cooking Ideas
Two cans stretch across a week’s lunches: toss one with lemon, olive oil, and herbs; roast the other with paprika and garlic on a sheet pan. Both slam dunk into greens, grain bowls, or soups without fuss.
Calories From A Larger Can
Some markets stock 19-ounce or 28-ounce cans. The math scales cleanly. Multiply the 100 g number by the drained weight listed on the label. If you’re estimating, a 19-ounce can typically drains to ~320–340 g of beans, which puts you near 440–470 calories for the solids. A 28-ounce can often drains to ~470–500 g and lands close to 640–690 calories.
Cooking Liquid And Sodium
Keeping the liquid helps emulsify sauces and stews. If sodium is a concern, use no-salt-added cans or rinse and replace the brine with water or low-sodium stock. Tradeoffs are simple: slightly thicker texture with liquid kept, cleaner flavor and lower salt when drained.
Smart Pairings For Balanced Meals
For a protein-forward plate, add canned fish or grilled chicken to your chickpea bowl. For a plant-only plan, combine with quinoa, tahini, and greens. The beans bring carbs, protein, and fiber; the rest of the plate can supply extra protein or healthy fats to round things out.
Make The Math Work For Your Day
Split a can between lunch and dinner to spread fiber and calories evenly. If your day is higher in activity, keep the full can in a stew or curry and portion the leftovers into containers so tracking stays painless.
Accuracy Notes You Can Trust
The drained-can figure (~352 kcal) comes from a “1 can drained (253 g)” entry in a lab-based database that compiles USDA FoodData Central results. The “total contents” figure (~394 kcal) follows from the solids-and-liquids entry that lists calories per cup and per can. These are the same references used by nutrition trackers and registered dietitians in menu planning.
If you want to peek behind the label rules, the serving-size regulation mentioned earlier is a handy reference. It explains why beans show gram-based servings and how companies choose the numbers that appear on the panel.
Want More Help With Calories?
If you’re dialing in your daily targets, our short primer breaks the math down with examples—try this calorie deficit guide next.