One cup of chicken-and-rice soup ranges from about 60 to 220 calories, depending on broth, rice, and chicken amounts.
Brothy Bowls
Hearty Servings
Creamy Styles
Canned Convenience
- Ready-to-serve tends to land near 120 kcal per cup.
- Prepared condensed can dip lower when diluted.
- Watch sodium on labels.
Low-effort
Homemade Light
- Lean chicken, extra carrots/celery.
- ¼ cup cooked rice per cup of soup.
- Use low-sodium stock.
Everyday
Creamy Comfort
- Roux or cream thickens the base.
- Rice and chicken in bigger portions.
- Portion awareness matters.
Indulgent
Calories In Chicken-And-Rice Soup By Style
Calories swing based on three levers: broth strength, how much rice lands in each scoop, and the amount of chicken. A light bowl with lots of broth sits near the low end. A creamy base or a heavy hand with rice pushes the number up fast.
Packaged options give a helpful range. Many ready-to-serve cans hover near 120–130 calories per cup, while prepared condensed versions can land lower if you add equal water. Homemade pots cover a wider span because the cook controls portions of rice, chicken, and fat.
Fast Reference Table: Common Styles And Per-Cup Energy
This table lands early so you can scan first, then read the details that follow.
| Style | Per Cup (kcal) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Canned, Ready-To-Serve | ~120–130 | Brothy; typical entries around 127 kcal per 240–255 g cup (USDA-derived datasets). |
| Condensed, Prepared With Water | ~60–90 | Dilution lowers calories per cup; some listings show ~58 kcal for a 243 g serving. |
| Homemade, Light | ~150–190 | Lean chicken, ¼ cup cooked rice, veggies, low-fat stock. |
| Homemade, Hearty | ~190–220 | 2–3 oz chicken per cup and ⅓–½ cup cooked rice. |
| Creamy Or Butter-Enriched | ~250–350 | Roux, cream, or extra oil adds dense energy. |
Numbers for packaged bowls come from USDA-based listings, such as ready-to-serve chicken-rice soup and prepared condensed versions. For pantry staples used in homemade batches, you can ballpark rice at ~205 kcal per cooked cup using MyFoodData’s cooked white rice entry, and lean chicken breast at about 165 kcal per 100 g using its cooked chicken data.
Once you’ve got a sense of your bowl’s energy, snacks and sides fit better once you set your daily calorie needs.
What Changes The Calorie Number?
Rice volume. Rice is compact energy. One full cup cooked holds ~205 calories, so even a modest scoop can shift a serving by 50–100 calories. Smaller measures—like ¼ to ⅓ cup in each ladle—keep things lighter.
Chicken amount and cut. Lean breast keeps numbers tight at about 165 calories per 100 g. Dark meat or skin lifts fat grams and pushes energy up. Chopping meat finely spreads protein evenly so each cup feels balanced without over-pouring.
Broth concentration. Ready-to-serve cans are thicker than fully diluted condensed. Homemade stock varies. More reduction equals more flavor and slightly more calories per cup.
Fat additions. A tablespoon of oil or a creamy roux can swing a pot by hundreds of calories. Toasting the rice in a teaspoon of oil or using a starchy slurry gives body with fewer additions.
Label Clues For Store-Bought Cans
Scan the serving size first. Some labels list 1 cup, others use grams. Match your bowl to what the label calls a serving. Then check calories and sodium. Many cans land near 120–130 calories per 1 cup serving, but salt can be high. The American Heart Association suggests limiting daily sodium to 2,300 mg, with an ideal goal of 1,500 mg for most adults; that makes low-sodium picks helpful when you eat soup often (AHA guidance).
Build A Lighter Bowl At Home
Start with a tasty base. Simmer onion, celery, carrot, bay leaf, and peppercorns in stock. Add cooked, shredded chicken near the end so it stays tender. Stir in cooked rice right before serving so grains don’t swell and drink the pot dry.
Portion cues that help:
- Per cup of soup in the bowl, aim for ¼–⅓ cup cooked rice.
- Keep chicken near 2–3 oz per serving. That’s roughly 56–85 g.
- Skim fat from stock or choose boxed broth labeled low-sodium.
- Finish with lemon and herbs for brightness without extra energy.
Simple Home Math For One Cup
Here’s a quick way to estimate your serving at home. Add up rice, chicken, and any added fat. Broth and vegetables add plenty of volume with modest energy.
Example Tally
- ¼ cup cooked rice ≈ ~50 kcal
- 2 oz cooked chicken ≈ ~90–100 kcal
- 1 cup stock with vegetables ≈ ~10–30 kcal
- Optional teaspoon of oil ≈ ~40 kcal
That places a typical homemade cup near 150–220 calories. Skip the oil or reduce rice to lean even lower.
Ingredient Swaps That Save Calories
Rice shape and amount. Swap part of the white rice for riced cauliflower to hold body while trimming energy. Or use less rice but add more carrots and celery for texture.
Chicken choices. Shredded breast saves calories. If you like thigh meat, trim visible fat and keep portions steady.
Thickening tricks. A light cornstarch slurry adds silk without cream. A beaten egg streamed in at the end gives a richer mouthfeel with moderate calories.
Storage, Reheating, And Portion Control
Cook once, portion twice. Ladle into single-cup containers so lunch is set and the calories per serving stay consistent. Rice keeps soaking up broth in the fridge, so hold some back and add at reheat if you want a thinner bowl.
On the stove, bring to a gentle simmer and stir often so rice doesn’t grab the bottom. In the microwave, stir halfway to even out hot spots. Splash in extra stock to loosen if needed.
How Different Rice Types Compare
White long-grain keeps its shape and offers a clean texture. Brown rice adds fiber and a nuttier bite for similar calories per cooked cup. Wild rice is a seed; it’s chewier and can read leaner by volume because fewer grains fit in the spoon. If you’re counting energy, the biggest swing still comes from how much lands in each serving, not which grain you pick.
Calories Per Portion: Add-In Reference
Use this table later in the read when you’re dialing in portions for your pot or for serving bowls.
| Ingredient | Portion | Calories |
|---|---|---|
| Cooked White Rice | 1 cup (158 g) | ~205 |
| Cooked White Rice | ¼ cup | ~50 |
| Cooked Chicken Breast | 100 g | ~165 |
| Cooked Chicken Breast | 2 oz (56 g) | ~90–100 |
| Low-Sodium Chicken Broth | 1 cup | ~10–20 |
| Carrot + Celery + Onion | 1 cup mixed | ~35–50 |
| Olive Oil Or Butter | 1 tsp | ~40–45 |
| Cream Or Half-And-Half | 2 Tbsp | ~40–80 |
| Wild Rice Blend | ¼ cup cooked | ~40–45 |
Smart Serving Ideas
Pair your bowl with a crisp salad dressed with lemon and herbs. Skip heavy bread if you want to keep the meal tight on calories. When feeding a group, set rice on the side and let people spoon in their own amount. That way light eaters and hungry athletes both win.
Reader Checklist: Keeping Calories In Check
- Measure rice once. Eyeballing drifts up fast.
- Use lean meat and trim skin.
- Season with aromatics, citrus, and herbs.
- Pick low-sodium broth; taste salt at the table if needed.
- Portion before you sit down.
FAQ-Free Notes You Might Want
Why do canned numbers vary? Serving size, dilution, and recipe. Some entries use 240 g per cup; others list 255 g. A chunkier cup carries more rice and chicken by weight, so calories rise.
What if I swap noodles for rice? One packed cup of cooked egg noodles lands close to 220 calories. Smaller scoops cut energy quickly. The same portion rules apply.
Does homemade always beat canned? Not always on calories, but you control sodium and fat and can tune portions to your plan. That control often matters more than tiny calorie differences.
When Sodium Matters
Soups can carry a lot of salt, especially canned. If you’re watching numbers, look for “low-sodium” labels or dilute a thicker base with unsalted stock. The AHA daily sodium limits above give a clear target. Herbs, garlic, and acid brighten flavor without pushing milligrams up.
Wrap-Up And A Simple Next Step
Here’s the win: a cup can be as lean as a light broth with a small spoon of rice, or as hearty as a creamy bowl with extra grains and meat. Use the tables to set your target, then cook to that number. Want a deeper pantry playbook after this? Try our low-calorie foods list for more easy swaps.