AMC popcorn ranges from about 270 to 1,100 calories per container, depending on size, oil, and toppings.
Kids (No Butter)
Regular (No Butter)
Refillable Tub
Plain, No Butter
- Lower calories per bite
- Salt varies by batch
- Best base for sharing
Leanest Choice
With Topping
- Oil-based drizzle
- Raises fat and kcal
- Ask for light pour
Richer Taste
Coconut Oil Batch
- Slight calorie shift
- Higher sat fat
- Same serving sizes
Check Label
Calories In Theater Popcorn At AMC: Sizes Compared
AMC posts detailed nutrition sheets for concessions. The numbers below cover plain popcorn without the buttery topping. Sizes vary by location, but the ranges are steady across the chain.
| Size (Approx. Volume) | Calories | Sodium (mg) |
|---|---|---|
| Kids — ~46 fl oz | 270 | 430 |
| Small — ~53 fl oz | 300 | 500 |
| Regular — ~95 fl oz | 550 | 930 |
| Large — ~140–150 fl oz | 810–870 | 1,320–1,450 |
| Refillable Tub — ~190 fl oz | 1,100 | 1,780 |
If you’re tracking intake across the day, anchoring your plan to your daily calorie intake makes these portions easier to budget when tickets include a combo.
Where These Numbers Come From
AMC publishes nutrition PDFs that list calories, fat, and sodium for each size and preparation. You’ll find entries for plain batches and for popcorn popped in coconut oil. Here’s the current hub where AMC hosts those sheets: Nutrition & Allergen Information. When you land there, open the “Nutrition Info” file for the latest chart for your location. For general label reading, the FDA explains how to use servings and percent Daily Value on the updated food label, which helps when you’re deciding how much to share or save for later; see the agency page on the Nutrition Facts label.
Butter Topping, Oil Choices, And Big Swings
Movie houses often use an oil-based “buttery” topping that bumps calories and saturated fat. AMC’s sheet lists plain popcorn by size and also offers versions popped in coconut oil. That second column matters, since oil type changes the grams of fat and the number on the line for saturated fat. If you like a drizzle, ask for a light pour and give the bag a shake so the flavor spreads without a heavy hit.
What Changes The Calorie Count The Most
Three details push the total up: container size, the oil used to pop the kernels, and any topping added at the pump. Size is obvious. Oil and topping deserve a closer look.
Oil: Canola Vs. Coconut
AMC lists both canola-based batches and coconut-oil batches in the same sizes. Calories are close, but saturated fat climbs in the coconut-oil runs. That’s why two same-size containers can taste identical yet land a little differently on a nutrition log.
| Size | Canola Oil (No Butter) | Coconut Oil (No Butter) |
|---|---|---|
| Small (~53 fl oz) | 300 | 300 |
| Regular (~95 fl oz) | 550 | 540 |
| Large (~140–150 fl oz) | 810–870 | 800–860 |
| Refillable Tub (~190 fl oz) | 1,100 | 1,080 |
Butter-Style Topping
Even a modest pour adds extra energy because fat carries 9 calories per gram. That’s straight from nutrition labeling rules. If you prefer the classic buttery taste, asking for a half portion and shaking the bag gives a similar flavor with less added fat. You can also flavor with a dry seasoning and skip the pump.
Portion Moves That Work In Real Life
Big tubs exist so a group can dip in. That’s handy when a refill is part of the deal. If you’re going solo, the small or the kids cup often pairs better with a drink. When you’re splitting a larger container, decide on a rough share before the previews roll. A simple “I’ll take a third” keeps the scoop honest without feeling fussy.
Share, Save, Or Swap
Got a refillable? Fill once, share across the row, then stash what’s left for the second act. If you prefer a richer taste, swap the full topping for a few pumps on the top layer only. Love the crunch but want fewer calories? Bring a small brown bag, portion your share, and enjoy without mindless dipping.
Sodium, Fiber, And What A “Serving” Means
Plain popcorn is a whole grain and brings some fiber. Air-popped popcorn is light for its volume—USDA notes that three cups land near 100 calories before toppings. That helps explain why a container can feel big but not weigh much. Sodium varies by batch, so numbers on the chart are averages, not hard caps.
Reading The AMC Sheet Fast
- Look at size first. Kids, small, regular, large, or tub—pick your lane.
- Scan calories. The middle sizes sit near 300–550; large and tubs rise fast.
- Check sodium. The salt number rides along with volume.
- Note the oil. Coconut-oil batches list higher saturated fat for the same size.
How To Order For Your Goals
Lowest Calories
Go plain, no topping, and pick the kids cup or small. If you crave extra flavor, sprinkle a dry seasoning and toss well. Ask the counter to leave room so you can shake without spills.
Balanced Treat
Regular size, light topping, and a plan to share. That keeps taste and intake in check while still feeling like a movie treat.
Group Night
Refillable tub, no topping on the base, and a small extra cup on the side with a light pour for anyone who wants the buttery hit. That way the whole tub isn’t drenched.
Making Sense Of Labels
On packaged foods you’ll see calories in bold and a serving size that reflects typical consumption. That same logic helps at the theater: think in scoops rather than the whole bucket. If you like numbers, AMC’s nutrition PDFs are the straight-from-the-source reference (AMC nutrition info). For a refresher on how labels handle calories and serving sizes, the FDA’s page on the Nutrition Facts label is handy.
Quick Picks And Realistic Swaps
If You Want The Taste Without A Big Calorie Hit
- Order small and ask for a light topping pour.
- Split a regular and pair it with a zero-calorie drink.
- Skip the pump and use a savory shaker; give it a good toss.
If Sodium’s Your Concern
Choose the smaller container and skip extra salt at the counter. Sip water during the show and keep the rest for the credits. If you’re sensitive to salt, steer toward plain batches and avoid cheese powders that can push sodium higher.
If You’re Tracking Macros
Popcorn leans carbohydrate with moderate fat when plain. Topping swings the fat share upward fast. That’s why the same bucket can fit different macros based on how it’s finished. For a baseline, USDA shows that air-popped popcorn has about 31 calories per cup and minimal fat, which is why volume feels big while calories stay modest.
Final Word On Choosing A Size
Pick the container that suits your plans and your appetite, then decide how much flavor you want from topping. Plain tastes great and lands lower on the calorie line. A light drizzle adds richness but doesn’t have to drench the whole bag. When in doubt, go smaller and enjoy every bite.
Want a structured refresher on calories and how they tie to weight goals? Try our calorie deficit guide next.