How Many Calories Are In A Single Shrimp? | Smart Count

One medium cooked shrimp has about 7 calories; size and cooking style shift the single shrimp calorie count.

Calories in one shrimp: quick math that works

Here’s the plain math you came for. A common 3-ounce cooked serving sits near 100 calories with about 21 grams of protein. That comes to roughly 1.2 calories per gram cooked. A typical medium shrimp weighs about 6–7 grams after cooking, which puts a single piece near 7 calories. Smaller shrimp land a touch lower, while large and jumbo pieces climb into the low teens.

Those estimates help you count fast at the stove or the table. You can get even closer by weighing a few cooked pieces, averaging the weight, and multiplying by the 1.2 figure. That quick check accounts for variety across species, brining, and moisture loss.

Calories by shrimp size and common styles

The table below uses cooked, edible weight and a 1.2 calories-per-gram baseline from a standard serving. Treat the numbers as practical estimates, not lab values.

Shrimp size & style Est. cooked weight (g) Calories per shrimp
Small (51–60/lb), boiled 5 ~6
Medium (41–50/lb), boiled 6–7 ~7–8
Large (31–40/lb), boiled 9–10 ~11–12
Jumbo (21–25/lb), boiled 14–16 ~17–19
Grilled, brushed with 1 tsp oil per 6 +0 +~10–15 total per 6
Light breading, air-fried +1–2 +~10–20
Tempura or deep-fried +2–3 +~35–60

Keep your add-ons honest. A teaspoon of oil split across six grilled shrimp adds about 40 calories to the batch, while a creamy dip can add as much again. For a lean plate, pair shrimp with leafy sides or other low-calorie high-protein foods rather than extra starch.

What changes the count

Cooking method

Water-based methods like boiling or steaming stick closest to the per-shrimp numbers above. Pan-searing and grilling add a little from oil. Frying adds the most because breading holds oil and batter adds mass.

Sauces and dips

Cocktail sauce lands on the lighter side. Mayo-heavy dressings, queso, and creamy aioli swing far higher per tablespoon. Keep sauces on the side and measure with a spoon instead of a pour.

Shells and yield

Counts on packages refer to pieces per pound before cooking, often with shells. Once peeled and cooked, edible weight drops. That’s why a cooked serving is the best common yardstick for your math.

Shrimp nutrition beyond calories

Per cooked 3 ounces, shrimp pack about 21 grams of protein with minimal fat or carbs. That’s why a single shrimp gives a neat protein bump for very few calories. For a safety check on mercury and weekly servings, the EPA–FDA fish advice lists shrimp among the Best Choices for routine meals. For the base serving numbers used in this guide, see the FDA seafood nutrition chart.

Micronutrients in play

You’ll get selenium, iodine, B-12, and modest omega-3s. Salt levels depend on processing and cooking water. If you’re watching sodium, cook without brines and season at the table.

How to weigh and count shrimp at home

Step-by-step check

  1. Cook the batch as you like, then drain and pat dry.
  2. Weigh five cooked shrimp together on a kitchen scale.
  3. Divide by five to get grams per piece.
  4. Multiply by 1.2 to estimate calories per shrimp.
  5. Multiply by the number of shrimp you plan to eat.

When you don’t have a scale

Use averages. If you’re eating six medium shrimp, call it 45–50 calories. If they’re large, call six pieces 65–70 calories. If they’re breaded, bump the total by a quick 60–120 calories depending on how heavy the crust looks.

Portion guide you can use at the table

Here’s a handy range for common dishes. The calories include typical sauces or coatings unless noted.

Dish Typical portion Approx calories
Shrimp cocktail 6 medium + 2 tbsp sauce ~90–120
Grilled skewers 6 large + herbs ~120–140
Stir-fry with vegetables 12 small + 1 cup veg ~180–220
Taco night 6 medium + salsa ~200–260 (with tortillas)
Tempura platter 4 jumbo, battered ~320–480
Light salad topper 8 medium, plain ~55–65 (shrimp only)

How many calories are in a single shrimp: real-world tips

When you buy

Shop by count per pound, not marketing names. A bag marked 21/25 holds about twenty-one to twenty-five raw shrimp per pound; those cook into the jumbo range used above. If you plan a snack, pre-portion six to eight cooked pieces per container so tracking stays simple.

When you cook

Keep a tiny bowl for oil and use a measuring spoon. Toss shrimp with just enough to glisten, not to pool on the pan. Dry spices and citrus build flavor for almost no calories.

When you track

Log by cooked weight when the app allows. If your app lists only raw entries, weigh raw first and apply the recipe’s cooked yield once. That one habit keeps your single-shrimp math consistent across recipes.

Make shrimp work for different goals

Lower-calorie plate

Go with boiled or grilled shrimp, load the plate with crunchy veg, and limit oil to a measured teaspoon per six pieces. Skip breading on weeknights.

Muscle-friendly meal

Double the shrimp count or add a second lean protein. Slide in fruit or potatoes for carbs if you trained that day.

Sodium-aware choice

Pick fresh or frozen shrimp without brine, cook in unsalted water, and season with herbs, garlic, chili, and lemon at the end.

Bottom line on single-shrimp calories

A single medium shrimp sits near 7 calories when cooked plain. Large pieces rise into the low teens. Breading and deep frying move that number far faster than grilling or steaming. If you weigh a few cooked shrimp once, you’ll have a house number you can trust for quick, repeatable tracking. Want a broader nutrition refresher to tie it all together? Try our calories and weight loss guide.