A grande Skinny Peppermint Mocha (nonfat milk, no whip) lands around 290 calories; size and syrup pumps shift the total.
Sugar (Short)
Calories (Grande)
Whip Adds
Short & Simple
- Nonfat milk
- Half-sweet syrup
- No whip
Best lean
Grande Half-Sweet
- Extra espresso shot
- Half peppermint + mocha
- No whip
Balanced
Venti Treat
- Nonfat milk
- Hold the whip
- Keep pumps light
Occasional
What Counts As A Skinny Peppermint Mocha?
At Starbucks, “skinny” isn’t an official winter menu item for peppermint drinks. In practice, people use it to mean a Peppermint Mocha made with nonfat milk and no whipped cream. That keeps the feel of the classic without the dairy fat or the topping.
Seasonal peppermint syrup in shops isn’t sugar-free, so the peppermint pumps still add sweetness. Starbucks lets you customize nearly every part of the drink in the app or at the counter, including milk type, syrup pumps, and the topping. Skipping whipped cream alone can save about 80–110 calories per Starbucks’ guidance.
How Many Calories Are In A Skinny Peppermint Mocha (By Size)?
Here’s a quick size-by-size view for the hot version with nonfat milk and no whip. Values reflect common nutrition listings for Starbucks beverages; store recipes can vary slightly.
| Size | Calories* | Recipe Note |
|---|---|---|
| Short (8 fl oz) | 160 | Nonfat milk, no whip |
| Tall (12 fl oz) | 240 | Nonfat milk, no whip |
| Grande (16 fl oz) | 290 | Nonfat milk, no whip |
| Venti (20 fl oz) | 400 | Nonfat milk, no whip |
*Numbers compiled from brand-based nutrition databases and Starbucks listings; skip-the-whip savings reflect Starbucks’ barista tips linked above.
Tall, Grande, And Venti In Plain Words
If you like a smaller cup, the tall is the easiest win at about 240 calories. A grande sits near 290 when you keep the nonfat, no-whip build. The venti pushes near 400 because the peppermint syrup and mocha portions scale with size.
Those counts match entries labeled “Peppermint Mocha with nonfat milk” and matching records that specify “no whip.” Starbucks also notes that skipping whipped cream cuts a big chunk of energy, which lines up with the spread you see above.
That single drink can eat up a big share of your daily added sugar limit, so sizing and sweetness tweaks matter.
Hot Versus Iced Skinny Peppermint Mocha
Iced versions use the same flavor base, so calories mostly track size and pumps. A tall iced Peppermint Mocha made with nonfat milk and no whipped cream often lands near 210 calories. Expect the iced grande to sit below the hot venti but above the hot tall because volume rises and syrup scales.
Why The Calories Shift So Much
Milk Choice Changes The Base
Starbucks lets you pick nonfat, 2%, whole, or nondairy options like almond, oat, coconut, or soy. Nonfat milk lowers calories compared with 2% or whole. Oat and coconut can add sweetness; almond is lean but tastes lighter. If you want the classic profile with fewer calories, nonfat is a safe bet.
Syrup Pumps Drive Sugar
The peppermint syrup and mocha sauce bring the holiday taste and most of the sugar. Ask for fewer pumps and the count drops. Half-sweet is a handy phrase that baristas understand. If you still want body, add an extra espresso shot; that deepens flavor without much sugar.
Whipped Cream Is Optional
Whipped cream is the easiest lever. Saying “no whip” keeps the top neat and trims a dose of calories. If you miss the foam, ask for a splash of nonfat cold foam; it gives you light texture for fewer calories than a full topping.
Simple Builds That Keep The Holiday Taste
Lean Classic (Hot)
Order a Peppermint Mocha, choose nonfat milk, set syrup to half-sweet, and say no whip. Pick short or tall if you want to stay well under 300 calories.
Bolder And Less Sweet
Order a grande, switch to half-sweet, ask for an extra espresso shot, and keep no whip. You get stronger coffee taste with fewer sugary sips.
Iced And Light
Order an iced Peppermint Mocha, choose nonfat milk, keep no whip, and try one fewer peppermint pump. A tall iced drink brings the vibe with a smaller sugar load.
Quick Tweaks And Typical Impact
Use these small moves to keep your Skinny Peppermint Mocha lean without losing the festive flavor.
| Tweak | Calorie Impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Skip whipped cream | −80 to −110 | Based on Starbucks’ guidance |
| Size down one step | −50 to −110 | Difference between sizes above |
| Ask half-sweet | Meaningful drop | Fewer peppermint and mocha pumps |
Sugar, Caffeine, And Expectations
A Skinny Peppermint Mocha still includes added sugars from the peppermint syrup and mocha sauce. U.S. guidance recommends keeping added sugars under 10% of daily calories—about 50 grams in a 2,000-calorie pattern—so a larger holiday drink can use most of that budget (CDC overview).
Caffeine sits near a standard mocha: one to two espresso shots by size. If you’re sensitive, ask for decaf espresso or make it half caf. You’ll still get the mint-and-chocolate notes without the buzz.
Ordering Tips That Work At The Register
Say The Size First
Start with short, tall, grande, or venti. That sets the syrup and milk volumes. Short is the stealth star for calorie control.
Set The Milk
Say “nonfat milk” next. If you like oat or almond, test it on a smaller cup to see how the sweetness lands for you.
Call The Sweetness
Ask for “half peppermint, half mocha,” or say “half-sweet.” Baristas hear this all season.
Drop The Topping
Finish with “no whip.” If you want a hint of creaminess, ask for a small splash of nonfat cold foam.
What If The Store Says There’s No Skinny Version?
No problem. “Skinny” can be shorthand that varies by drink. For this one, you’ll get the same result by ordering a Peppermint Mocha with nonfat milk and no whipped cream, then dialing back the pumps. That’s the plan most shops follow when a seasonal syrup doesn’t have a sugar-free option.
Smart Order, Same Holiday Vibe
You can enjoy the mint-meets-chocolate cup without blowing your day. Go smaller, keep nonfat milk, and skip the topping. If you want deeper coffee taste, add one more espresso shot and trim a pump. That’s how you keep flavor while keeping the numbers tidy. Want a deeper walkthrough of energy balance? Try our calorie deficit guide.