Fruit calories vary by type and portion; most fresh fruits fall between 30–90 calories per 100 grams.
Light Picks (per 100 g)
Most Fruits (per 100 g)
Energy‑Dense (per 100 g)
Fresh Whole & Sliced
- Use 100 g checks to compare
- Skins add fiber; same kcal
- Chilled wedges feel satisfying
Low kcal
Blended Smoothies
- Start with 150–200 g fruit
- Add liquid first; then ice
- Watch honey or nut butter
Watch add‑ins
Dried & Trail Mix
- Small portions pack energy
- Sugars concentrate as water drops
- Pair with nuts for staying power
Calorie dense
Calorie counts in fruit aren’t one-size-fits-all. Water, sugar, and serving weight drive the number you see on your tracker. This guide puts common fruits on the same 100‑gram footing, then shows what a typical piece adds to your day. You’ll also see how dried fruit and smoothies change the math, and simple ways to build snacks that fit your goal.
How Many Calories Are In Different Fruits Per 100 Grams
Comparing per 100 grams levels the field. A 100‑gram slice of watermelon lands near 30 kcal, while the same weight of banana is closer to 89 kcal. Most everyday picks cluster in the 45–65 kcal band, with outliers on both ends. Drying removes water and concentrates sugars, so dried fruit sits far higher per bite than fresh.
| Fruit | kcal / 100 g | Typical Serving |
|---|---|---|
| Apple (raw, with skin) | 52 | 1 medium (182 g) ≈ 95 kcal |
| Banana (raw) | 89 | 1 medium (118–126 g) ≈ 105–112 kcal |
| Orange (raw) | 47 | 1 medium (154 g) ≈ 80 kcal |
| Grapes (red/green) | 67 | 3/4 cup (126 g) ≈ 90 kcal |
| Blueberries | 57 | 1 cup (148 g) ≈ 84 kcal |
| Strawberries | 32 | 8 medium (147 g) ≈ 50 kcal |
| Blackberries | 43 | 1 cup (144 g) ≈ 62 kcal |
| Raspberries | 52 | 1 cup (123 g) ≈ 64 kcal |
| Cherries, sweet | 63 | 21 cherries (140 g) ≈ 100 kcal |
| Mango | 60 | 1 cup pieces (165 g) ≈ 99 kcal |
| Pineapple | 50 | 2 slices, 3" dia (112 g) ≈ 50 kcal |
| Kiwi | 61 | 2 medium (148 g) ≈ 90 kcal |
| Pear | 57 | 1 medium (166 g) ≈ 100 kcal |
| Peach | 39 | 1 medium (147 g) ≈ 60 kcal |
| Plum | 46 | 2 medium (151 g) ≈ 70 kcal |
| Grapefruit | 42 | 1/2 medium (154 g) ≈ 60 kcal |
| Watermelon | 30 | 2 cups diced (280 g) ≈ 80 kcal |
| Cantaloupe | 34 | 1/4 medium (134 g) ≈ 50 kcal |
| Honeydew | 36 | 1/10 medium (134 g) ≈ 50 kcal |
| Pomegranate | 83 | 1/2 cup arils (87 g) ≈ 72 kcal |
| Avocado | 160 | 1/2 medium (100 g) ≈ 160 kcal |
| Dates (Deglet Noor, dried) | 282 | 2 large (48 g) ≈ 133 kcal |
| Raisins (dried grapes) | 299 | 1/4 cup (40 g) ≈ 120 kcal |
| Prunes (dried plums) | 240 | 5 prunes (50 g) ≈ 120 kcal |
| Apricots, dried | 241 | 1/4 cup halves (35 g) ≈ 84 kcal |
These figures come from standard database entries and the FDA’s raw fruit poster for serving weights. Variety and ripeness nudge the numbers, but the pattern holds: more water means fewer calories per bite.
Fruit also helps you reach the recommended fiber intake, so that bowl does more than fill calories.
Serving Sizes And What Counts As A Cup
Labels and apps often show grams, cups, or piece counts. The USDA’s MyPlate defines what “counts as a cup” in the Fruit Group so you can log portions without a scale. One cup of fruit, a half cup of dried fruit, or a cup of 100% juice all count as one cup toward daily fruit. Those units don’t always match calories one‑for‑one, but they make planning easier.
Real fruit varies in size. A “medium” apple might weigh 150–190 grams; a banana might range from 100 to 140 grams. When you want precision, weigh once or twice to learn your usual pieces, then eyeball with confidence.
The FDA’s fruit poster lists common serving weights and calories for store favorites. It’s a handy cross‑check when you don’t have a label.
Fresh, Dried, Or Juice: Calorie Trade‑Offs
Fresh fruit carries more water and more volume for the calories. Dried fruit shrinks water away and concentrates sugars, so the same weight can deliver four to ten times as many calories. Juice removes fiber and pours fast; the energy adds up quicker than chewing whole pieces.
Fresh Vs Dried, Side By Side
Here’s how common pairs compare per 100 grams. Notice how the dried versions cluster far higher. If you like trail mix, small scoops go a long way.
| Fruit Pair | Fresh kcal / 100 g | Dried kcal / 100 g |
|---|---|---|
| Grapes → Raisins | 67 | 299 |
| Plums → Prunes | 46 | 240 |
| Apricots → Dried Apricots | 48 | 241 |
| Apples → Dried Apples | 52 | 243 |
| Bananas → Banana Chips | 89 | 519 |
That jump is great when you need compact fuel, like hiking. For everyday snacking, fresh fruit lets you eat a bigger bowl for the same calories.
Where Juice Fits
Juice can be part of a balanced day, yet it’s easy to sip past your target. A typical 240‑milliliter glass of orange juice lands near 110 kcal, while an orange sits closer to 80 kcal. The MyPlate page on fruit shows what counts as a cup; if you’re tracking calories, pour into a measured glass and stop there.
See what counts as a cup across fresh fruit, dried fruit, and juice.
Low‑Calorie Fruits For Big, Satisfying Bowls
Pick fruits with high water content when you want volume. Watermelon, strawberries, cantaloupe, and honeydew are standouts. Citrus segments, peaches, nectarines, and blackberries also sit on the lighter side per bite.
Build a large bowl by mass, not just by pieces. Aim for 250–300 grams total to keep calories modest while the bowl looks generous.
- Watermelon or cantaloupe as a base
- Strawberries or blackberries for color and bite
- Citrus wedges for brightness
- Cubes of pineapple for tang without much cost
Higher‑Calorie Fruits And Smart Uses
Bananas, mango, grapes, pomegranate arils, and kiwi bring more energy per bite. Avocado is the outlier, with calories coming mainly from fat. Dried fruit packs the most energy in the smallest space.
Use these when you need staying power: blend half a banana into a smoothie, toss mango into yogurt, or sprinkle a spoon of raisins over oatmeal. You get flavor and fuel without overdoing it.
How To Estimate Fruit Calories Fast
Use three quick checks. First, learn the per 100‑gram number for your usual picks. Second, weigh a typical piece once to set your mental model. Third, scale up or down in your head: 150 grams at 50 kcal per 100 grams is about 75 kcal.
A handful estimate helps on busy days. For berries, one loose cup hovers around 60–85 kcal. For melon, two heaping cups sit near 80–100 kcal. For sliced pineapple, a couple of rings are roughly 50 kcal.
Build A Fruit Snack That Fits Your Calories
Start with 150–200 grams of fresh fruit. Add protein or creaminess if you like, then finish with crunch. The extras swing the math, so measure once, then repeat that combo next time.
- Base: 150 g strawberries (≈48 kcal) or 200 g watermelon (≈60 kcal).
- Protein: 1/2 cup plain Greek yogurt (≈80 kcal).
- Flavor: 1 tsp honey (≈21 kcal) or a squeeze of lime (≈0 kcal).
- Crunch: 1 tbsp chopped nuts (≈50 kcal) or 1/4 cup low‑sugar granola (≈110–130 kcal).
Common Missteps And Easy Fixes
Guessing big pieces. A giant apple can be 230 grams. Weigh a few times to learn your true “medium.”
Pouring juice freely. Use a 240‑milliliter glass and treat it like any other calorie source.
Trail mix by the handful. Pack tablespoons, not cups. Dried fruit piles on fast.
Calling fruit “free.” Fruit is nutrient‑dense and worth eating. It still counts toward your day.
Your Quick Takeaway
Most fresh fruits land between 30 and 90 kcal per 100 grams. Pick fresh for volume, dried for compact energy, and shape portions to match your plan. With a couple of anchor numbers in your head, you can build bowls and snacks that hit the sweet spot.
Want a simple plan for your day? Try our daily calorie intake guide.