How Many Calories Are In Frozen Fruit? | Real-World Numbers

Most frozen fruit lands around 60–100 calories per cup; brands and added sugar shift the total.

Why Frozen Fruit Calories Vary

Frozen fruit is usually picked ripe and frozen quickly, so the base calories come from its natural carbs and a little fiber. What swings the number is water content, fruit type, and whether the package is “no-sugar-added” or “sweetened.” Syrup or added sugar pushes the total up fast, while plain berries stay lean per cup.

Serving weight matters too. One brand’s “1 cup” might list 140 g while another lists 165 g. That alone can shift your log by 10–30 calories even when both are unsweetened.

Calories In Popular Frozen Fruits (Per Cup)

The chart below uses standard cup weights from widely sold packs and commodity entries. Values reflect unsweetened fruit unless marked. A quick scan shows most unsweetened options fall near the 60–100 kcal band, with berries at the lower end and tropical fruit a bit higher.

Frozen Fruit Per 1 Cup (kcal) Per 100 g (~kcal)
Strawberries, unsweetened 77 35
Blueberries, unsweetened 79 56
Mango chunks, unsweetened 90 64
Dark sweet cherries, unsweetened 99 71
Pineapple chunks, unsweetened 83 50
Pineapple chunks, sweetened (syrup) 211 86

Those per-100-gram figures are back-calculated from the same source serving weights so you can compare brands side-by-side without changing your portion size.

Spotting The “No-Sugar-Added” Label

Flip the bag. If the ingredients list only shows fruit, you’re likely in that 60–100 kcal range per cup. If you see sugar, syrup, or juice concentrate, expect a jump, especially with pineapple or berries packed in syrup.

Where These Numbers Come From

Calorie values in the table reflect commodity and retail entries indexed by MyFoodData, which compiles and maps to USDA FoodData Central. “Unsweetened” blueberry cups average about 79 kcal, while strawberry cups sit near 77 kcal; pineapple varies most by pack type. Sources: frozen strawberries and frozen blueberries commodity pages; sweetened pineapple and sweetened berries show how syrup changes the total.

Portion Size, Cups, And Real-World Logging

Packages can call the same cup different weights. If your plan is precise, weigh once, then keep using the same bowl or scoop. It also helps to frame fruit portions against your daily calorie needs so smoothies and desserts fit without surprises.

How Frozen Fruit Fits Into A Healthy Plate

Frozen counts the same as fresh toward fruit targets. The USDA’s MyPlate framework puts adults near 1.5–2 cups per day depending on total energy needs, and one cup of raw, frozen, or cooked fruit counts as a cup toward that target. You’ll find the official breakdown under the Fruit Group page from MyPlate.

Does Freezing Change Nutrition?

In short, not much you need to worry about. Several analyses show many vitamins remain stable during frozen storage; in some cases vitamin levels can be similar to fresh. One ARS study on vitamin C stability in frozen produce helps explain why: fast freezing slows the reactions that break it down.

Fruit-By-Fruit Calorie Notes

Strawberries

Unsweetened frozen strawberries hover around 77 kcal per cup with a generous fiber hit and a strong vitamin C line on the label. “Sweetened” sliced packs are a different story: a cup can jump above 200 kcal because of added sugar.

Blueberries

Plain frozen blueberries land near 79–80 kcal per cup. Wild blueberries (same cup size) look similar for calories but bring extra fiber per portion, which can keep bowls satisfying. Sweetened blueberry cups climb near 195 kcal.

Mango

Most unsweetened mango chunks sit close to 90 kcal per cup. Brands vary a little by cut size and water content, so check the serving weight listed for your bag.

Cherries

Frozen dark sweet cherries usually come in around 95–100 kcal per cup, with 2–3 g fiber. The cup weight often shows 140 g on retail labels; that’s handy when you prefer logging by grams.

Pineapple

Here’s where pack style matters most. Unsweetened cups sit near 80–85 kcal. Syrup-packed or sweetened cups can cross 200 kcal, more than doubling the number.

Label Smarts That Save Calories

Scan The Ingredients

Look for a single ingredient—fruit. That usually pairs with the lower calorie numbers shown earlier.

Check Serving Weight

Two cups on two bags aren’t equal if one lists 165 g and the other 140 g. When calories feel off, this is the common reason.

Watch “Sweetened,” “In Syrup,” And Juice Concentrate

All three terms signal extra sugar. That adds flavor, but it also adds a lot of energy per spoonful.

How Sweetening Changes The Math

Here’s a side-by-side snapshot showing how the same fruit shifts when syrup enters the picture.

Fruit No-Sugar-Added (kcal/cup) Sweetened Or Syrup (kcal/cup)
Strawberries 77 245
Blueberries 79–80 ~195
Pineapple 83 211

The gap comes from added sugars, not a change in the fruit itself.

Simple Ways To Keep Calories In Check

Build A Smarter Smoothie

Anchor with 1 cup frozen berries, add a scoop of yogurt or milk, then top with chia or oats if you need extra staying power. Skip juice—use cold water or unsweetened milk to keep the tally tight.

Turn Frozen Fruit Into A Quick Dessert

Microwave a cup of cherries or mango until just soft and finish with a spoon of plain yogurt. It eats like a sundae with a fraction of the calories you’d get from syrup-packed fruit.

Make Breakfast Bowls That Satisfy

Warm oats plus a cup of frozen blueberries hits that 300–350 kcal sweet spot for many plans, especially if you also add nuts or seeds for texture.

Serving Size FAQs—Without The Fluff

What Counts As One Cup?

For fruit goals, a cup of raw or frozen fruit counts as one cup toward your daily fruit target in the Fruit Group. If you use dried fruit, half a cup counts as a cup thanks to the lower water content.

Any Reason To Pick Fresh Over Frozen For Vitamins?

Pick what fits your budget and taste. Much of the vitamin content holds up in the freezer; research on vitamin C stability in frozen produce backs that up.

Bottom Line On Frozen Fruit Calories

Plain frozen fruit is a low-calorie, high-fiber way to hit fruit goals. Most cups sit near 60–100 kcal. If calories are coming in higher than you expected, it’s almost always because of sweeteners or heavier listed serving weights.

Want a fuller walk-through? Try our calories and weight loss guide.