How Many Calories Are There In A Bowl Of Soup? | Quick Facts Guide

Most bowls land between 60–300 calories per cup of soup, with broth-based bowls on the low end and creamy or starchy styles on the high end.

Soup can be a light starter or the whole meal. The number on your bowl hangs on three things: the base (broth vs. cream), the fillers (protein and starch), and the serving size. One cup is the usual label size, but a home bowl often pours 1½–2 cups. Keep that in mind when tallying.

What Counts As One Bowl?

Most nutrition labels call one serving 1 cup (240 ml). Many cereal-style bowls pour more. If you ladle to the brim, you may be closer to 1½ cups (about 360 ml). Restaurants often serve even more. For quick math: measure your favorite bowl once with water, note the fill line, and use that as your baseline.

Calories Per Bowl By Common Soup Types

Here’s a broad look at typical 1-cup ranges. These aren’t brand-specific; they show patterns you can expect across kitchens and shelves.

Soup Type (1 Cup) Typical Calories Typical Sodium
Clear Broth/Stock 10–60 kcal 100–400 mg
Chicken Noodle (ready-to-serve) 70–120 kcal 500–800 mg
Vegetable (brothy) 60–120 kcal 400–700 mg
Tomato (condensed prepared) 140–180 kcal 600–900 mg
Bean/Lentil (brothy) 150–220 kcal 400–700 mg
Cream-Based (mushroom, chowder) 200–350 kcal 600–1,000+ mg

Once you’ve checked the bowl size, the next swing factor is density. Noodles, potatoes, cream, and cheese lift the count. Lean protein and veg add staying power with a smaller bump. Snacks and sides matter too, but the bowl itself is where most calories sit.

Planning meals gets easier once you set your daily calorie needs. With a target, a broth-based starter might fit a lighter day, while a bean-heavy stew can carry a full lunch.

How Different Bases Change The Number

Broth-First Bowls

Clear stock with vegetables sits on the low end. Plain vegetable broth can drop near 10 calories per cup, and even with carrots, celery, and herbs, you usually stay in a modest range. Salt content can still be high in packaged cartons, so check labels if you’re watching sodium.

Chicken Noodle And Similar

Ready-to-serve chicken noodle commonly lands around 80–120 calories per cup with a wide sodium range. A brand listing of 80 calories per cup is common for leaner recipes, while chunkier styles push higher.

Tomato-Based Styles

Condensed tomato that’s prepared with water tends to sit around the mid range for calories, often near 150 per cup. Add milk instead of water and the number climbs. Creamy tomato bisque or versions finished with cream move even higher.

Creamy Chowders And Mushroom

When the base is butter, cream, or roux, the bowl gets dense. A single cup can reach 250–350 calories, and restaurant portions can pour double that. If you’re after the creamy mouthfeel, a splash of milk or a swirl of yogurt can get you close with fewer calories than heavy cream.

Bean, Lentil, And Pea

Legumes bring protein and fiber, so these bowls feel filling. A cup often lands in the 150–220 range, depending on added oil and starch. Top with a spoon of grated cheese or a drizzle of olive oil and you’ll nudge it further up.

Close Variant: Calories In One Bowl Of Soup By Type And Size

You’ll see two common serving sizes on labels: 1 cup and 1 can. If your bowl matches the can, you might be eating 1.5–2 cups. Multiply the label number by your true portion. When dining out, ask for the ladle size if you track closely, or estimate from the shape of the bowl and the depth of the pour.

What Drives Big Swings Between Brands?

Two recipes with the same name can differ a lot. One chicken noodle might list 80 calories per cup with lean broth and extra veg. Another uses more oil or dark meat and lands closer to 120. Tomato styles vary with added sugar and cream. Beans and lentils change with added oil, ham, or sausage. Read the per-cup line first, then scan fat and carbs to see where the energy comes from.

Label Facts You Can Trust

Branded cartons disclose calories and sodium per serving, and that’s the fastest way to size up a bowl. For a sense check on classic chicken-noodle styles, compare a carton that lists 80 calories per cup. For sodium awareness across all soups, federal guidance caps a day at less than 2,300 mg for teens and adults; one generous bowl can eat into a good chunk of that, so balancing the rest of the day helps.

How To Estimate A Homemade Pot

Cook once, log once, and reuse the math. Add all ingredients to a recipe calculator, divide by total cups you ladle out, and save the result. If you don’t track every gram, use a quick-start approach: count energy-dense items first (oil, cream, cheese, pasta, sausage). Those shape the total more than the carrots and celery.

Quick Ranges For Common Add-Ins

Use these rule-of-thumb adds when you tweak a base recipe. They won’t match every brand, but they keep you close.

Add-In Or Swap Calorie Change* Notes
Olive Oil, 1 Tbsp +120 kcal Bloom spices in less oil to trim.
Heavy Cream, 1/4 Cup +200 kcal Use milk or yogurt for a lighter finish.
Cooked Pasta, 1 Cup +175–220 kcal Small shapes feel hearty in smaller amounts.
Cooked Rice, 1 Cup +190–220 kcal Brown rice adds fiber; portion still matters.
Shredded Chicken, 3 oz +120–140 kcal Lean protein bumps satiety per calorie.
Cheddar, 2 Tbsp +55–65 kcal Finish on top instead of stirring in.

*Typical values for common supermarket items; always defer to the label on your exact product.

Lower-Calorie Swaps That Keep Flavor

Build Body Without Heavy Cream

Blend a cup of the soup and stir it back in. Or use evaporated milk or plain yogurt at the end off heat. A potato or white bean purée thickens nicely too.

Season With Aromatics, Not Fat

Toast spices in a teaspoon of oil, not a tablespoon. Add acid like lemon, vinegar, or tomatoes to brighten. Finish with herbs, scallions, and pepper for lift.

Let Protein Do The Work

Poach diced chicken in the broth, add canned beans, or stir in tofu. You’ll raise fullness with a modest calorie bump.

When A Higher-Calorie Bowl Makes Sense

After long activity, a heartier bowl can speed recovery. A bean-and-grain stew with a drizzle of olive oil fits days when you need extra energy. Pair with fruit or a side salad and you’ve got a rounded plate.

Sodium: The Other Number To Watch

Calories tell you “how much,” while sodium tells you “how salty.” Packaged soups can run high. Federal advice sets a daily limit at less than 2,300 mg for adults. One salty bowl can land near a third to a half of that, so rinsing canned beans, choosing “reduced sodium” labels, and steering clear of double-salting at the table all help.

Restaurant Vs. Carton Vs. Homemade

Restaurant Bowls

Portions vary, and cooks lean on cream, butter, and salt for taste. Expect a wide swing. Ask for the nutrition sheet if it’s a chain.

Carton And Canned

Labels give you per-cup numbers. Scan the “per can” line too; that can mirror a home bowl. Compare fat and sodium lines side by side to choose a lighter carton without losing flavor.

Homemade

You control every lever. Skim fat, sauté in less oil, and finish with milk or yogurt. Add bulk with vegetables and beans. Season boldly with herbs, spices, garlic, and citrus.

Practical Ways To Count Your Bowl

Use The Ladle Method

Standard ladles hold around 1/2 cup. Two scoops make 1 cup; three scoops make 1½ cups. Count scoops, not guesses.

Measure Your Favorite Bowl Once

Fill with water, pour into a measuring cup, and mark a line inside with a tiny piece of tape you can remove later. That line pays off every time you serve.

Log The Recipe One Time

Input ingredients into a recipe calculator, divide by total cups served, and save. Next batch with the same pot and ladle will be within a small margin.

Smart Pairings And Portions

A light starter soup pairs well with a sandwich or salad. A hearty bean stew can stand alone with fruit on the side. If you track calories, set the bowl first, then build the plate around it.

Want a deeper refresher on salt? Try our daily sodium intake limit.

References integrated above per site policy.