Diet Coke has 0 calories per 12-fl-oz (355 ml) can in the U.S.; labels show 0 when a serving is under 5 calories.
Calories
Sodium
Caffeine
Small Can (7.5 Oz)
- About 222 ml
- Roughly 29 mg caffeine
- Zero energy
Compact
Standard Can (12 Oz)
- 355 ml single serve
- 46 mg caffeine
- Zero energy
Everyday
Large Bottle (20 Oz)
- 591 ml shareable
- About 77 mg caffeine
- Zero energy
Big Sip
Diet Coke Calorie Count Explained
Energy on the label reads 0 because the drink has no sugar and no digestible carbohydrate. Any trace energy from ingredients rounds down under U.S. labeling rules. The result: a can delivers fizz and flavor without energy from macronutrients.
Serving Sizes You’ll See In Stores
Packaging ranges from mini cans to large bottles. Caffeine scales with volume; the energy line stays at 0. The quick grid below shows common packages, the energy line, and an estimated caffeine figure per container.
| Serving Size | Calories (Per Serving) | Caffeine (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 7.5 fl oz (222 ml) | 0 | ~29 mg |
| 12 fl oz (355 ml) | 0 | 46 mg |
| 16.9 fl oz (500 ml) | 0 | ~65 mg |
| 20 fl oz (591 ml) | 0 | ~77 mg |
| 2 Liters (8 × 8 fl oz) | 0 per 8 fl oz | ~31 mg per 8 fl oz |
Energy targets are easier to hit once you set your daily calorie needs. That context helps you see where a zero-energy drink fits across a day’s intake.
Why The Label Shows Zero
U.S. labels round energy to the nearest stated increment. When a single serving provides under 5 Calories, the energy line can read 0. That rule keeps panels readable and avoids misleading precision for trace values.
What’s Inside The Can
The formula uses carbonated water, caramel color, an acid blend, flavors, and a non-nutritive sweetener. No sugar means no digestible carbohydrate, so the energy line stays at 0 while flavor stays cola-like.
Calories In Diet Cola Across Regions
Labeling language varies by market. In the U.S., you’ll see “0 Calories.” Some regions write “kJ/kcal” and may print “<1 kcal” when local rules prefer explicit near-zero wording. The drink itself remains zero-sugar and functionally zero-energy per serving either way.
How Non-Nutritive Sweeteners Affect Energy
Aspartame delivers intense sweetness at tiny amounts, so the energy contribution at the sip level rounds to zero. Flavor is set by acids and aromatics, not sugar. That’s why the panel shows energy, sugars, and added sugars all at zero.
Where Sodium And Caffeine Fit
A standard can carries about 40 mg sodium and 46 mg caffeine. Sodium sits low for most people; caffeine sits midrange for a soda. If you prefer none, a caffeine-free version exists with the same energy line at zero.
Diet Soda Versus Regular Cola: Energy Tradeoffs
Regular cola gets sweetness from sugar, which drives energy up fast. A single can can take a big bite out of a daily sugar budget. Diet cola keeps the taste cues without the sugar hit, so energy remains at zero and the sugar line stays at zero as well.
You can confirm the panel on the brand’s page, including the energy line at zero and caffeine at 46 mg per 12 fl oz, on the official Coca-Cola product facts. Energy rounding follows the federal rule that allows “0” when a serving is under 5 Calories, per 21 CFR 101.9.
When A Zero-Energy Drink Helps
Swapping one can of sugar-sweetened cola for a zero-energy cola cuts around 140 Calories at the 12-oz size. If that swap replaces a daily habit, the weekly cut reaches about 980 Calories without changing portions elsewhere.
How To Read The Panel Quickly
Scan serving size first. Then check energy, sugars, and sodium. For this drink, energy is 0, sugars are 0, and sodium is modest per can. Caffeine is listed so you can plan your day if you’re watching intake.
Close Variations You Might See On Shelves
Lines include cherry, lime, and other flavors, plus a caffeine-free option. Flavors don’t add sugar. The energy line remains at 0, while sodium and caffeine stay in the same ballpark unless you pick caffeine-free.
Best Ways To Fit It Into A Day
Pair it with meals where you’d like fizz without energy. Use it to swap for a sugar-sweetened soda at times you tend to crave something bubbly. Keep an eye on caffeine late in the day if sleep timing matters for you.
Side-By-Side: Popular Cola Choices (12 Fl Oz)
| Beverage | Calories | Sugar (g) |
|---|---|---|
| Diet Coke | 0 | 0 |
| Coca-Cola Original | 140 | 39 |
| Coca-Cola Zero Sugar | 0 | 0 |
Practical Tips For Choosing A Can Or Bottle
Pick A Size That Fits Your Moment
Mini cans tame caffeine and keep sips short. Standard cans are the everyday pick. Large bottles suit sharing or long stretches; cap them tightly to keep the fizz.
Time Caffeine To Your Schedule
Early afternoon works for many people. If caffeine later in the day isn’t your thing, grab the caffeine-free version. The panel stays the same on energy and sugars.
Balance Taste And Nutrition Goals
A zero-energy cola helps lower energy from drinks without changing your plate. If you’re tracking intake, pairing it with fiber-rich sides can leave you more satisfied with the same meal size.
Answers To Common Reader Checks
Does It Break A Fast?
Energy reads 0 per serving, so it won’t add energy to your log. That said, the taste of sweetness can still be a cue. Pick what aligns with your method.
Is The Sodium Line A Concern?
At about 40 mg per can, the sodium line is low compared with most savory snacks or condiments. If you’re counting, it’s easy to fit into a day’s target.
What About Other Sweeteners?
Formulas change by flavor and market, but the theme stays the same: zero sugar and a tiny amount of non-nutritive sweetener by weight. That’s why the energy line doesn’t budge.
Make The Swap Stick
Small Habits Add Up
Replace one sugary can a day with a zero-energy cola for a week. Notice cravings, timing, and any taste changes. Keep what helps, skip what doesn’t.
Pair With Smarter Staples
Zero energy in the glass pairs well with fiber-forward meals. If you’re dialing portions, matching it with whole grains or greens can keep a plate satisfying.
Track Progress Without Obsession
Log drinks when you log meals. A quick pass keeps patterns clear without stealing time from the meal itself.
Want a simple target for sweetened foods? Try our daily added sugar limit.