Sugar Substitute Calculator – Honey, Stevia, Maple Syrup & More | SavoryTribe
SavoryTribe Tools

Sugar Substitute
Calculator

Convert between granulated sugar, honey, maple syrup, stevia, erythritol, coconut sugar and more — with exact ratios and baking adjustments for every swap.

11 sweeteners
Step 1 — Select your starting sweetener
Amount in recipe
Unit
🍬 Select a sweetener above
Substitution amounts
🍯 Select a sweetener above to see all substitutions
Sugar Substitutes — Quick Reference (per 1 cup granulated sugar)
SubstituteAmount for 1 cup sugarLiquid reductionOven tempNotes

Sugar Substitutes in Baking — The Complete Guide

What every sweetener actually does in a recipe, and how to substitute without ruining the bake

Sugar does far more in baking than just add sweetness. It tenderises gluten by absorbing water that would otherwise toughen the dough, helps trap air when creamed with butter to create lift, promotes browning through caramelisation and the Maillard reaction, and extends the shelf life of baked goods by retaining moisture. When you substitute a different sweetener, all of these functions are affected to varying degrees — which is why some swaps work seamlessly and others require multiple recipe adjustments.

Liquid Sweeteners: Honey, Maple Syrup, Agave

Honey, maple syrup, and agave nectar are all liquid sweeteners, which means they add moisture to a recipe that granulated sugar does not. This is the source of most failed substitutions — a direct 1:1 swap of honey for sugar makes the batter too wet, the resulting bake spreads more, and the texture becomes denser. The standard adjustment is to use ¾ cup of liquid sweetener per 1 cup of sugar and reduce other liquids in the recipe by ¼ cup. Honey also tends to brown faster due to its fructose content, so reducing oven temperature by 25°F (15°C) is usually recommended.

Maple syrup behaves most similarly to honey but has a slightly thinner consistency and a more neutral effect on browning. It’s one of the most versatile liquid sugar substitutes for baking — the flavour complements a wide range of recipes from quick breads and muffins to pancakes and cookies. Agave syrup is the most neutral in flavour of the three but is sweeter than sugar, so you can use slightly less — about ⅔ cup per 1 cup sugar.

Granular Alternatives: Coconut Sugar, Brown Sugar, Raw Sugar

Granular alternatives are generally the easiest swaps because they behave similarly to white sugar in terms of moisture and structure. Coconut sugar is the most seamless 1:1 substitute for brown sugar or raw sugar — same texture, similar moisture absorption, slightly less sweet with a mild caramel flavour. It will darken the colour of your bakes slightly. Brown sugar and white sugar swap at 1:1 for most recipes, with the key difference being that brown sugar adds moisture and a molasses flavour from the molasses content.

Zero-Calorie Sweeteners: Stevia, Erythritol, Monk Fruit

Zero-calorie sweeteners are where substitution becomes most complex. Stevia is 200–400 times sweeter than sugar, so the amount needed is a fraction of a teaspoon where a cup of sugar would normally be used. This creates a volume problem in baking — sugar doesn’t just sweeten, it provides bulk. When using stevia in baking, you need to replace that bulk with another ingredient (unsweetened applesauce, yogurt, or a small amount of another flour work well). Erythritol is less sweet than sugar (about 70% as sweet) but can be used in larger quantities, making it more suitable for baking volume replacement. It can cause a slight cooling sensation in high concentrations, which some people find noticeable in frostings and no-bake desserts.

Key Rules for Substituting Sugar Successfully

💧 Adjust liquid for liquid sweeteners

Every time you swap granulated sugar for a liquid sweetener (honey, maple, agave), reduce the total liquid in the recipe by 3–4 tbsp per ¾ cup of liquid sweetener used. This keeps the batter consistency correct.

🌡 Reduce oven temp for honey

Honey browns faster than sugar due to its fructose content. Reduce oven temperature by 25°F (about 15°C) when baking with honey to avoid over-browning on the outside before the centre is cooked.

⚗️ Add baking soda for acidic sweeteners

Honey and maple syrup are slightly acidic. Add ¼ tsp of baking soda per cup of honey or maple syrup to neutralise the acidity and prevent the bake from rising poorly or tasting slightly sour.

🎂 One swap at a time

Changing the sweetener changes moisture, structure, browning and flavour all at once. If you’re also changing the flour or fat, you’re compounding variables. Swap one ingredient at a time and test before changing more.

Frequently Asked Questions
How much honey do I use instead of sugar?
Use ¾ cup of honey for every 1 cup of granulated sugar. Because honey is a liquid, also reduce other liquids in the recipe by ¼ cup. Add ¼ tsp of baking soda to neutralise honey’s natural acidity. Finally, reduce your oven temperature by 25°F (15°C) since honey causes baked goods to brown faster. These four adjustments together give you the best result when baking with honey instead of sugar.
Can I substitute maple syrup for sugar in baking?
Yes. Use ¾ cup of maple syrup for every 1 cup of sugar, and reduce other liquids by 3 tablespoons. Maple syrup adds a distinctive flavour that works beautifully in autumn-spiced recipes (carrot cake, pumpkin bread, oatmeal cookies) but may be noticeable in neutral-flavoured bakes like vanilla cake. It browns slightly faster than sugar, so watch your bake time and consider reducing oven temperature by 15–25°F.
Is coconut sugar a good substitute for regular sugar?
Coconut sugar is one of the easiest and most seamless sugar substitutes. It swaps 1:1 with granulated or brown sugar, has a similar texture and granule size, and behaves almost identically in recipes. The differences are that it is slightly less sweet (so your bake will be marginally less sweet), it has a mild caramel-toffee flavour, and it will darken the colour of pale batters. For chocolate, spiced, or strongly flavoured bakes, these differences are imperceptible. For pale or neutral-flavoured recipes, the colour change is worth noting.
How do I use stevia instead of sugar in baking?
Pure stevia extract is 200–400 times sweeter than sugar, so tiny amounts are needed. Approximately ¼ tsp of pure stevia powder replaces 1 cup of sugar in terms of sweetness. However, stevia provides no bulk or structure, which is a significant problem in baking where sugar also functions as a structural ingredient. For stevia to work in baking, you need to replace the bulk of the removed sugar with another ingredient — unsweetened applesauce, extra egg, yogurt, or a small amount of extra flour. Stevia baking blends (stevia mixed with erythritol or inulin) are specifically formulated to address this volume problem and are a more practical choice for baking.
What is the healthiest sugar substitute for baking?
The answer depends on what “healthy” means in your context. If you’re reducing calories, erythritol and stevia have essentially zero calories and zero glycemic impact. If you prefer minimally processed natural alternatives, coconut sugar and raw honey retain trace minerals and have a slightly lower glycemic index than white sugar. If you’re managing blood sugar, erythritol and monk fruit are absorbed differently and don’t raise insulin levels significantly. No sweetener is universally “healthiest” — the best choice depends on your specific health goal, dietary approach, and how much of it you’re consuming overall.
✓ Copied
`); w.document.close(); w.print(); }function copyText(text, msg) { navigator.clipboard.writeText(text).then(() => showToast(msg)); } function showToast(msg) { const t = document.getElementById('ss-toast'); t.textContent = msg; t.classList.add('show'); setTimeout(() => t.classList.remove('show'), 2200); } function faqToggle(el) { el.classList.toggle('open'); el.nextElementSibling.classList.toggle('open'); }/* ════════════════════════════════ INIT ════════════════════════════════ */ (function init() { buildFromGrid(); buildRefTable(); })();