Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla Greek Yogurt: 13g Protein, Labelgrade B+ (81/100)
B+ 81 / 100 — Very low saturated fat, effectively zero sugar, and very low sodium.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla delivers 13g of protein and 70 calories in a 180g cup — with a genuine 0g of sugar, not the “0g added” that most “no sugar” yogurts mean. It earns a B+ (81/100): perfect marks on saturated fat, sodium, and sugar, dragged down only by ordinary protein density. This is a clean low-calorie snack first and a protein source second.
Why the B+
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C | 61 / 100 | 7.2g per 100g — the cup is mostly water; fine, but not a protein concentrate |
| Ingredient quality | B | 78 / 100 | 19 ingredients, all recognizable, but more gums and sweeteners than a plain yogurt |
| Saturated fat | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0g — fully nonfat |
| Sodium | A+ | 100 / 100 | 70mg (11mg per oz) — low |
| Sugar | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0g total, 0g added — the headline feature |
| Fiber | F | 34 / 100 | 1g, from the added citrus fiber; yogurt isn’t a fiber food |
The grade is honest about the trade-off. The three “load” dimensions are perfect because the product is engineered to be nonfat, unsalted, and sugar-free. What it can’t fake is density: straining and filtering milk only gets you to ~7g protein per 100g, so the protein score sits at a C. The “B+” reads as clean snack, average protein — which is exactly what this is.
How it actually gets to zero sugar
This is the whole story of the product, and it’s two tricks stacked together.
- Ultra-filtered milk removes the lactose. A normal yogurt carries 4–6g of milk sugar (lactose) per serving no matter what. Chobani starts from ultra-filtered nonfat milk, which has had most of that lactose filtered out before the cultures ever touch it — so there’s almost no native sugar left to report.
- The sweetness is non-sugar. What’s left is sweetened by allulose (listed 4th), plus stevia leaf (Reb M) and monk fruit extract lower down. Allulose is a “rare sugar” — it tastes like sugar and behaves like it in the mouth, but the body absorbs and then excretes most of it without metabolizing it. It doesn’t count as sugar on the Nutrition Facts panel and contributes almost no calories.
That combination is why the label can show 6g total carbohydrate but 0g sugar and just 70 calories — most of those 6g are allulose and citrus fiber, not the usual lactose-plus-cane-sugar. If you’ve wondered how a sweet vanilla yogurt rings up at zero sugar, that’s the mechanism, spelled out on the ingredient line.
Zero sugar vs “Triple Zero”: not the same claim
The closest competitor on the shelf is Dannon’s Oikos Triple Zero, and the names invite a direct mix-up. They don’t mean the same thing.
- Chobani Zero Sugar means literally zero sugar — 0g on the label.
- Triple Zero’s three zeros are zero added sugar, zero artificial sweeteners, zero fat. It still lists 5g of naturally-occurring sugar per cup, because it’s sweetened with stevia over a milk base that keeps its lactose.
So if your single goal is the lowest sugar number, Chobani is the one that hits it. The flip side: Triple Zero packs 15g of protein to Chobani’s 13g, and uses chicory root fiber for 3g of fiber versus Chobani’s 1g. Neither is strictly better — Chobani wins on sugar, Triple Zero on protein and fiber.
How it compares
| Product | Protein per serving | Per 100g | Calories | Sugar |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla (this product) | 13g | 7.2g | 70 | 0g |
| Two Good Lowfat Vanilla | 13g | 7.2g | 90 | 2g |
| Oikos Triple Zero Vanilla | 15g | 6.3g | 90 | 5g |
| Oikos Pro Vanilla | 20g | 8.3g | 140 | 3g |
Two reads from this table. Against Two Good — same 13g protein — Chobani is the leaner pick: nonfat versus Two Good’s 2g fat (1.5g saturated), and 0g sugar versus 2g, for 20 fewer calories. And if you came here for protein, Oikos Pro makes the case against this whole tier: it adds whey to reach 20g per cup, the kind of density a strained-and-filtered nonfat yogurt structurally can’t match.
Who it’s for
The right shopper wants a sweet, dessert-like yogurt with no sugar and no fat for under 75 calories — someone managing blood sugar, calories, or just sugar intake who’s happy with 13g of protein as a bonus rather than the main event. If you’re chasing grams of protein, size up to a whey-boosted yogurt instead. And if allulose in volume bothers your stomach, note that it’s the 4th ingredient here, though a single cup is a modest dose.
Ingredients
Ultra-Filtered Nonfat Milk, Water, Skim Milk, Allulose, and 2% or less of: Vanilla Extract, Natural Flavors, Tapioca Flour, Citrus Fiber, Guar Gum, Sea Salt, Stevia Leaf Extract (Reb M), Monk Fruit Extract, Citric Acid, and Cultures. Six live and active cultures: S. Thermophilus, L. Bulgaricus, L. Acidophilus, Bifidus, L. Casei, and L. Rhamnosus. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2755650.)
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 180g
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (180g) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 70 |
| Protein | 13g |
| Total Fat | 0g |
| Saturated Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 6g |
| Dietary Fiber | 1g |
| Total Sugars | 0g |
| Added Sugars | 0g |
| Sodium | 70mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla Greek Yogurt · UPC 00818290018571. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.
How this fits each diet
Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.
contains animal-derived ingredients
contains no listed meat or fish
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein is in Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla Greek Yogurt?
13 grams per 180g cup (USDA FDC 2755650) — that's 7.2g per 100g, or about 2g per oz. A full cup covers 26% of the FDA's 50g Daily Value for protein.
How does it have zero sugar when most flavored yogurts have 10g or more?
Two moves. First, the milk is ultra-filtered, which strips out much of the lactose (milk sugar) that a normal yogurt carries. Then, instead of cane sugar, the sweetness comes from allulose, stevia leaf (Reb M), and monk fruit extract — none of which count as sugar on the label. The result is a genuine 0g of total sugar, not just 0g added.
What is the allulose in here, and does it spike blood sugar?
Allulose is a 'rare sugar' that tastes like sugar but is barely metabolized — the body absorbs it and excretes most of it unused, so it carries almost no calories and has minimal effect on blood glucose. It's why this yogurt reads 6g total carbs but 0g sugar and only 70 calories. Some people find larger amounts cause GI upset; a single cup is a small dose.
Chobani Zero Sugar vs Oikos Triple Zero — which is actually zero sugar?
Chobani Zero Sugar is the literal one: 0g total sugar on the label. Oikos Triple Zero's 'three zeros' are zero added sugar, zero artificial sweeteners, and zero fat — it still lists 5g of naturally-occurring sugar per cup, and 15g protein vs Chobani's 13g. If your goal is the lowest sugar number, Chobani wins; if it's the most protein, Triple Zero edges ahead.
Is this a good pick for building protein?
It's fine, not optimal. At 7.2g protein per 100g it earns only a C on density — the cup is mostly water by weight. For straight protein-per-cup, Oikos Pro (20g, whey-boosted) is the stronger choice. Chobani Zero Sugar wins on being nonfat and truly sugar-free, not on protein concentration.
Is it keto-friendly?
Close. With 6g total carbs but 0g sugar — and allulose making up much of those carbs — the net impact on blood sugar is low, which suits most low-carb plans. Strict keto counters who don't subtract allulose should still log it as a low-carb dairy, not a freebie.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-02, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2755650. We re-verify top pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.