Maruchan Ramen Noodle Soup Chicken: Labelgrade C- (57/100)
C- 57 / 100 — Additive-heavy formulation (maltodextrin or corn syrup and MSG or curing nitrites), low sugar load, and high sodium per 100g.
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Maruchan Ramen Noodle Soup Chicken delivers 4g of protein and 190 calories per 0.5 BLOCK OF NOODLES WITH SEASONING (USDA FDC 2032433). Per 100g that’s 9.3g of protein; per oz, 2.6g. The Labelgrade is C- (57 / 100): Additive-heavy formulation (maltodextrin or corn syrup and MSG or curing nitrites), low sugar load, and high sodium per 100g.
Why this Labelgrade
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C | 64 / 100 | 9.3g per 100g — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting |
| Ingredient quality | C | 62 / 100 | 39 ingredients; flagged maltodextrin or corn syrup + MSG or curing nitrites |
| Saturated fat load | C- | 55 / 100 | 3.5g per serving (8.1g per 100g) — meaningful saturated fat load |
| Sodium load | F | 7 / 100 | 530mg per serving (349mg per oz) — high; structural for cured/preserved foods |
| Sugar load | A+ | 95 / 100 | 1g sugar; USDA omits the added-sugar line, but the ingredients list a sweetener — scored as added, not naturally-occurring |
| Fiber | D | 46 / 100 | 0.989g per serving — modest fiber contribution |
| Overall | C- | 57 / 100 | Weighted blend: protein 23% · ingredients 21% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 15% · fiber 8% |
How it compares
We’re still building out this category. As a benchmark, plain cooked chicken breast contains 31g of protein per 100g (8.8g per oz). Maruchan Ramen Noodle Soup Chicken delivers 9.3g of protein per 100g (2.6g per oz).
The serving-size trick: this label is measured per HALF block
Before anything else, look at the serving size on this product, because it changes how you should read every number on the page. The panel reports “0.5 block of noodles with seasoning” — half a brick. But a Maruchan pack is a single block that cooks in one pot and gets eaten in one bowl. Practically nobody snaps the brick in two, makes half, and saves the rest. So the official “serving” is half of what a real person eats, which means the friendly-looking numbers on the front are exactly half the truth.
Double them, and the picture changes. A pack you actually finish is not 190 calories and 530mg of sodium — it’s about 380 calories, 8g of protein, 14g of fat (7g of it saturated), and roughly 1,060mg of sodium. That last figure is the one that matters: ~1,060mg is close to half the entire 2,300mg daily sodium limit, gone in a single bowl of soup. The C- grade is calculated on the per-100g sodium load (already an F), but the lived experience is even saltier, because the unit you eat is twice the unit on the label. This isn’t a scandal unique to Maruchan — it’s standard in the instant-noodle aisle — but it’s the single most important thing to know before you call ramen a light meal.
What’s actually in the brick and the packet
Strip the marketing and ramen is two simple things: a block of fried refined noodles and a packet of seasoned salt. The noodles are enriched wheat flour cooked in vegetable oil — that frying step is why a refined-carb food carries 7g of fat per half-block (3.5g saturated), a profile you wouldn’t expect from plain pasta. There’s essentially no fiber and only modest protein, because it’s flour, not grain or meat.
The flavor packet is where the sodium and the long ingredient list come from: salt, maltodextrin, sugar, monosodium glutamate, hydrolyzed proteins, disodium inosinate and guanylate, dehydrated vegetables, and a token amount of powdered cooked chicken for the “chicken” name. None of it is dangerous, and the MSG in particular is harmless despite its reputation — but together it’s 39 ingredients engineered to make salt and starch taste savory, which is what lands ingredient quality at a C. The practical upshot is the easiest health upgrade in this whole category: use half the packet. You barely lose flavor and you cut the sodium — the one genuinely problematic number — close to in half. Add an egg and a handful of vegetables and the cheap, hot, comforting brick becomes a meal that actually feeds you.
Scope
This page covers Maruchan Ramen Noodle Soup Chicken (3 oz/85 g), UPC 041789004117, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 2032433. Maruchan sells multiple variants in this product line — other sizes, flavors, or fat levels may have different macros and Labelgrade scores. Manufacturers periodically reformulate; always cross-reference the actual package label, especially if you have allergies or dietary restrictions.
Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)
ENRICHED WHEAT FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID), VEGETABLE OIL (CONTAINS ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING: CANOLA, COTTONSEED, PALM) PRESERVED BY TBHQ, CONTAINS LESS THAN 1% OF: SALT, SOY SAUCE (WATER, WHEAT, SOYBEANS, SALT), POTASSIUM CARBONATE, SODIUM (MONO, HEXAMETA, AND/OR TRIPOLY) PHOSPHATE, SODIUM CARBONATE, TURMERIC. SOUP BASE INGREDIENTS: MALTODEXTRIN, SALT, SUGAR, CONTAINS LESS THAN 1% OF: MONOSODIUM GLUTAMATE, POTASSIUM CHLORIDE, LACTOSE, SPICES (CELERY SEED), TURMERIC, CABBAGE EXTRACT, YEAST EXTRACT, NATURAL FLAVORS, HYDROLYZED CORN, WHEAT AND SOY PROTEIN, DISODIUM INOSINATE, DISODIUM GUANYLATE, DEHYDRATED VEGETABLES (GARLIC, ONION, CHIVE), VEGETABLE OIL (PALM), POWDERED COOKED CHICKEN.
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 0.5 BLOCK OF NOODLES WITH SEASONING
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (0.5 BLOCK OF NOODLES WITH SEASONING) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 190 |
| Protein | 4g |
| Total Fat | 7g |
| Saturated Fat | 3.5g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 26g |
| Dietary Fiber | 0.989g |
| Total Sugars | 1g |
| Sodium | 530mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Iron | 1.8mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Ramen Noodle Soup Chicken (3 oz/85 g) · UPC 041789004117. 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 meat, fish, or gelatin
contains a gluten-bearing ingredient
Frequently Asked Questions
How much sodium is really in a pack of Maruchan ramen?
The label says 530mg — but read the serving size: it's per HALF block, and the package is one block. Almost nobody splits a single ramen brick into two meals, so the real-world serving is the whole pack: about 1,060mg of sodium, roughly 46% of the entire day's limit (2,300mg) in one bowl. The 530mg figure isn't wrong, it's just measured on a serving size that doesn't match how the product is eaten. Sodium is the headline problem here, and the label's framing hides half of it.
Is Maruchan ramen one serving or two?
On paper, two; in real life, one. USDA lists the data per '0.5 block of noodles with seasoning,' which means a single 3 oz pack is officially two servings. But a ramen block is a single brick that cooks as one and gets eaten as one, and that's how most people use it. So whenever you read the panel, mentally double it: a pack you actually eat is about 380 calories, 8g protein, 14g fat (7g saturated), and ~1,060mg sodium — not the friendlier half-block numbers printed up top.
Is Maruchan ramen bad for you?
As an occasional cheap, hot, filling meal it's fine; as a staple, the sodium is the real issue. The noodles are refined wheat flour fried in oil (which is where the 7g of fat per half-block, 3.5g of it saturated, comes from), and the flavor packet is essentially salt, MSG, maltodextrin, and dried seasoning. Eat the whole pack and you're near half a day's sodium with little protein or fiber to show for it. It's not poison — it's just a salt-and-refined-carb convenience food, and it grades like one (C-).
Why does Maruchan Ramen earn a C- (57/100)?
Sodium drags it down hard. On a per-100g basis the sodium load scores an F (7/100) — and that's before accounting for the whole-pack reality. The fried refined noodles bring a meaningful saturated-fat load (C-) and a 39-ingredient label with maltodextrin and MSG lands ingredient quality at C. Protein density is mediocre (C) and fiber is low (D). The one bright spot is negligible sugar (A+). Blend it and you get C- (57/100): cheap and convenient, but sodium-heavy and nutritionally thin.
How can I make instant ramen healthier?
Two easy moves. First, use only half the seasoning packet — that single change roughly halves the sodium and is the highest-leverage fix there is. Second, build it into a real meal: add an egg or some leftover chicken for protein, and throw in frozen vegetables or fresh greens for fiber and bulk. You keep the cheap, hot, comforting noodles but stop relying on a salt packet to do all the flavoring, and you turn a thin snack into something that actually keeps you full.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-06, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2032433. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.