Two Good Vanilla Greek Yogurt: 13g Protein, 2g Sugar, Labelgrade B+ (80/100)

B+ 80 / 100 — Very low saturated fat, effectively zero sugar, and very low sodium.

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Protein
61/100
📋
Ingredients
78/100
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Sat fat
96/100
🧂
Sodium
100/100
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Sugar
100/100
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Fiber
30/100

The short answer

Two Good Vanilla delivers 13g of protein and just 2g of sugar for 90 calories in a 5.3 oz (180g) cup. The “only 2g of sugar” on the front of the tub isn’t marketing sleight-of-hand — it’s the result of an extended straining-and-fermentation process that strips most of the milk’s natural lactose before any flavoring goes in, with Stevia Leaf doing the sweetening instead of cane sugar. It earns a B+ (80/100): A+ on sugar, sodium, and saturated fat, held back only by modest protein density.

Why the B+

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityC61 / 1007.2g per 100g — a low-fat cup cut with water for texture, so it’s protein-light by weight
Ingredient qualityB78 / 10011 ingredients, all recognizable; gellan gum and tapioca starch are texturizers, not red flags
Saturated fatA+96 / 1001.5g per cup (0.8g per 100g) — reduced-fat milk keeps it low
SodiumA+100 / 10040mg per cup — about 2% of the daily limit, barely there
SugarA+100 / 1002g, all residual lactose; no added nutritive sweetener to score against
FiberF30 / 1000g — structural; no yogurt has fiber

The two grades that matter here pull in opposite directions. The A+ on sugar is earned, not inherited — most flavored yogurts hit their sweet taste by adding sugar back after fermentation, and this one doesn’t. The C on protein is the honest ceiling: 13g is a fine per-cup number, but spread across 180g (much of it added water), it’s not dense enough to be a protein-hunter’s first pick.

What the slow-strain process actually buys you

Ordinary Greek yogurt is strained once to thicken it. Two Good is strained longer, and the cultures (L. Bulgaricus and S. Thermophilus) are given more time to ferment the lactose — the natural milk sugar — into lactic acid. Less lactose in the curd plus more whey strained off means the starting sugar is already low before a drop of flavor is added; Stevia Leaf (Reb M) then carries the sweetness, so vanilla arrives without cane sugar. The trick is subtraction at the source rather than masking with added sugar.

The trade-off shows up twice. The straining plus added water dilutes protein per gram (hence the C), and the strained curd needs a little engineering to stay spoonable — which is why tapioca starch and gellan gum appear. They replace lost body; they’re texture, not filler.

Two Good vs the “zero sugar” yogurts

This is the real shelf decision, and the labels reward a close reading:

ProductProteinSugarCaloriesServingLabelgrade
Two Good Vanilla (this product)13g2g90180gB+ (80)
Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla13g0g70180gB+ (80)
Oikos Triple Zero Vanilla15g5g90240gB+ (81)

Two things jump out. Oikos “Triple Zero” actually carries the most sugar of the three at 5g — its “zero” is a marketing trio (zero added sugar, fat, artificial sweeteners), not total sugar. And Chobani Zero Sugar genuinely hits 0g via allulose, matching Two Good’s 13g protein in 20 fewer calories. Two Good’s edge is its short, plain label: it reaches 2g with nothing more exotic than stevia — no allulose or chicory-root fiber. Want the most protein? Oikos Triple Zero’s 15g. Lowest sugar and calories? Chobani. Two Good splits the difference.

Who it’s for

Reach for Two Good Vanilla if you want a low-sugar, low-calorie flavored Greek yogurt with a recognizable label and no artificial sweetener — a dessert-feeling spoon that won’t spike your sugar. It’s a snack, not a protein anchor: 13g is solid for a cup but not dense. For grams of protein per spoonful, step up to Oikos Pro (20g in a smaller 150g cup, helped by added whey); for the lowest sugar and calories at the same 13g, Chobani Zero Sugar edges it out.

Ingredients

Cultured reduced-fat milk and water form the base; Stevia Leaf (Reb M) is the only sweetener; tapioca starch and gellan gum thicken the strained cup; lemon juice concentrate and sea salt balance flavor; fruit and vegetable juice adds color; vitamin D3 is added; and live cultures do the fermentation. No added sugar, no artificial sweetener. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2757425.)

Ingredients: Cultured Reduced Fat Milk, Water, Less Than 1%: Natural Flavors, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Tapioca Starch, Gellan Gum, Stevia Leaf Reb M, Sea Salt, Fruit and Vegetable Juice Concentrate ( For Color), Vitamin D3, Active Yogurt Cultures L. Bulgaricus & S. Thermophilus

Where to buy

Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. The Labelgrade score is independent of affiliate relationships. More.

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 180g

UPC 00036632039200
Verified 2026-06-02 · checked monthly
90
Calories
13g
Protein 26% DV
4g
Carbs 1% DV
2g
Fat 3% DV
per 100 g
7.2g protein · 50 cal ·1.1g sugar ·22mg sodium
per oz (1 oz)
2.0g protein · 14 cal ·0.31g sugar ·6.3mg sodium
Sugar 2g
Fiber 0g · 0% DV
Saturated fat 1.5g
Sodium 40mg · 2% DV

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Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (180g)
Calories90
Protein13g
Total Fat2g
Saturated Fat1.5g
Total Carbohydrates4g
Dietary Fiber0g
Total Sugars2g
Sodium40mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Two Good Lowfat Vanilla Greek Yogurt · UPC 00036632039200. 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.

Vegan
F 0/100

contains animal-derived ingredients

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
A+ 100/100

no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein is in Two Good Vanilla Greek Yogurt?

13 grams per 180g cup (USDA FDC 2757425) — that's 7.2g per 100g, or about 2g per oz. It clears the FDA 'high in protein' bar (13g is 26% of the 50g Daily Value), but it sits below a true protein-first yogurt: Oikos Pro packs 20g into a smaller 150g cup.

How does Two Good get down to 2g of sugar?

A long, slow straining and fermentation step. The live cultures (L. Bulgaricus and S. Thermophilus) keep working on the milk's natural lactose, and the extended strain removes more of the watery whey that carries it — so most of the dairy sugar is gone before flavoring. Stevia Leaf (Reb M) then supplies the sweetness, so there's no added cane sugar to put it back. The 2g that remains is residual lactose, not added sugar.

Is 'only 2g of sugar' actually lower than the zero-sugar competitors?

It's in the same neighborhood and genuinely low, but read the labels. Chobani Zero Sugar hits a true 0g (it uses allulose). Oikos Triple Zero — despite the name — actually lists 5g of sugar per serving. So Two Good's 2g undercuts Oikos Triple Zero and lands just above Chobani Zero Sugar.

Does Two Good Vanilla contain artificial sweetener?

No. The only sweetener is Stevia Leaf (Reb M), a plant-derived extract. There's no sucralose, aspartame, or acesulfame potassium on the label — which is a real point of difference for shoppers avoiding artificial sweeteners.

Why does it score a B+ and not higher?

The sugar, sodium, and saturated-fat dimensions all score A+. What pulls it to a B+ is protein density: at 7.2g per 100g, this is a low-fat flavored cup diluted with water for a spoonable texture, so it's protein-light by weight even though the per-cup gram count is fine. The structural F on fiber (yogurt has none) also drags the blended score.

Is Two Good Vanilla keto-friendly?

Yes for most low-carb plans: 4g total carbs, 2g sugar, 2g fat, 13g protein per cup. With 0g fiber, net carbs are the full 4g. It's one of the lower-carb flavored Greek yogurts because the sugar has been strained out rather than sweetened back in.

When was this data last verified?

2026-06-02, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2757425. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.