Yoplait Greek 100 Blueberry Fat Free Yogurt: 14g Protein, Labelgrade B+ (80/100)
B+ 80 / 100 — A fat-free, 100-calorie Greek yogurt that hits its number by using added sugar AND artificial sweeteners (sucralose + acesulfame potassium) together. 14g protein per cup is solid, sodium and saturated fat are near zero, and total sugar stays low — but the dual-sweetener approach and a phosphate-and-starch fruit blend keep ingredient quality at a B. The name refers to the calorie count, not the protein.
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Yoplait Greek 100 Protein Blueberry gives you 14.4 g of protein for 101 calories in a single 5.3 oz (150 g) cup — about 9.6 g of protein per 100 g (USDA FDC 2717929). It earns a Labelgrade B+ (80/100). The strengths are real and easy to verify on the panel: 14 g of protein in a 100-calorie cup, 0.083 g of saturated fat, 54.6 mg of sodium, and only 6.5 g of total sugar. Two things keep it honest, though. The “100” is the calorie number, not the protein — and the only way a sweet blueberry yogurt lands at 100 calories is by pairing a little added sugar with two no-calorie sweeteners, sucralose and acesulfame potassium. This is a well-built diet yogurt, not a clean-label or a protein-maxed one.
Why the B+
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C | 64 / 100 | 9.6 g per 100 g. The 14.4 g per cup is a genuine high-protein serving, but it’s diluted by water and the fruit blend; a strained plain Greek runs 11-15 g per 100 g |
| Ingredient quality | B | 77 / 100 | Nonfat milk and live cultures make a clean base, but the blueberry blend adds sugar, fructose, modified corn starch and tricalcium phosphate, and the panel ends with ace-K and sucralose |
| Sugar load | A | 92 / 100 | 6.5 g total (2.04 g added) — genuinely low for a flavored cup, though it’s low partly because the artificial sweeteners do some of the sweetening |
| Sodium load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 54.6 mg per cup — low |
| Saturated fat | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0.083 g — negligible, as expected for a fat-free yogurt |
| Fiber | F | 30 / 100 | 0 g — structural for a strained dairy product, even with real blueberries in the blend |
Read top to bottom, the grade tells a consistent story: the dairy itself scores near-perfect on the things a low-fat yogurt should ace (sodium, saturated fat, sugar), and the two soft spots are both about how the cup is engineered — a protein density the name oversells, and a sweetener strategy that leans on sucralose and ace-K. There’s no hidden flaw here; a B+ is exactly where an honestly-built 100-calorie flavored Greek yogurt should land.
What “100” really buys you
The number on the lid is a calorie ceiling, and Yoplait hits it by attacking calories from two directions. Fat is the first: nonfat milk strips the cup to 0.245 g of total fat, removing roughly 50-70 calories versus a whole-milk yogurt. Sugar is the second, and it’s where the formula gets interesting. Instead of sweetening a blueberry yogurt with the 12-15 g of sugar that taste would normally require, the recipe uses just 2.04 g of added sugar (the “sugar” and “fructose” you see in the fruit blend) and lets sucralose and acesulfame potassium carry the rest of the sweetness for zero calories. That’s the whole trick: a sugar-sweetened blueberry cup this size would land closer to 140-170 calories. Whether that trade is worth it depends entirely on how you feel about artificial sweeteners — there’s no nutritional penalty, but there’s no pretending they aren’t there either.
The protein-density gap, in real terms
The single most misleading thing a shopper can assume about this cup is that “Greek 100 Protein” means it’s protein-dense. It isn’t, and the C grade is the honest signal. At 9.6 g per 100 g, you’re getting a real high-protein serving (14.4 g) only because the cup is a full 150 g — the milk solids are diluted by added water and the blueberry blend. A thick strained plain Greek yogurt does 17-23 g of protein in the same size cup, because nothing has been added back to it. If your goal is grams-per-bite — say you’re hitting a protein target on a tight calorie budget — a plain strained Greek is the denser tool. If your goal is a portion-controlled, pre-sweetened 100-calorie snack that still delivers 14 g, this cup is purpose-built for exactly that.
How it compares
| Product | Protein/cup | Per 100 g | Calories | Total sugar | Sweeteners |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yoplait Greek 100 Blueberry (this) | 14.4 g | 9.6 g | 101 | 6.5 g | Sugar + fructose + sucralose + ace-K |
| Yoplait Greek 100 Strawberry | 14 g | 9.3 g | 100 | 7 g | Same approach |
| Yoplait Greek 100 Peach | 14 g | 9.3 g | 100 | 7 g | Same approach |
| Chobani Less Sugar Wild Blueberry | 18 g | 12 g | 180 | 13.5 g | Cane sugar only (no artificial) |
Inside Yoplait’s own Greek 100 line the three flavors are near-twins, and the blueberry cup is actually the quiet pick of the bunch: it posts the most protein (14.4 g vs 14 g) and the least total sugar (6.5 g vs 7 g) on the USDA panels, which is why it earns its own B+ (80), a single point below the strawberry cup’s B+ (81). The more meaningful contrast is the same-flavor showdown with Chobani Less Sugar Wild Blueberry. Chobani gives you noticeably more protein (18 g, and a denser 12 g per 100 g) and skips artificial sweeteners entirely, sweetening only with cane sugar — but you pay 79 more calories and more than double the sugar (13.5 g) for it. That’s the real fork: fewest calories and no real-sugar load if you’re fine with sucralose and ace-K (Yoplait), or more protein and a cleaner sweetener list at a higher calorie and sugar cost (Chobani).
Build it from real fruit
The cleanest way to understand this product is to rebuild it. Start with 150 g of plain nonfat Greek yogurt — 15-16 g of protein, 0 g added sugar, no artificial sweeteners, for roughly the same calories as this cup. Stir in a small handful of fresh or frozen blueberries: about 5 g of natural sugar and ~1 g of fiber that the Yoplait cup, despite listing blueberries, doesn’t deliver (its fiber is 0 g). You end up with more protein, real fruit, a gram of fiber, and a panel with no sucralose, no ace-K, and no modified corn starch. What Yoplait sells over that DIY version is the only thing the DIY version lacks: a sealed, pre-portioned, grab-and-go cup. If convenience is the point, that’s a fair trade; if the ingredient list is the point, the 30-second homemade version wins.
Ingredients
Pasteurized grade A nonfat milk, fruit blend (blueberries, water, sugar, fructose, modified corn starch, pectin, guar gum, citric acid, tricalcium phosphate, malic acid, vitamin A acetate, vitamin D3, sodium citrate). Contains 0.5% or less of: natural flavor, yogurt cultures (L. bulgaricus, S. thermophilus), acesulfame potassium, sucralose.
The honest read on this list: a clean nonfat-milk-and-cultures base, a fruit blend doing double duty as flavor and texture (modified corn starch and the gums build body; tricalcium phosphate firms it and bumps calcium to 153 mg), and the two no-calorie sweeteners at the very end that make the 100-calorie math work. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2717929.)
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 container (150 g)
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 container (150 g)) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 101 |
| Protein | 14.4g |
| Total Fat | 0.245g |
| Saturated Fat | 0.083g |
| Trans Fat | 0.08g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 10.3g |
| Dietary Fiber | 0g |
| Total Sugars | 6.5g |
| Added Sugars | 2.04g |
| Sodium | 54.6mg |
| Cholesterol | 2.66mg |
| Calcium | 153mg |
| Iron | 0.018mg |
| Potassium | 199mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Greek 100 Protein Blueberry Fat Free Yogurt (5.3 oz (150 g) cup) · UPC 00070470455785. 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 Yoplait Greek 100 Blueberry?
14.4 g of protein per 5.3 oz (150 g) cup (USDA FDC 2717929) — about 9.6 g per 100 g. That's a solid high-protein yogurt, but note it's well below a strained plain Greek yogurt, which runs 17-23 g per cup. The '100' in the name is the calorie target, not the protein.
Does Yoplait Greek 100 Blueberry have added sugar?
Yes. The USDA panel lists 2.04 g of added sugar per cup, and the ingredient list shows both sugar and fructose in the blueberry fruit blend. Total sugar is 6.5 g, the rest naturally-occurring lactose. The added-sugar load is genuinely low for a flavored yogurt — but it is not zero, and any 'no added sugar' impression would be wrong.
Does it contain artificial sweeteners?
Yes — acesulfame potassium (ace-K) and sucralose, both listed at the end of the ingredient panel. This is how Yoplait keeps total sugar down while still tasting sweet: a small amount of real sugar plus two no-calorie sweeteners. If you specifically avoid artificial sweeteners, this isn't the yogurt for you; a less-sugar yogurt sweetened only with real fruit and cane sugar (like Chobani Less Sugar) or a plain Greek yogurt would be the alternative.
Why is the protein density only a C if it's a 'protein' yogurt?
Because Labelgrade scores protein per 100 g, not per cup. At 9.6 g per 100 g, this lands in C territory — it's diluted by water and the fruit blend relative to a thick strained Greek yogurt (17-23 g per cup, 11-15 g per 100 g). The 14.4 g per cup is still a real high-protein serving by FDA rules; it just isn't dense.
How does blueberry differ from the strawberry and peach cups?
Barely. The blueberry cup actually posts the highest protein of the three on the USDA panels (14.4 g vs 14 g) and the lowest total sugar (6.5 g vs 7 g), which is why it shares the strawberry cup's overall score territory but is graded on its own numbers. All three use nonfat milk, the same dual sweetener (sucralose + ace-K), and a fruit blend thickened with modified corn starch — the difference is mostly the fruit and the colorings, not the macros.
Is it keto-friendly?
Not really. At 10.3 g total carbs and 6.5 g sugar per cup, it's too carb-heavy for strict keto. It's reasonable for general low-fat, calorie-controlled eating, but a zero-sugar Greek yogurt (0 g sugar, 0 g added sugar) is the better keto pick.
Is it lactose-free?
Not labeled lactose-free. Greek and strained-style yogurts carry less lactose than regular yogurt because straining removes some of the whey that holds it, and live cultures digest a portion. People with mild lactose intolerance often tolerate it; those with severe intolerance should test their own tolerance.