Boba Tea Calorie Calculator | Boba Nutrition Facts

🧋 Boba Tea Calorie Calculator

Calculate calories in any boba drink — milk tea, fruit tea, taro, matcha, and more

Quick Presets
Your Boba Order
🧋 Your Boba Tea Nutrition
Total Calories
-- kcal
Total Sugar
-- grams
Total Carbs
-- grams
Total Fat
-- grams
Base Drink Calories--
Milk Calories--
Sugar Calories--
Toppings Calories--
Topping Calorie Snapshot
120Tapioca Pearls
70Popping Boba
55Coconut Jelly
110Cheese Foam
Boba Tea Calorie Reference
Drink (16 oz) Calories Sugar (g) Fat (g) Carbs (g)
Classic Milk Tea (100%)310 kcal38 g8 g50 g
Taro Milk Tea (100%)360 kcal42 g9 g58 g
Matcha Milk Tea (100%)290 kcal36 g7 g46 g
Brown Sugar Milk Tea460 kcal58 g10 g72 g
Thai Milk Tea (100%)390 kcal46 g10 g61 g
Mango Fruit Tea (no milk)220 kcal48 g0 g52 g
Jasmine Green Tea (50%)150 kcal30 g0 g38 g
Passion Fruit Tea (100%)195 kcal44 g0 g49 g
Topping Nutritional Guide
Topping Calories Carbs (g) Sugar (g) Fat (g)
Tapioca Pearls120 kcal30 g8 g0 g
Popping Boba70 kcal17 g14 g0 g
Coconut Jelly55 kcal14 g10 g0 g
Egg Pudding90 kcal12 g10 g4 g
Aloe Vera30 kcal7 g6 g0 g
Cheese Foam110 kcal5 g4 g9 g
Sugar level is the biggest lever: Ordering at 50% sugar instead of 100% saves approximately 40–60 calories per drink. For daily boba drinkers, that adds up to over 1,400 calories per month.
Tapioca pearls add significant carbs: One serving of classic tapioca pearls contains roughly 30g of carbohydrates — almost entirely from starch and sugar. Popping boba and jelly alternatives are lower-carb options.

 

Boba tea… Known also as bubble tea, pearl milk tea or boba milk tea, is based on tea with chewy tapioca balls, milk and flavors according to your desire. It originated in Taichung, Taiwan during the 1980s and soon spread globally with endless varieties of tastes and creative ideas

The origin of the name is a bit unclear, honestly. Maybe it relates to the bubbles that you make when frothing the milk tea, or to the chewy tapioca pearls themselves, that look like little bubbles in the liquid. The Chinese word for tapioca pearls is bōbà, which clearly affected the name.

What Is Boba Tea?

But here is the key: those bubbles are not carbonated. They are sweet, chewy balls from starch, that sit at the bottom of the glass and you draw them upward with that distinctive thick straw.

The most common toppings are tapioca pearls or boba. They come from cassava starch, you boil them and later soak them in sugary syrup for their typical sweetness. Well processed, they have the right chew, not too soft, not too bouncy, simply fun to chew.

Tapioca pearls already appeared in Taiwanese desserts long before the 1980s, and milk tea already was deep in the local food traditoin.

The tea itself can be black, green or white, according to your mood. You mix it with milk and tapioca pearls in a shaker, and you can choose it warm or cold… Most prefer cold.

Because dairy does not have the same cultural meaning outside Asia, almost each boba store uses powdered non-dairy creamer. Brown sugar syrup gives richness and mixes well in warm and cold versions. There is also honey boba, where you substitute the sugar with honey.

Popping boba is more of a new thing. Instead of the classic chew, those pearls burst with taste and texture, which gives a totally fresh experience. Except that, stores offer lychee jelly, aloe, coffee jelly, chia seeds and basil seeds as toppings.

Combining different textures with tapioca pearls stops the boredom.

Standard servings have around 16 ounces. With milk tea and tapioca balls that reaches around 299 calories, with 38 grams of sugar. Only the tapioca base adds about 35 calories for 10 grams, so a typical serving adds around 200 calories to your drink.

Some versions include fruit juice, tapioca starch and seaweed extract for more depth.

Original milk tea is the signature drink for many stores, that which defines them. It is made from a mix of several black teas, and the proportion of tea to milk stays secret. Menus have taro milk tea, Thai tea, strawberry matcha milk tea and brown sugar milk tea.

Boba you find at special boba stores, coffee and tea houses and restaurants about Southeast Asian cuisine.

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