• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Paleo Leap
  • Recipes
    • Beef and Red Meat
    • Chicken and Poultry
    • Pork
    • Fish and Seafood
    • Eggs
    • Soups
    • Salads
    • Sides, Veggies and Appetizers
    • Sauces, Dips & Vinaigrettes
    • Drinks
    • Sweets and Snacks
    • Cooking Tips
  • Learn
  • Your Starting Point
    • Topic Index
    • Paleo 101
    • Paleo Meal Plan
    • Paleo Food List
    • Transitioning to Paleo
    • Am I Doing it Right? - Checklist
    • Mini-Course for Beginners
  • Popular Topics
    • Recipes for Beginners
    • Breakfast Ideas
    • Homemade Condiments
    • Legumes
    • Wheat & Gluten
    • Dairy
    • Nightshades
  • More
    • Compilations
    • Foods
menu icon
go to homepage
  • Recipes
  • Chicken
  • Pork
  • Snacks
  • Salads
  • Learn Paleo
  • Paleo Cooking Tips
  • Paleo Diet Foods
  • Paleo Recipe Compilations
  • Keto Diet Recipes
  • Paleo Beef and Red Meat Recipes
  • Paleo Drink Recipes
  • Paleo Egg Recipes
  • Paleo Fish and Seafood Recipes
  • Paleo Sauces and Dips
  • Paleo Sides, Veggies and Appetizers
  • Paleo Soup Recipes
  • Paleo Tips & Tricks
  • Paleo Topic Index
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
  • search icon
    Homepage link
    • Recipes
    • Chicken
    • Pork
    • Snacks
    • Salads
    • Learn Paleo
    • Paleo Cooking Tips
    • Paleo Diet Foods
    • Paleo Recipe Compilations
    • Keto Diet Recipes
    • Paleo Beef and Red Meat Recipes
    • Paleo Drink Recipes
    • Paleo Egg Recipes
    • Paleo Fish and Seafood Recipes
    • Paleo Sauces and Dips
    • Paleo Sides, Veggies and Appetizers
    • Paleo Soup Recipes
    • Paleo Tips & Tricks
    • Paleo Topic Index
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
  • ร—
    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Net Carbs and Carb-Counting: Everything you Need to Know for Keto

    Last Modified: Feb 21, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

    Sharing is caring!

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Reddit

    โ€œNet carbsโ€ sounds like something made up for an infomercial, but itโ€™s actually not nonsense! If youโ€™re trying to go low-carb, then understanding net carbs can be really helpful for meal planning and troubleshooting.

    Net Carbs

    Net carbs: what they are and how they work.

    Letโ€™s start with a very simple definition of net carbs. For any particular food or meal:

    Net carbs = total carbs - fiber

    Why doesnโ€™t fiber count as a type of carb?

    Fiber is technically a kind of carbohydrate in the biological sense. But because of the way the human digestive system works, you canโ€™t break down fiber to get energy from it. Fiber passes through your stomach undigested until it hits your large intestine.

    When fiber gets to the large intestine, things get a bit interesting. You canโ€™t digest that fiber, but your gut bacteria can, at least for certain types of fiber. So fiber is essentially food for your gut bacteria, not for you.

    Sometimes, the gut bacteria break down fiber and produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) like butyrate. You can digest some of those SCFAs, but those are fats, not carbs. So to the extent that you get any actual calories or nutrition from fiber, itโ€™s actually fat, not carbs.

    Thatโ€™s why fiber doesnโ€™t count as a type of carbohydrate. Assuming your gut bacteria are healthy, fiber will actually add a little bit of fat to your diet, not carbs.

    You canโ€™t add fiber to meals to โ€œcancel outโ€ other carbs.

    The math above might make it seem like you can just add fiber to your diet to โ€œcancel outโ€ other carbs and reduce the net carbs in your diet. But thatโ€™s not true. The โ€œnet carbs = total carbs - fiberโ€ formula is nutrition label math, nothing more. You can subtract fiber from the total carb count on a nutrition label, but that doesnโ€™t mean fiber has magic carb-destroying powers.

    For example, imagine you eat 2 cups of cooked pasta. 2 cups of cooked pasta have 84.2 grams of total carbohydrate: 73.3 are digestible and 10.9 are fiber. So if you ate that pasta, youโ€™d count 73.3 grams of net carbs:

    84.2 (total carbs)
    -10.9 (fiber)
    ___________
    73.3 (net carbs)

    Then imagine that you take a fiber supplement with 50 grams of fiber. That fiber also doesnโ€™t count in your net carb count, so your net carbs for the day are still sitting at 73.3. But the fiber doesnโ€™t cancel out 50 grams of the carbs in the pasta. It's not like you now have only 23.3 grams of net carbs for the day. You still ate all 73.3 grams of digestible carbs - eating a lot of fiber doesnโ€™t change that.

    Another way to put that: calculate the net carbs for each food separately. Carbs in one food (or supplement) can't affect carbs in any other food.

    In the same vein, you canโ€™t ever have โ€œnegative carbs.โ€ If you ate a supplement with 80 grams of fiber to go with your pasta, you wouldnโ€™t have -6.7 grams of carbs for the day: thatโ€™s totally impossible. Youโ€™d still have 73.3 grams of net carbs from the pasta, plus 80 grams of extra fiber and very likely an awful stomach ache from eating all that fiber at once.

    Reading nutrition labels

    Now for the nitty-gritty, because label-reading when you care about net carbs is a bit of a procedure.

    Different countries have different labeling rules about total carbs, net carbs, and fiber. In the United States, the Nutrition Facts label will list โ€œTotal Carbohydrateโ€ - thatโ€™s every type of carb in the food, including digestible carbs and fiber. Underneath the โ€œTotal Carbohydrateโ€ category, there will be one or more sub-items. All of these are different fractions of the total carbohydrate. So for example, if you see:

    Total Carbohydrate 10 g
    Sugar 5 g
    Fiber 3 g

    What that means is that there are 10 grams of carbohydrates, of which 5 are sugar and 3 are fiber. So in this imaginary food, there would be 7 grams of net carbs (total carbs - fiber = 10 - 3 = 7). It doesnโ€™t mean that there are 18 total grams of carbs. The โ€œTotal Carbohydrateโ€ number includes every kind of carb in the food; all the other numbers are just breaking that โ€œTotal Carbohydrateโ€ number down into different categories.

    In many other countries, fiber is already subtracted from the total carbs on the label. For example, in the UK, nutrition labels have a line for โ€œCarbohydrates,โ€ which refers to net carbs, and a separate line for โ€œFiber.โ€ The carbs listed under โ€œFiberโ€ arenโ€™t included in the โ€œCarbohydratesโ€ line. So if your country does nutrition labels like that, you already have the net carbs calculated for you right on the label.

    Dealing with Confusion Over Net Carbs

    This is all pretty confusing and annoying, and thatโ€™s without even getting into imported foods. But here are some tips and tricks for dealing with the math:

    • Use an online database. For example, if you use the USDA standard reference database, you can be sure that youโ€™ll get nutrition information based on U.S. rules. Then you can compare that to the label on your food and get an idea of what youโ€™re probably looking at.
    • Remember that you canโ€™t have negative carbs. If you try to subtract fiber from total carbs, and you get a negative number, then the "total carbs" on the label was probably already net carbs.
    • Learn the foods you like to eat. On keto, your carbs will probably come mostly from vegetables. Youโ€™ll probably have some favorite vegetables that you eat a lot. Invest most of your carb-looking-up energy into those vegetables - then you can just relax a bit about them. Depending on your personal carb limits for keto, you might just know that โ€œI canโ€™t have more than a cup of Brussels sprouts every day,โ€ and then thatโ€™s that, no Nutrition Facts required

    Just to give you an idea of approximately what to expect, here are the carb counts and net carb counts for some common keto vegetables:

    FoodTOTAL carbs (including fiber)FIBERNET carbs (without fiber)
    Spinach (1 cup raw)1.090.70.39
    Cauliflower (1 cup cooked)2.551.41.15
    Cucumbers (1 cup raw)3.780.53.28
    Cabbage (1 cup raw)5.162.22.96
    Kale (1 cup cooked)7.322.64.72
    Onions (ยฝ cup cooked)10.661.59.16

    This obviously isnโ€™t a complete list of vegetables, but itโ€™s enough to give you a bit of an idea what you can expect for net carbs and fiber in keto meals. Fiber actually takes a pretty significant chunk out of the total carbs for a lot of vegetables.

    It gets easier once youโ€™re actually doing it

    Counting carbs can be really confusing to read about, but itโ€™s one of those confusing things that gets a little easier when you actually start applying it to your own food. Itโ€™s almost easier to learn it by doing it, so if all of the above just set your head spinning, it might help to just plug some foods into your nutrition database of choice and start looking at the carb and fiber counts - and then notice how those foods affect your body when you eat them. After all, thatโ€™s really the important part!

    More Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    • closeup of a white bowl filled with Garlic & Roasted Onion Salsa
      Garlic & Roasted Onion Salsa
    • plate filled with blackened tilapia and sliced lemon
      Blackened Tilapia
    • Crab Stuffed Salmon served on a cutting board
      Crab Stuffed Salmon
    • 17 paleo bars & bites to snack on featured
      17 Paleo Bars & Bites To Snack On

    Sharing is caring!

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Reddit

    Filed Under: Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Reader Interactions

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Recipe Rating




    Primary Sidebar

    paleo leap square logo

    Hi, I'm Rick! Paleo Leap is the oldest and biggest resource online, covering everything about the paleo diet. We have over 1500 recipes categorized and plenty of meal plans for you to try.

    More about me โ†’

    Popular

    • Bacon-Wrapped Salmon Featured
      Bacon-Wrapped Salmon Recipe
    • Almond Milk Custard
      Almond Milk Custard Recipe
    • Flourless Banana Pancakes Featured
      Flourless Banana Pancakes Recipe
    • Turban Squash Soup Featured
      Turban Squash Soup Recipe

    Recent Recipes:

    • closeup of a glass of Almond banana cinnamon smoothie on a wood table
      Almond Banana Cinnamon Smoothie
    • glass of Peach and chocolate green smoothie on a wood table with peaches in the background
      Peach and Chocolate Green Smoothie
    • closeup of two glasses of cinnamon and Coconut vanilla milkshake
      Coconut Vanilla Milkshake
    • Pumpkin smoothie in a glass on a wood table with cinnamon sticks in the background
      Pumpkin Smoothie

    Footer

    โ†‘ back to top

    About

    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Policy

    Newsletter

    • Sign Up! for emails and updates

    Contact

    • Contact

    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

    For your information only. The statements on this website are merely opinions. Paleo Leap does not provide medical or nutritional advice, treatment, or diagnosis. Read the full disclaimer.

    Copyright ยฉ 2023 Paleo Leap