Sugar-Free Collagen Gummies: What "Sugar-Free" Actually Means in the UK
By Glow Nutrition2 min read
Who this is for: UK buyers checking sugar-free or low-sugar collagen gummy claims
Sugar-free has a legal threshold
"Sugar-free" is not just marketing language. In UK nutrition-claim rules, a sugars-free claim for a solid food requires no more than 0.5g sugars per 100g. Gummies are solid foods, so that threshold matters.
"Low sugars" is different. For solids, it means no more than 5g sugars per 100g. That is a much higher threshold than sugars-free.
No added sugars is a different claim again
"No added sugars" does not mean the same thing as sugar-free. It means no added mono- or disaccharides and no other food used for its sweetening properties. If sugars are naturally present, the label must also say that the product contains naturally occurring sugars.
That distinction matters for gummies because a gummy texture often relies on sweeteners, syrups, fibres, polyols or other formulation choices. The product may be lower sugar than a standard gummy and still not qualify for every sugar-related claim.
Read the nutrition panel, not just the badge
Before trusting a sugar claim, check:
- sugars per 100g
- sugars per serving
- total carbohydrate
- polyols or sweeteners
- glucose syrup, sugar, fruit juice concentrate or other sweetening ingredients
- serving size and number of gummies per day
The per 100g figure is important because UK claim thresholds use that basis for solids.
Sugar-free does not solve the collagen-dose problem
A sugar-free gummy can still be low in collagen. The sugar claim tells you about sugars, not collagen content.
That is the common trap in this category. A product can feel healthier because it avoids sugar, while still delivering a modest collagen dose. Check both claims separately: sugar status and collagen milligrams.
Sweeteners can change the review pattern
Removing sugar often means using sweeteners or polyols. Some buyers prefer that. Others dislike aftertaste or digestive effects. A sugar-free gummy is not automatically easier to tolerate.
If you are sensitive to sweeteners or have digestive conditions, read the full ingredient list and start cautiously.
Claims and safety note
This article deals with nutrition claims and does not assess any specific product's compliance. Collagen has no authorised health claim in Great Britain for skin, hair, nails, joints, wrinkles, hydration or ageing. Sugar-free wording does not change that.
If you have diabetes, dental concerns, digestive sensitivities, allergies or are buying for a child, ask an appropriate clinician or pharmacist where needed. For product marketing, sugar-free, low sugars and no added sugars should be checked against the current GB nutrition-claim conditions before publication.
For related sugar issues, read Collagen Gummies and Sugar and Sugar-Free, Low Sugar and No Added Sugar Gummy Supplements.
Frequently asked questions
- What does sugar-free mean for collagen gummies in the UK?
- For solid foods, the sugars-free nutrition claim requires no more than 0.5g sugars per 100g. A brand should not use the phrase unless the product meets the condition.
- Is no added sugar the same as sugar-free?
- No. No added sugars means no added mono- or disaccharides and no other foods used for sweetening properties. The finished product may still contain naturally occurring sugars.
- Are sugar-free collagen gummies better?
- Not automatically. They may suit some buyers, but you still need to check collagen dose, sweeteners, taste, allergens and claims.
How we researched this
- GB Nutrition and Health Claims Register, nutrition-claim thresholds checked July 2026
- Our claims and regulatory watchout research, July 2026
- Our Free Soul collagen gummies review analysis, July 2026
Last reviewed .