What Is Monk Fruit? The Complete Guide

The complete monk fruit guide

What is monk fruit? Nature’s sweetest secret

You have seen it on a label or heard it on a podcast. It is not a trend or a chemical in disguise. It is a real fruit, with an 800-year history. Here is everything you need to know.

9 min read 800 years of safe use
Happy Monkfruit liquid and powder

You may have seen it on a label, heard it on a health podcast, or spotted it in the sweeteners aisle and wondered what it actually is. Monk fruit is not a trend, and it is not a chemical compound in disguise.

It is a real fruit, with an 800-year history, and it has quietly become the most interesting natural sweetener in the world. This guide covers everything worth knowing, in plain language.

Start here

What is monk fruit?

Monk fruit, known botanically as Siraitia grosvenorii and traditionally as Luo Han Guo, is a small, round, green fruit native to the misty highlands of southern China and northern Thailand. It belongs to the gourd family and grows on vines in cool, mountainous conditions that are hard to recreate anywhere else.

It has been cultivated and eaten in China for well over 800 years. Monks in the Guangxi region, which is where the name comes from, are said to have grown it in monastery gardens and used it both as a sweetener and as a cooling herbal drink. Long before anyone understood the chemistry, people had worked out that a little of this fruit, dried and steeped in water, made a remarkably sweet and soothing drink.

Today it is grown almost exclusively in southern China, harvested by hand, and turned into a concentrated liquid or powder used as a natural sweetener around the world. It has been sold in the United States since the early 2010s. In Europe it is only now becoming available, and Happy Monkfruit® is the first brand to bring it to market here legally.

Monk fruit flower and young fruit on the vine
Monk fruit vines growing in the southern Chinese highlands
The clever part

Why is it so sweet, without any sugar?

An ordinary piece of fruit is sweet because of fructose and glucose, sugars your body breaks down and that raise blood glucose. Monk fruit is different. Its sweetness comes almost entirely from a group of natural compounds called mogrosides, and mainly from Mogroside V.

These are antioxidant glycosides found in the flesh of the fruit. They are intensely sweet, up to 200 to 300 times sweeter than table sugar at high purity, but your body does not metabolise them as sugar. They pass through without a meaningful insulin response and without raising blood glucose.

The headline

This is why monk fruit has a glycemic index of zero. Not approximately zero. Zero. No spike, no crash, no insulin response. The sweetness is real, it just is not sugar.

How it is made

A decoction, not an extract

There are two ways to make a monk fruit sweetener. The first is industrial extraction, using chemical solvents to isolate and purify specific mogrosides to very high concentrations. That produces a potent sweetener, but it is classified as a novel food under EU law and cannot be sold legally in Europe or the UK without an authorisation that has not been granted.

The second method, and the only one we use, is a decoction. Fresh monk fruit is infused in water, exactly as you would steep a tea. The solids are strained out, then the liquid is gently heated until all the water evaporates. What remains is 100% concentrated fruit. Nothing added, nothing removed. One ingredient.

This traditional preparation has historical precedent stretching back centuries, which is why EU regulators clarified in October 2024 that aqueous decoctions of monk fruit are not classified as novel foods. Our product is fully compliant, and it is the purest form of monk fruit you can legally buy in Europe.

One ingredientNo erythritolNo fillers
Pure fruit, nothing else

Liquid for drinks, powder for baking.

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At a glance

Happy Monkfruit, liquid and powder

Detail
Liquid
Powder
Ingredients
100% monk fruit decoction
Decoction + prebiotic tapioca fibre
Sweetness vs sugar
10 to 15x
3 to 5x
Glycemic index
Zero per serving
Zero per serving
Calories per serving
About 1 kcal
About 1 kcal
Best for
Tea, drinks, creamy foods
Baking and sprinkling

For comparison, a teaspoon of sugar is roughly 16 to 20 kcal with a real blood-sugar spike. Both of our products are vegan, GMO-free, gluten-free, keto-friendly and diabetic-friendly, with no erythritol, maltodextrin or additives.

Honest answer

What does it taste like?

On its own, the liquid tastes a little like honey: warm, rounded sweetness with a gentle depth. It does not taste artificial or clinical. Because it comes from real fruit, it carries subtle fruity undertones rather than the sharp edge you might associate with saccharin or sucralose.

Worth knowing

Monk fruit can have a mild aftertaste in high-acidity settings, such as black coffee, lemon juice or vinegar dressings. In neutral or creamy foods, most people find it undetectable. Tea, yoghurt, cream, smoothies and milk-based drinks are where it shines. People used to natural products tend to adjust to it quickly.

Why monk fruit helps

What are the health benefits?

Monk fruit is not a medicine and we do not claim it is. But it is a real fruit with a genuine nutritional profile, and the scientific interest in it is substantial and growing.

No glycemic impact

Monk fruit has a glycemic index of zero per serving. It does not raise blood sugar or trigger insulin secretion. For diabetics, low-carb and keto dieters, and anyone watching their glucose, this is the single most important fact about it.

Potential antioxidant properties

Mogrosides are antioxidant compounds. Some studies suggest they may help neutralise free radicals, the molecules linked to cellular damage and ageing. This is an active research area, and the findings are promising but still preliminary.

Potential anti-inflammatory properties

Early research suggests mogrosides may have anti-inflammatory effects. Chronic low-grade inflammation is linked to many modern conditions, so natural compounds with this potential draw real scientific interest. These studies are not yet clinical, so we present them as areas of research rather than settled facts.

No known side effects

This is perhaps monk fruit's biggest advantage over every other sweetener. Erythritol has been linked to cardiovascular risk in recent studies. Xylitol causes digestive problems for many people. Sucralose has raised concerns about gut health. Aspartame is classified by the WHO as a possible carcinogen. Monk fruit has no known side effects, and after 800 years of use, none have emerged.

Kinder to teeth

Unlike sugar, monk fruit does not feed the bacteria that cause tooth decay, so it sweetens without contributing to the acid that erodes enamel. It is one reason dentists are among our most consistent customers.

In context

How it compares to other sweeteners

Sweetener Natural? GI Side effects Keto?
Monk fruit Yes, a fruit 0 None known Yes
Stevia Often processed 0 Some open questions Yes
Erythritol Processed 0 Bloating, CV concerns Yes
Xylitol Processed 7 Bloating, CV concerns Partial
Sucralose Artificial 0 Gut health concerns Yes
Aspartame Artificial 0 WHO 2B carcinogen Yes
Sugar Yes 65 Obesity, diabetes No

Side effects reflect associations reported in published research. All health claims should be treated as preliminary unless clinically established.

Who it is for

Is monk fruit for you?

Diabetics and anyone managing blood sugar

Monk fruit is one of the very few sweeteners that causes no measurable rise in blood glucose, which makes it a genuinely safe option for people with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes. Many of our customers are diabetics who gave up on erythritol, stevia and artificial options and found this is the one that finally works.

People on keto or low-carb diets

It is fully keto-compatible. The carbohydrates on our European label are mogrosides and fibre, neither of which your body converts to glucose or uses to break ketosis. You can use monk fruit freely without adjusting your macros.

People who have given up on other sweeteners

The ideal customer is someone already using sweeteners but not satisfied. They bloat on erythritol, dislike the taste of stevia, or do not trust artificial options. Monk fruit is not perfect for everyone, but for people who value natural ingredients it is often the one that finally fits.

Families and children

It is safe for children, does not feed tooth-decay bacteria, and is free from the artificial compounds found in most family sweeteners. Parents and schools looking to cut sugar without adding chemicals have found it a clean solution.

Health-conscious adults

You do not need a diagnosis to want cleaner ingredients. More and more people are simply reducing ultra-processed foods and synthetic compounds. Monk fruit, made from real fruit by a centuries-old process, fits naturally into that.

In your kitchen

How do you use monk fruit?

Drinks

A few drops of liquid sweeten a cup of tea or herbal infusion. Start with 3 to 5 drops in neutral or creamy drinks; it can be more noticeable in black coffee.

Yoghurt & dairy

One of the best uses. Stir a few drops into full-fat Greek yoghurt, whipped cream or creme fraiche for an instant dessert, with no sugar and no spike.

Baking

Use the powder, not the liquid. Its prebiotic tapioca fibre adds a little bulk and better texture. Start with about a quarter of the sugar and taste as you go.

Smoothies & shakes

A few drops add sweetness with no sugar or carbs. It pairs especially well with creamy bases like coconut milk, almond milk or full-fat dairy.

At the table

Keep the powder close for sprinkling over berries, porridge or chia pudding. Because it is 3 to 5x sweeter than sugar, a small pinch goes a long way.

Monk fruit used across a fresh breakfast spread
The label question

Why does it show carbohydrates?

This is the single most common question we get, so it deserves a direct answer. Our liquid shows 69g of carbohydrates per 100g. That looks alarming if you are used to American labels that show zero. Here is why ours is different, and more honest.

EU food labelling law requires every carbohydrate compound to be declared, including mogrosides and dietary fibre, even when your body does not metabolise them as sugar. American labels can round aggressively and omit certain fibre fractions. We cannot. The result is a number that looks high but reflects a metabolic impact of essentially zero per serving.

Context

A normal serving, a few drops of liquid or a small pinch of powder, is about 1 kcal and causes no measurable rise in blood sugar. A teaspoon of sugar is 4g of carbs, around 16 kcal, and a real spike. The label number simply needs context.

The legal bit

Is it legal in the UK and Europe?

Yes, in decoction form. Since October 2024, EU authorities have clarified that non-selective aqueous decoctions of monk fruit are not classified as novel foods and may be sold freely. Happy Monkfruit® was the first brand to register and sell monk fruit in Europe and the UK under this framework.

Monk fruit extracts, the industrially processed, high-purity preparations, remain classified as novel foods in the EU and are not authorised for general sale. That means many products sold online by non-European brands are not technically legal to sell here. Our decoction is.

Your body recognises it as food, because that is exactly what it is.
Final thoughts

Rare, in a way that matters

Monk fruit is not a miracle, because no food is. But it is genuinely rare: a natural sweetener with 800 years of safe use, zero glycemic impact, no known side effects, and real taste that comes from real fruit.

The sweetener aisle is cluttered with products that promise much and deliver less, artificial compounds, processed sugar alcohols, and heavily extracted preparations the body eventually resists. Monk fruit is different in a way that counts. We are proud to have brought it to Europe first, with the cleanest method, the most transparent label, and the simplest possible ingredient list. If you have been looking for a better answer to sweetness, this is the one worth trying.

Try it yourself

Europe’s first monk fruit sweetener

100% natural, zero glycemic impact, no erythritol, no fillers. Shipped across the UK and EU.

Liquid for drinks · Powder for baking · Loved by people who gave up on sweeteners
Happy Monkfruit powder pouch and liquid bottle together
Good to know

Frequently asked

Monk fruit (Luo Han Guo, Siraitia grosvenorii) is a small green fruit grown in the mountains of southern China. It has been used as a natural sweetener and herbal remedy for over 800 years. Its sweetness comes from natural antioxidant compounds called mogrosides, which do not raise blood sugar.
Sugar raises blood glucose and adds calories your body stores as energy. Monk fruit's sweetness comes from mogrosides, which your body does not metabolise as glucose. It has a glycemic index of zero per serving, about 1 kcal per serving, and no known side effects.
Yes. It has been safely consumed for over 800 years with no known side effects, and is widely considered the safest natural sweetener available. Unlike erythritol, xylitol and artificial sweeteners, no adverse effects have been identified in published research.
It has a warm, round sweetness with subtle fruity undertones, and works best in neutral or creamy foods and drinks. It can have a mild aftertaste in high-acidity settings like black coffee or lemon. People who use natural products generally adapt quickly.
No. Both have a glycemic index of zero, but they come from different plants, with different flavours and processing. Stevia is from a South American herb; monk fruit is from a Chinese gourd. Most commercial stevia is heavily processed, while our monk fruit is made only with water and heat.
Yes. It has a glycemic index of zero per serving and does not trigger an insulin response, making it one of the safest options for Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes. Consult your doctor before significant dietary changes if you are on medication.
Yes. The carbohydrates on our EU label are mogrosides and fibre, which your body does not convert to glucose or use to break ketosis. It is fully compatible with ketogenic and low-carb diets.
Yes. It has no known side effects and is safe for children. Because it does not feed the bacteria that cause tooth decay, it is a particularly good choice for kids' food and drinks.
The liquid is 100% monk fruit decoction, one ingredient, 10 to 15x sweeter than sugar. The powder is decoction with prebiotic tapioca fibre as a carrier, 3 to 5x sweeter. Liquid is best for drinks and creamy foods; powder is better for baking and sprinkling.
No. Our liquid is only monk fruit decoction. Our powder is monk fruit decoction with prebiotic tapioca fibre. We never use erythritol, maltodextrin or any filler.
Directly at happymonkfruit.com. We are Europe's and the UK's first registered monk fruit brand, and we ship across the UK and EU.

References

  • Scientific Reports (Nature). Characterisation of monk fruit (Siraitia grosvenorii) as a sweetener. Article s41598-021-85689-2.
  • Review of mogroside biological activities and synthetic biology (ScienceDirect, S0308814624009269).
  • Frontiers in Nutrition (2023). Bibliometric analysis of monk fruit extract and mogrosides as sweeteners (PMC10495570).
  • Nutrients, MDPI (2025). Monk Fruit Extract and Sustainable Health: a PRISMA-guided systematic review of randomised controlled trials.
  • NIH Research Matters / Cleveland Clinic. Study linking erythritol to higher rates of cardiovascular events (published in Nature Medicine, 2023).
  • European Commission. Novel Food status clarification: non-selective aqueous decoctions of monk fruit are not novel foods (October 2024).
  • Healthline. Monk fruit sweetener: benefits overview.

This article is for general information and reflects what current studies suggest. It is not medical advice. Research on natural sweeteners is ongoing, and much of it is still early-stage.