Sugar & Health Index (EU-27)

Sugar & Health Index — European Union
01

The ranking

Composite score from 0 (low) to 100 (concerning). Toggle between general population and children: the underlying components change (adult intake + adult obesity + diabetes vs. child intake + child obesity). Click a column header to sort.

⬤ intake data confidence · ↘ consumption trend
low → concerning
directly measured (high confidence)
partial indicator
extrapolated (low confidence)
declining   flat   rising
Read this before interpreting the numbers. The "supply" column comes from FAO food balance sheets: it measures sugar placed on the market (including waste and non-food uses), not actual intake. It's inflated by cross-border purchases — which is why Belgium tops the list and Luxembourg looks artificially low. Free-sugar intake is only directly measured in ~13 countries; elsewhere it is estimated.
02

Why "most sugar" ≠ "worst health"

The intake / burden mismatch

The countries that consume the most sugar are not necessarily the sickest. Three cases in the table illustrate this:

  • Belgium — highest supply figure, yet moderate obesity and diabetes: the FAO number partly reflects transit trade and cross-border buying.
  • Portugal — among the lowest free-sugar intakes in the EU (< 8%), yet the highest diabetes prevalence: the burden has other drivers (ageing, sedentary lifestyle) and a lag effect.
  • Italy — the lowest adult obesity in the EU, yet one of the worst rates of childhood obesity: a risk that hasn't shown up in adults yet.

The overall trend

Two curves are moving in opposite directions, which makes projection tricky:

  • Consumption is falling almost everywhere — sugary drink intake has declined in 21 tracked countries, industry reformulation is widespread, and 14 EU member states now tax sugary drinks.
  • Obesity and diabetes keep rising in most countries (lag effects, multiple causes). The IDF projects a 10% rise in regional diabetes by 2050.

Net effect: over 10 years, intake plateaus while the health burden keeps growing — especially where it's already high and public policy is weak.

03

10-year projection — who is deteriorating fastest

An indicative scenario: starting from the current score, heavily weighting today's childhood obesity (the best leading signal of tomorrow's adult burden), adding the consumption trend, and subtracting a bonus for countries with a tiered sugar tax (the most effective design). The strongest predictor of the sickest country in 10 years is childhood obesity today.

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Romania

Low adult burden today, but child overweight > 25%, a rapidly westernising diet, and a tax only introduced in 2024. The steepest upward trajectory.

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Italy

The "Mediterranean paradox": lean adults, but children among the most affected in Europe. These children will become at-risk cardiometabolic adults.

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Cyprus

Low supply figure but already high childhood obesity and diabetes, with no sugar tax in place. The adult burden is likely to keep climbing.

Countries improving fastest. The Netherlands (highest child intake, but a strongly declining trend, low child obesity, and a tax in place), Ireland (an 85% drop in daily teen soda consumption, tiered tax) and France (lowest adult obesity, tiered tax) are best positioned.
04

Methodology & sources

How the index is calculated

Each score is a transparent composite, computed in-page from per-country values. Variables are scaled 0–100 by linear clamping (e.g. adult free sugars: 6% → 0, 18% → 100; adult obesity: 8% → 0, 28% → 100; diabetes: 3% → 0, 15% → 100).

General population = 45% "intake pressure" + 55% "realised burden".
Intake pressure = 60% estimated adult free sugars + 40% FAO supply.
Burden = 50% adult obesity + 50% diabetes prevalence.

Children = 40% intake (child/adolescent free sugars) + 60% child obesity/overweight.

10-year projection = 0.55 × general score + 0.45 × scaled child obesity + trend adjustment − policy bonus. Trend: rising +6, flat 0, declining −4. Policy: tiered tax −5, flat-rate/other tax −2, none/planned 0.

Confidence (⬤). Green = free-sugar intake measured by a national or multi-centre survey (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, partial Sweden, etc.). Orange = partial indicator or regional cohort (IDEFICS). Hollow = extrapolated from supply data and regional profile (mostly Central/Eastern Europe). These are orders of magnitude, not precision measurements.

Major limitations. Dietary surveys are methodologically inconsistent (different methods, years 2003–2024, sample sizes), socially-desirable under-reporting of "negative" foods, food composition tables that lag recent reformulations, and FAO supply ≠ actual intake. The projection is a scenario, not a forecast.

WHO (2015) — Guideline: Sugars intake for adults and children (free sugar threshold < 10% / < 5%).

Azaïs-Braesco et al. (2017), Nutrition Journal — review of total and added sugar intakes in Europe (11 surveys).

Löwik (2021), Applied Sciences — assessment of sugar intake in Europe (free/added sugars by age group, % of energy).

Graffe et al. / IDEFICS study (2020), Eur J Nutr — free sugars in children (BE, CY, EE, DE, HU, IT, ES, SE).

HBSC (2021/22 survey) & Chatelan et al. (2022) — daily sugary drink consumption among adolescents, 21 countries.

FAO — food balance sheets (per-capita sugar supply), via Landgeist mapping.

Eurostat — EHIS 2019/2022, adult obesity (self-reported BMI ≥ 30).

WHO COSI — round 6 (2022–2024) & Health at a Glance: Europe 2024 — childhood obesity.

IDF Diabetes Atlas (2024) — diabetes prevalence (ages 20–79).

WHO Europe / Tax Foundation / Eurotax — sugary drink taxes by country.

Composite index built for illustrative purposes on 22 June 2026 from heterogeneous public sources. Scores synthesise data of uneven quality and do not replace a harmonised national survey. Use with appropriate caution.

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