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Blackberries for Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes: Can They Be Eaten and What Are the Limitations?
Medical expert of the article
Last updated: 27.10.2025
Blackberries are a "watery" berry with a high proportion of dietary fiber and a moderate amount of natural sugars. This provides a low glycemic load per serving, especially when used in place of sweet desserts, syrups, or sweetened beverages. Their acidity and rich flavor help eliminate added sugar while maintaining the enjoyment of the meal. The nutritional "matrix" (water + fiber + polyphenols) contributes to a smoother postprandial glucose curve. [1]
Current diabetes management standards for 2025 emphasize a simple but important idea: water is the default beverage. Even diet drinks with non-nutritive sweeteners are recommended for use only in moderation and for short periods as a "bridge" to sugar abstinence. In this framework, berries, including blackberries, are considered a meal on a plate, not a glass of juice. This shift in emphasis significantly improves both glycemic control and energy balance. [2]
Berries have another powerful quality: they're easy to substitute. Where you'd once have honey, syrup, or cookies, you can substitute a cup of blackberries. This reduces free sugars, increases fiber and water content, and helps you feel fuller with fewer calories. For many people, it's these behavioral choices, repeated day after day, that make the biggest difference in blood sugar management.
Finally, blackberries are one of the champions of anthocyanin content among dark berries. Anthocyanins are polyphenols that, in 2024 reviews, were associated with improved carbohydrate metabolism in people at risk and in some patients with type 2 diabetes. This isn't a "cure-all," but an additional benefit to the berry's already beneficial glycemic profile. [3]
Table 1. Key arguments in favor of blackberries for diabetes
| Factor | What does this mean in practice? |
|---|---|
| High water and fiber content | Low glycemic load of typical servings |
| Polyphenols (anthocyanins) | Potential support for postprandial glycemia |
| A bright sweet and sour note | Easily replaces sugar/syrups in dishes |
| Good compatibility with protein | Smoother post-meal glucose curve |
Nutritional value and "working" portions
According to the USDA, 1 cup (≈144 g) of fresh blackberries contains about 62 kilocalories, 14 g carbohydrates, 8 g dietary fiber, and 7 g natural sugars. This is a rare combination of "high fiber - low calories - moderate sugars." Per 100 g, the numbers are proportional: approximately 43 kcal, 9.6 g carbohydrates, and about 5-6 g fiber. This profile makes the berry a convenient "fruit component" of the plate. [4]
Blackberries have a low glycemic index; in berry summary tables, they're in the "green zone" (low GI), and the actual glycemic load per cup tends to be low due to water and fiber. In practical nutrition, this means that a serving of blackberries added to a protein-and-vegetable plate or natural yogurt rarely causes sharp glucose spikes. What matters most is the context of the dish and what exactly the berries are replacing less favorable ingredients with. [5]
To match portions to your carb plan, it's helpful to use the rule "one carbohydrate serving ≈ 15 grams of carbohydrates." A cup of blackberries (≈ 14 grams of carbohydrates) is about one carbohydrate serving, but it's very high in fiber, making it a better choice than cookies, sweet toppings, and juices. This simple guideline helps you plan your plate without having to do complicated arithmetic.
In terms of micronutrients, blackberries are rich in vitamin C (≈34 mg per cup) and provide some calcium, potassium, and iron. They contain both soluble and insoluble fiber—a combination that improves satiety and supports a favorable postprandial response. For people looking to increase fiber in their diet, blackberries are one of the most convenient options. [6]
Table 2. Nutritional value of blackberries
| Indicator | Per 100 g | For 1 cup (≈144 g) |
|---|---|---|
| Energy | ~43 kcal | ~62 kcal |
| Carbohydrates | ~9.6 g | ~14 g |
| Dietary fiber | ~5-6 g | ~8 g |
| Natural sugars | ~4-5 g | ~7 g |
| Protein | ~1.4 g | ~2 g |
| Vitamin C | ~24 mg | ~34 mg |
Source: USDA/SNAP-Ed; FatSecret (USDA). [7]
Glycemic index, load, and real-life eating behavior
Berries, including blackberries, have a low glycemic index, confirmed by international studies. However, in everyday life, it's not the index itself that's more important, but the glycemic load of a serving and the combination of the food with other ingredients. A cup of blackberries has few available sugars and a high water content, hence the low glycemic load. If you add the same cup to plain oatmeal or natural yogurt, the post-meal glucose curve becomes smoother. [8]
An interesting nuance is the "berry-starch effect." In randomized studies, polyphenol-containing berries eaten with white bread reduced postprandial insulin (and sometimes glucose) responses compared to the same bread without berries. The mechanisms involve partial inhibition of starch-digesting enzymes and slower glucose absorption. The practical implications are simple: berries are logical to serve with starchy dishes if your goal is to smooth out the peaks. [9]
Juices are especially important to remember. Even if it's 100% fruit juice, a glass will contain tens of grams of free sugars without fiber. A 2025 meta-analysis shows that drinking "less than 100%" fruit drinks increases the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, while whole fruits offer no such benefit. Whole berries and water are optimal daily beverages for people with diabetes. [10]
Finally, a word about frozen berries. Blackberries are a complete alternative to fresh ones: the nutritional profile is preserved, and portioning and year-round availability make it easier to stick to a meal plan. Frozen blackberries are convenient for adding a precise "measured" cup to porridge, yogurt, or salad. [11]
Table 3. Glycemic reference values for blackberries
| Indicator | Meaning / Conclusion |
|---|---|
| Glycemic index | low (low-GI berry group) |
| Glycemic load of a cup | low due to water and fiber |
| The best context | together with starch or as part of a protein-vegetable plate |
| Drinks | water is preferable to any "berry" drinks |
Sources: International GI tables; clinical studies on berries; ADA-2025. [12]
What Science Says About Berries, Anthocyanins, and Diabetes
A 2024 systematic review of anthocyanin-containing foods found that a diet rich in anthocyanins (especially from dark berries) improves a range of carbohydrate metabolism outcomes—primarily postprandial markers and insulin sensitivity—in at-risk individuals and in some patients with type 2 diabetes. The effects are modest and not comparable to pharmacotherapy, but when combined with other elements of a healthy diet, they are significant. [13]
Separate randomized trials in healthy individuals and individuals with impaired carbohydrate metabolism have shown that berries combined with white bread reduce the insulin response with similar or slightly lower glycemia. This is important for those experiencing high insulin costs from starchy foods. In practice, it makes sense to add blackberries to cereals, whole-grain bread, casseroles, and other starchy dishes. [14]
However, there's no evidence that blackberries alone can magically lower glycated hemoglobin levels over the long term. Long-term outcomes depend on overall diet, physical activity, body weight, and prescribed therapy. Berries aren't a "cure," but a reliable part of your diet that helps reduce added sugar and improve the quality of your plate.
Yet it's precisely these "details" that make a noticeable difference over time. If a cup of blackberries regularly replaces cookies, syrup, or sweet yogurt, that's tens of grams of free sugars per week and noticeably smoother post-meal curves. Combining this with water as a base drink enhances the results and is fully consistent with the ADA-2025 updates. [15]
Table 4. Berries and glycemia - what is actually confirmed
| Question | Short answer | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Do berries reduce starch peaks? | Yes, in RCTs - lower insulin, sometimes lower glucose | [16] |
| Do berries "cure" diabetes? | No; effects are moderate and nutritional | [17] |
| What about juices? | Free sugars; benefits of whole fruit not transferred | [18] |
| What do the 2025 standards recommend? | Water is a priority; NNS - short and moderate | [19] |
Product forms: fresh, frozen, dried, jam, juice
Fresh and frozen blackberries are equally viable everyday options. Freezing helps maintain portion sizes and seasonality, and frozen berries are often just as good in vitamin C and fiber content—especially if the "fresh" ones have been refrigerated for several days. For glycemic and calorie control, these are the best forms. [20]
Dried blackberries are a concentrated source of sugar and calories. Portions become very small, and a "handful" easily turns into one or two carbohydrate servings. If you like dried fruit, use it as a rare addition and weigh it. This is more accurate and predictable for glucose.
Jams and sauces with sugar are dessert products. Even "homemade" jam with a small amount of sugar dramatically changes the berry's glycemic index. If you're looking for a "jam effect," use sugar-free thawed blackberry puree, optionally with a minimal dose of a non-caloric sweetener.
Juices (even 100% pure) contain tens of grams of free sugars per glass, and "smoothies" and nectars even more. This isn't an everyday option for diabetics. If you want "flavor in your water," add a few berries or a spoonful of puree to the pitcher—this way you'll preserve the water's benefits without adding sugar. [21]
Table 5. Blackberry formats and their glycemic meaning
| Format | Fibers | Free sugars | What does it mean |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh/frozen | There is | No | default selection, low load |
| Dried | not enough per 100 kcal | relatively high | only in small portions |
| Jam/sauce with sugar | almost none | There is | dessert, not "berry" |
| Juice/nectar | No | many | not suitable for everyday use |
Portions, combinations, and substitution ideas
A typical serving size is 1 cup (≈144 g). This contains ≈14 g of carbohydrates and ~8 g of fiber. This cup is perfect for a snack with natural yogurt or cottage cheese: the protein and fat from the dairy products, along with the fiber from the berries, provide a smooth glucose curve and good satiety. For breakfast, oatmeal without syrup with a cup of blackberries and a pinch of cinnamon is a good choice. [22]
If your goal is to smooth out the peaks after starch, add berries along with a starch source (oats, buckwheat, whole-grain toast). The combination of starch + fiber + polyphenols works better than berries alone. This is reflected both in clinical studies on berries and bread, and in the general common sense of "building a plate": protein, non-starchy vegetables, a serving of starch, and berries instead of sweets. [23]
To control your weight, pre-measure portions: for example, ½-cup packets in the freezer. This allows for a "guesstimate" and helps maintain energy balance. The same technique works for quick homemade "sugar-free jam": thaw a portion, lightly crush it, and it's ready. You can add vanilla, zest, or cinnamon if desired—it'll add plenty of flavor without adding sugar.
When using intensive insulin therapy, be aware of the "fat brake": if you add nuts, cream, or full-fat yogurt to your berries, the glucose peak may shift in time. This isn't a bad thing, but it's important when adjusting your bolus or choosing an extended bolus. Monitor your glucose levels using your glucometer or continuous monitoring system.
Table 6. Useful Substitutions (Daily Practice)
| Was | It became | Why is it better for diabetes? |
|---|---|---|
| Sweet yogurt | natural yogurt + a cup of blackberries | no added sugar, more fiber |
| Syrup in porridge | cup of blackberries + cinnamon | lower load, higher saturation |
| Cookie dessert | berries after a protein meal | soft postprandial response |
| Berry drink | water + a few berries/spoon of puree | corresponds to the 2025 water priority [24] |
Safety and special cases
Allergic reactions to blackberries are rare, but possible. If you experience mouth itching, rash, or swelling, avoid the product and discuss the situation with your doctor. If you have a sensitive stomach, start with small portions and eat the berries as part of a meal rather than on an empty stomach—tolerance is usually higher this way.
People with a predisposition to kidney stones are sometimes advised to individually monitor their intake of foods containing organic acids and oxalates. Blackberries are not among the "record holders" for oxalates, but if you have a strong predisposition, it's best to discuss your overall diet with a nephrologist; the key preventative measure is adequate hydration. (This is consistent with the water priority in the ADA-2025 updates.) [25]
No dangerous drug interactions specific to blackberries have been described in clinical reviews. However, the general rules remain: discuss any concentrates or "extracts" (if using them) with your doctor, especially if you are taking multiple medications. In everyday life, whole fresh or frozen berries are a safe and predictable choice for most people with diabetes.
Finally, be aware of "hidden sugar" in processed foods. "Jams," "sauces," "smoothies," and "nectars" often contain added sugar. Read the label: the "of which sugars" line and the ingredients list are your primary guides. If sugars are listed first, look for an alternative or make your own puree.
Table 7. Red flags on the label
| Paragraph | What's alarming | What to choose |
|---|---|---|
| Compound | sugar, syrups, concentrates in the first lines | "no added sugar", short ingredients |
| Portion | "2/3 cup" or other "tricky" portions | recalculate to your volume |
| Drinks | "nectar", "cocktail", "smoothie" from concentrate | water + whole berries in food |
| Dried berries | large "advertising" portions | small portions, weigh |
Mini Daily Plan (Sugar-Free Options)
The first option is breakfast: oatmeal with water/milk + a cup of blackberries + cinnamon. The flavor is from the berries, not the syrup.
Snack: Plain yogurt + ½-1 cup berries.
Lunch/Dinner: Green salad with chicken/fish and blackberries, dressed with olive oil and lemon juice.
Drinks: Water. If needed, a pitcher of water with a few berries and a citrus wedge, no sweeteners. This is fully in line with the 2025 Water Priority. [26]
Table 8. "How much is this in carbohydrate servings"
| Format | Mass/volume | Carbohydrates (estimate) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh/frozen - 1 cup | ~144 g | ~14 g | ≈ 1 "carbohydrate serving", ~8 g fiber [27] |
| Fresh - 100 g | 100 g | ~9.6 g | low energy density [28] |
| Dried - "a handful" | 15-30 g | much higher in weight | use as an accent |
| Juice - 200 ml | 200 ml | tens of grams of sugars | not for everyday use [29] |
Brief summary
Blackberries are a "friendly" berry for a diabetic diet: low in calories, high in dietary fiber, low glycemic load, and anthocyanins. In randomized trials, berries combined with starchy meals mitigated postprandial responses (especially insulin responses); don't expect long-term "miracles"—the effect is nutritional and moderate. Opt for fresh or frozen blackberries, use them instead of sugar and syrups, pair them with protein and non-starchy vegetables, and stick to water as your default drink—this is directly reflected in the 2025 Standards update. [30]

