A medium order has 28 g total sugar and 27 g added sugar, per Dunkin’s nutrition guide.
If you’re ordering this drink for the brown-sugar taste, sugar is part of the deal. The question is how much, and how that changes with size. Dunkin’s nutrition guide lists both total sugars and added sugars for its Brown Sugar Shakin’ Espresso. Those two numbers help you gauge sweetness, compare sizes, and decide if a tweak is worth it.
Below, you’ll see the sugar grams for small, medium, and large, plus a few practical ways to dial it up or down without turning the drink into something else.
What Counts As “Sugar” In This Drink
On nutrition labels, “Total Sugars” includes sugars from every source in the item. In a coffee drink, that can include sugars from milk plus sugars from syrups or sweeteners. “Added Sugars” counts sugars added during preparation, like flavored syrups and sweetener blends.
Dunkin’s guide reports both values, which makes it easier to spot where sweetness is coming from. If total sugar and added sugar are close, most of the sugar is coming from added sweeteners rather than milk.
To check the same numbers yourself, use Dunkin’s official nutrition guide PDF and look under the Iced Espresso section.
How Dunkin Lists The Drink Name
The menu name uses “Shaken Espresso.” In Dunkin’s nutrition guide, the item appears as “Brown Sugar Shakin’ Espresso.” It’s the same menu idea: espresso shaken with ice and sweetened with a brown sugar flavor, then finished as a cold espresso drink.
That naming detail matters because nutrition data is tied to the exact menu item entry. The sugar grams below are taken from Dunkin’s published nutrition guide for the Brown Sugar Shakin’ Espresso.
Brown Sugar Shaken Espresso Sugar Amounts By Size
Here are the numbers Dunkin lists for total sugar and added sugar in each size. If you like thinking in teaspoons, a simple conversion is 4 grams of sugar per teaspoon.
Small: 18 g total sugars, 18 g added sugars. Medium: 28 g total sugars, 27 g added sugars. Large: 37 g total sugars, 36 g added sugars. The pattern is steady: each size jump adds a noticeable bump in sweetness.
To put added sugar in context, the FDA sets a Daily Value for added sugars of 50 grams on a 2,000-calorie diet, which is used for Nutrition Facts labels. You can read the definition and Daily Value details on the FDA added sugars page.
Table 1 breaks the drink down in a few ways so you can compare sizes at a glance.
| Line Item | Sugar Amount | Fast Context |
|---|---|---|
| Small Total Sugars | 18 g | Roughly 4.5 tsp total sugar |
| Small Added Sugars | 18 g | 36% of the 50 g added-sugar Daily Value |
| Medium Total Sugars | 28 g | Roughly 7 tsp total sugar |
| Medium Added Sugars | 27 g | 54% of the 50 g added-sugar Daily Value |
| Large Total Sugars | 37 g | Roughly 9.25 tsp total sugar |
| Large Added Sugars | 36 g | 72% of the 50 g added-sugar Daily Value |
| Small Vs Medium | +10 g total | One size jump adds 2.5 tsp total sugar |
| Medium Vs Large | +9 g total | Another jump adds 2.25 tsp total sugar |
If you follow the American Heart Association’s tighter guidance, those numbers can feel big fast. The AHA suggests limiting added sugars to 25 g per day for women and 36 g per day for men, which it also expresses as 6 and 9 teaspoons. See the AHA’s explanation on how much sugar is too much.
Using that lens, a large order’s 36 g added sugar matches the AHA daily limit for men and clears the women’s limit. A medium is just over the women’s limit and sits under the men’s limit. A small lands under both, yet it still carries a clear sweet profile.
Why Total Sugar And Added Sugar Are So Close
Notice how close total sugars and added sugars are in the medium and large sizes. That signals that most sugar is coming from added sweetener rather than milk. Milk still brings some naturally occurring sugars, yet the added sugar figure is doing most of the work here.
If you’re trying to lower sugar, that’s useful. It points you toward changes that reduce sweetener first, instead of swapping milks and hoping for a big shift.
What Else Changes When You Size Up
Sugar is the headline, yet it’s not the only number that climbs with size. Dunkin’s nutrition guide lists calories and total carbs alongside sugar. As size increases, carbs increase, and most of that climb is sugar.
From Dunkin’s guide: small is 120 calories with 26 g carbs; medium is 180 calories with 40 g carbs; large is 230 calories with 51 g carbs. If you’re choosing a size for taste, it helps to know the sweetness jump brings a calorie jump too.
How To Order It Less Sweet Without Losing The Brown Sugar Vibe
People ask for “less sugar” in coffee drinks in a few different ways. Some want less sweetness on the tongue. Some want fewer grams of added sugar. The best move depends on what your store can do and what you can tolerate in flavor.
Ask For Less Sweetener Or Fewer Pumps
If your Dunkin location can adjust the sweetener amount, this is the most direct lever. The brown sugar flavor is tied to sweetener, so cutting it will taste less dessert-like. Many people prefer a half-sweet version because it still reads as brown sugar, just cleaner and more coffee-forward.
Choose A Smaller Size First
This is the simplest sugar cut that keeps the recipe intact. Moving from large to medium drops total sugar by 9 g and added sugar by 9 g. Moving from medium to small drops total sugar by 10 g and added sugar by 9 g.
Balance With More Ice Or A Longer Shake
This won’t change grams of sugar, yet it can change your experience. More dilution can make the same sugar taste lighter. If you tend to sip slowly, a drink that starts a bit stronger can still land pleasant by the time ice melts.
Skip Extra Sweet Add-Ons
If you’re adding flavored cold foam, drizzle, or extra syrup, those extras can push sugar higher. Keeping the order close to the base drink makes the label numbers more meaningful.
When “Sugar Free” Isn’t A Real Match For This Drink
Some iced coffee drinks can be built around unsweetened espresso and a splash of milk. This one is designed around a sweet brown sugar flavor, so a “sugar free” version won’t taste like the original. If you remove the sweetener entirely, you’ll be closer to shaken espresso with milk than to a brown sugar drink.
If you want a less sweet cold espresso that still feels flavored, you might be happier with an unsweetened iced espresso or iced latte, then add a light flavor option your store offers.
Added Sugar Benchmarks That Help You Decide Fast
Numbers are only useful if they help you make a call in the moment. Here are a few benchmarks that can help you decide whether today is a small, medium, or large day.
- 50 g added sugars is the FDA Daily Value used on labels.
- 25 g added sugars is the AHA’s daily limit for many women.
- 36 g added sugars is the AHA’s daily limit for many men.
- 12 tsp is 50 g of sugar using 4 g per teaspoon.
The CDC also summarizes the Dietary Guidelines approach: people age 2 and older should keep added sugars under 10% of daily calories. For a 2,000-calorie pattern, that’s 50 g added sugar, or 200 calories. See CDC added sugars facts for a plain-language overview.
How To Use The Numbers If You Track Nutrition
If you track macros, sugar grams can slot into your day like any other item. The main trick is picking the right size and logging the drink as ordered. If you cut sweetener or change milk, the listed values won’t match your cup.
Two practical ways to stay honest with your log:
- Log the standard drink when you order it standard. Use the brand’s published numbers.
- If you modify it, log the closest standard item and treat your entry as an estimate, then keep your remaining added sugar choices lower later in the day.
What To Do If You’re Watching Blood Sugar
If you’re monitoring blood sugar for medical reasons, sweet coffee drinks can hit fast because the sugar is in liquid form and easy to consume quickly. It can help to drink it with food, sip slowly, and choose a smaller size. Personal response varies, so use your own data and any clinician guidance you already follow.
Ways To Trim Sweetness While Keeping The Drink Recognizable
Table 2 lays out order tweaks that usually keep the drink in the same lane. These are practical, café-style changes that many stores can do.
| Order Change | What It Does To Sweetness | Trade-Off |
|---|---|---|
| Go Down One Size | Cuts sugar grams by the label difference | Less volume |
| Ask For Half Sweet | Lowers the sweetener load | Brown sugar note is lighter |
| Keep Milk Simple | Avoids extra sweetened creamers | Less dessert-like texture |
| Skip Toppings And Drizzles | Avoids extra sugar sources | Fewer flavor layers |
| Add A Shot Of Espresso | Makes the same sweetness taste less forward | More bitterness |
| Extra Ice | More dilution as it melts | Colder, thinner finish |
| Sip With A Meal | Can soften the sweet hit for some people | Changes the “treat” feel |
| Swap To Unsweetened Iced Espresso | Near-zero added sugar if ordered plain | No brown sugar flavor |
So, How Much Sugar Is In Dunkin Brown Sugar Shaken Espresso?
From Dunkin’s nutrition guide, the sugar depends on size: small has 18 g total sugars, medium has 28 g, and large has 37 g. Added sugars are 18 g, 27 g, and 36 g across those sizes. If you want the flavor with fewer sugar grams, start by going down a size or asking for less sweetener, since the added sugar drives most of the sweetness.
References & Sources
- Dunkin’.“Nutrition Guide (PDF).”Provides total sugars and added sugars for Brown Sugar Shakin’ Espresso by size.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Added Sugars on the Nutrition Facts Label.”Defines added sugars and lists the 50 g Daily Value used on labels.
- American Heart Association (AHA).“How Much Sugar Is Too Much?”Shares suggested daily limits for added sugars expressed in grams and teaspoons.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Get the Facts: Added Sugars.”Summarizes guidance to keep added sugars under 10% of daily calories and converts to teaspoons.
