Do Starbucks Frappuccino Bottles Have Caffeine?

A standard 13.7 oz bottle of Starbucks Frappuccino contains 110 mg of caffeine, which is roughly comparable to a single shot of espresso.

You grab a chilled Starbucks Frappuccino bottle from the gas station cooler, twist the cap, and take a sip. It tastes creamy and sweet, more like a milkshake than a coffee. That smooth flavor can make you wonder: Is there actually any coffee in here, or did they just nail the imitation?

The short answer is yes — these bottles definitely contain caffeine. The amount is moderate compared to a brewed cup, but it’s enough to give you a noticeable lift. This article breaks down exactly how much caffeine is inside, how different flavors compare, and where the bottled version fits against other Starbucks drinks.

How Much Caffeine Is In A Bottle

The official number comes straight from the manufacturer. A standard 13.7 fluid ounce bottle of Starbucks Frappuccino (the coffee-based version) contains 110 milligrams of caffeine, according to the PepsiCo product facts label — the same company that produces and distributes these bottles.

That caffeine count equals about 8 mg per ounce. For perspective, a 12-ounce tall brewed Starbucks coffee contains 235 to 290 mg — more than double what you’d get from a Frappuccino bottle. So the bottle lands squarely in the moderate caffeine camp, not the high-octane one.

Some blog sources report lower estimates of 60 to 90 mg per bottle, but these numbers don’t align with the manufacturer’s published label. The official 110 mg figure is the more reliable one to use when tracking your daily intake.

Why The Caffeine Level Surprises People

The bottled Frappuccino tastes sweet and creamy, much more like a dessert than a black coffee. That flavor profile leads many people to assume these drinks contain very little caffeine or none at all. In reality, they’re coffee-based beverages, not coffee-flavored milk drinks.

How the bottled version stacks up against other popular coffee drinks at Starbucks:

  • Bottled Frappuccino (13.7 oz): Contains 110 mg of caffeine. Smooth, sweet, and moderately caffeinated.
  • Tall brewed coffee (12 oz): Contains 235–290 mg. Over double the caffeine of the bottle.
  • Single shot of espresso (1 oz): Contains roughly 63 mg. A Frappuccino bottle has about 1.7 shots’ worth.
  • Dunkin Frozen Coffee (14 oz): Contains 295 mg. More than double the bottled Frappuccino.
  • Starbucks Iced Energy drink (newest RTD): Contains 160 mg. Plant-based caffeine, not coffee-based.

The takeaway is clear: The bottled version is not a high-caffeine drink, but it’s also not a caffeine-free option. It sits in the same range as about two shots of espresso or one strong 8-ounce home-brewed cup.

Caffeine By Flavor And Bottle Size

All the standard coffee-based flavors — Mocha, Vanilla, Caramel, Pumpkin Spice, and White Chocolate Mocha — use the same base recipe. That means they all deliver roughly 110 mg of caffeine per 13.7 ounce bottle. CaffeineInformer’s caffeine per fluid ounce breakdown confirms this consistency: the per-ounce number holds steady because the coffee extract ratio is the same across flavors.

Flavor differences come from added syrups and sweeteners, not from changes to the coffee base. So switching from Mocha to Vanilla or Caramel won’t change your caffeine intake.

Flavor Bottle Size Caffeine (mg)
Mocha 13.7 oz 110
Vanilla 13.7 oz 110
Caramel 13.7 oz 110
Pumpkin Spice 13.7 oz 110
White Chocolate Mocha 13.7 oz 110

There is also a Frappuccino Lite variant announced in early 2025, but specific caffeine content for that version hasn’t been officially published yet as of mid-2025.

How To Tell If It’s The Coffee-Based Version

Not every Starbucks bottled drink contains caffeine. The company makes a line of creamy, coffee-free milk drinks that look similar on the shelf. Here’s how to spot the difference before you buy:

  1. Check the front label: Look for the word “Frappuccino” — that’s your signal it’s the coffee-based drink with caffeine. Non-coffee versions are labeled “Milk Drink” or “Doubleshot Energy.”
  2. Read the ingredients panel: Coffee-based versions list “coffee” or “coffee extract” early in the ingredient list. Non-coffee versions won’t list coffee at all.
  3. Find the caffeine declaration on the side panel: PepsiCo voluntarily lists caffeine content near the Nutrition Facts box, so you can check the exact number without guessing.

Is 110 Mg A Lot Or A Little

For a healthy adult, the FDA generally considers up to 400 mg of caffeine per day to be safe. That figure comes from the Center for Science in the Public Interest’s caffeine chart, a frequently cited reference. By that standard, one 13.7 ounce Frappuccino bottle uses about a quarter of your daily limit.

Tasting Table ranked the bottled Frappuccino as the lowest caffeine coffee drink from Starbucks in one of its analyses. This comparison makes sense: it’s much lighter than a brewed coffee or a latte, but still offers enough caffeine for a mild energy boost rather than a jolt.

For people who are sensitive to caffeine or who prefer a lower daily intake, the bottled Frappuccino can fit comfortably into a moderate routine. Having one bottle won’t push most people past the typical safety threshold, though individual tolerance varies considerably.

Drink Caffeine (mg)
Bottled Frappuccino (13.7 oz) 110
Tall brewed coffee (12 oz) 235–290
Can of Coca-Cola (12 oz) 34
Brewed black tea (8 oz) 47

The Bottom Line

Starbucks Frappuccino bottles do contain caffeine — 110 mg per 13.7 oz bottle — making them a moderately caffeinated, coffee-based drink despite their creamy, dessert-like taste. All standard coffee flavors share the same caffeine content, so you can pick your favorite without worrying about the dose changing.

If you track your caffeine intake closely or have a known sensitivity, check the side panel on the bottle to see the exact number rather than relying on the drink’s name or appearance, and consider discussing your daily limits with your primary care doctor or a registered dietitian if you have specific health concerns.

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