If you’ve ever stood at a Dutch Bros drive-thru squinting at the menu board trying to figure out what’s actually sugar-free versus what just sounds like it might be, you already know the problem. The menu is enormous, the customization options are genuinely overwhelming, and the staff moves fast. I’ve ordered wrong more times than I’d like to admit — including one embarrassing afternoon where I confidently ordered a “skinny” version of something that doesn’t actually have a skinny modifier, got a very sweet drink, and didn’t say anything because the line behind me was eight cars deep.
So here’s what I’ve actually mapped out after going through Dutch Bros’ ingredient documentation, cross-referencing their app customization options, and doing a lot of trial-and-error ordering in 2025 and into early 2026.

The Sugar-Free Syrup Situation
Dutch Bros uses Torani and their own house syrups depending on location and drink type. The confirmed sugar-free syrup options available at most locations as of early 2026 are:
- Sugar-free vanilla
- Sugar-free caramel
- Sugar-free hazelnut
- Sugar-free white chocolate (availability varies by region — I’ve had two locations tell me they don’t carry it)
- Sugar-free raspberry
- Sugar-free peach
The thing people get wrong constantly: “sugar-free” on the syrup doesn’t make the whole drink sugar-free. If you’re ordering a blended drink, the base itself often contains sugar. A Freeze (their blended line) uses a base mix that has carbs in it. I learned this the hard way when I was tracking macros and couldn’t figure out why my “sugar-free” blended drink was logging at 28g carbs. The syrup was fine. The base wasn’t.
For actual low-carb ordering, you want to stay in the espresso-based drinks or the Rebel (their energy drink) line, and you need to specify both the syrup swap AND the milk swap.

Milk Matters More Than People Think
Dutch Bros defaults to 2% milk on most drinks. If you’re cutting carbs, the swap that actually moves the needle is going to heavy cream or unsweetened almond milk.
Heavy cream: roughly 0.4g carbs per ounce. A standard 24oz drink uses maybe 4-6oz of milk, so you’re looking at under 3g carbs from the dairy component.
Unsweetened almond milk: about 0.3g carbs per ounce at most, but Dutch Bros uses a commercial almond milk blend that I’ve clocked at closer to 1g per ounce depending on the location’s supplier. It’s still better than 2% (which runs about 1.5g per ounce), but it’s not zero.
Oat milk is the trap. I’ve watched people order oat milk thinking it’s the “healthy” option and not realize it’s running 2g+ carbs per ounce. A 24oz oat milk latte with sugar-free syrup can still land at 20-25g carbs just from the milk.

The Rebel Line: Where Low-Carb Actually Works
The Dutch Bros Rebel is their proprietary energy drink base. The base itself is sugar-sweetened, which is the first problem. But here’s the thing most guides don’t tell you: you can order a Rebel with sugar-free syrup and ask them to use the “light” Rebel base, which some locations will do by splitting the Rebel with water or soda water.
The cleaner move I’ve settled on: order a Rebel with soda water as the base, sugar-free syrup of your choice, and a splash of cream if you want it. This is essentially a sugar-free Italian soda with caffeine. Carbs drop to under 5g depending on how heavy-handed they are with the syrup.
The standard Rebel with sugar-free syrup but full Rebel base is still going to run you 25-30g carbs because the base is sweetened. I’ve seen this listed as “low carb” on multiple third-party sites and it’s just not accurate.
Espresso Drinks: The Reliable Path
The safest low-carb ordering at Dutch Bros is in the espresso line. Here’s what actually works:
Americano with sugar-free syrup: essentially zero carbs outside the syrup. A pump of sugar-free vanilla syrup is about 0-1g carbs depending on the brand. Order a medium (24oz) Americano with 2-3 pumps sugar-free vanilla and you’re under 5g total.
Latte with heavy cream: ask for a latte, substitute heavy cream for milk, sugar-free syrup. The espresso itself is negligible. You’re looking at 2-4g carbs for a medium.
The Kicker (their Irish cream latte): this one is trickier. The Irish cream syrup is not available in sugar-free at most locations. I’ve asked at four different Dutch Bros in the Pacific Northwest and none of them had a SF Irish cream option. If you love the Kicker, the closest low-carb approximation is a heavy cream latte with sugar-free vanilla and a tiny pump of regular hazelnut — it’s not the same, but it scratches a similar itch at around 6-8g carbs instead of 35+.

The Annihilator and Other Signature Drinks
The Annihilator (chocolate macadamia nut) is one of their most popular drinks and it’s a nightmare to make low-carb. The chocolate sauce is not available in sugar-free. The macadamia nut syrup is not available in sugar-free. You can ask for sugar-free chocolate (some locations have it as a Torani option) and sugar-free hazelnut as a substitute for macadamia, but you’re building a different drink at that point.
My honest take: if the Annihilator is your thing, just drink it. The low-carb version is a compromise that doesn’t really taste like the original. Sometimes the right answer is to pick a different drink rather than chase a bad approximation.
The Golden Eagle (vanilla and caramel) is much more workable. Sugar-free vanilla and sugar-free caramel both exist, heavy cream instead of milk, and you’re at a drink that’s genuinely close to the original at under 8g carbs for a medium.
How to Actually Order Without Holding Up the Line
Dutch Bros staff are fast and they’re used to modifications. The cleanest way to order a low-carb drink is to lead with the base drink name, then say “with sugar-free [syrup], heavy cream instead of milk.” Don’t say “I want something low-carb, what do you recommend” — the line will hate you and the answer will vary wildly by who’s working.
Specific phrasing that works:
“Medium latte, sugar-free vanilla, heavy cream instead of milk.”
“Medium Americano, sugar-free caramel, no sweetener.”
“Medium Rebel, soda water base, sugar-free peach, splash of cream.”
The app lets you customize before you get to the window, which is genuinely useful for this. You can see the syrup options, toggle sugar-free where available, and change the milk. It doesn’t show you carb counts, which is a gap I’d love to see them close, but it at least lets you build the drink before you’re staring at a speaker trying to remember what you wanted.

What’s Changed in 2026
The main update worth noting: Dutch Bros expanded their sugar-free syrup availability in late 2025. Sugar-free peach and sugar-free raspberry were inconsistently available before — I had locations tell me they didn’t carry them as recently as mid-2025. As of my last few visits in early 2026, both have been consistently available at the locations I frequent in Oregon and Washington. If you’re in a different region, it’s still worth asking rather than assuming.
The oat milk situation hasn’t changed. It’s still on the menu, it’s still high-carb, and it’s still being recommended in “healthy” Dutch Bros guides that clearly haven’t looked at the nutrition numbers. Unsweetened almond milk remains the better call if you want a plant-based option and you’re watching carbs.
One thing I’m still waiting on: a sugar-free chocolate sauce option that’s actually consistent across locations. A few people in Dutch Bros-focused communities have reported getting it at specific locations, but I haven’t been able to confirm it as a standard offering. If that changes, the Annihilator problem gets a lot more solvable.







