Stevia : Everything You Need To Know in 2026

Mar 25, 2026
Stevia: Everything You Need to Know in 2026 (Benefits, Risks, Best Products) | Artinci
Sweetener Deep Dives

Stevia: Everything You Need to Know in 2026 (Benefits, Risks, Best Products)

Certified in Low-Carb Nutrition & Metabolic Health (144 CPD credits, CPD UK)
Updated March 2026 · 12 min read

I'll be honest with you: I hated stevia the first time I tried it.

There was this lingering bitterness at the back of my tongue that no amount of chai spice could hide. When we first started developing sugar-free desserts for Artinci, we did what most small food brands do — we sourced a ready-made stevia powder from a vendor and used it in our formulation. The result was, frankly, terrible. Too bitter. Too one-dimensional. The kind of product that would convince someone stevia doesn't work — and send them straight back to sugar.

But that bad experience became the turning point. Because the science behind stevia was too compelling to ignore — a plant extract, 200 to 300 times sweeter than sugar, with zero calories and zero glycemic impact. The problem wasn't stevia itself. The problem was that we had no control over the formulation. So we decided to develop our own sweetener blend in-house, from scratch.

I'll tell you honestly: the first six trials failed. Yes, I was counting. Each one taught us something — about ratios, about how stevia's high-intensity sweetness interacts with different bulking agents, about the precise point where the aftertaste tips from acceptable to overpowering. Trial seven was the first time it began to fall into place. We launched, and then we kept refining — listening to real customers, adjusting based on live feedback, iterating the formulation through actual market use rather than just lab tastings. Today, I believe we've cracked it. And in this guide, I want to share everything I've learned along the way: the real science, the honest limitations, and the practical knowledge that separates stevia frustration from stevia mastery.

What Is Stevia, Really?

Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni is a small shrub native to Paraguay and Brazil. For centuries, the Guaraní people of South America chewed its leaves to sweeten herbal teas — long before the rest of the world had heard of it.

The magic lies in a group of compounds called steviol glycosides. These are the molecules responsible for stevia's intense sweetness. The two you'll see most often are stevioside and rebaudioside A (commonly called Reb A). Newer variants — Reb M and Reb D — are gaining traction because they deliver a cleaner, more sugar-like taste with less of the aftertaste that made earlier stevia products polarising.

Stevia's commercial journey began in Japan in the 1970s — nearly three decades before most Western countries approved it. Japan essentially proved that large-scale stevia adoption was possible, and the rest of the world eventually followed. Today, stevia is found in over 40,000 food and beverage products globally, from Coca-Cola formulations to tabletop sweeteners to sugar-free Indian sweets.

200–300x Sweeter than sugar — with zero calories and zero glycemic impact

How Stevia Works in Your Body

This is where stevia fundamentally differs from sugar, and it's the reason it matters for anyone managing their blood glucose.

When you eat table sugar (sucrose), your body breaks it down into glucose and fructose. Glucose enters the bloodstream rapidly, triggering a blood sugar spike. Your pancreas responds by releasing insulin to shuttle that glucose into cells. Consume excess sugar over time, and this cycle contributes to insulin resistance, weight gain, and eventually conditions like Type 2 diabetes.

Stevia bypasses this cycle entirely. Steviol glycosides pass through your digestive system largely unabsorbed. They don't raise blood glucose. They don't stimulate significant insulin release. Your body doesn't metabolise them for energy — which is exactly why stevia delivers zero calories.

The metabolic summary: Sugar gets broken down, absorbed, and spikes your blood glucose. Stevia passes through your system without triggering the glucose-insulin cycle. For the 101 million Indians living with diabetes and the 136 million with pre-diabetes (per the ICMR-INDIAB study), this distinction is not academic — it's life-altering.

The Honest Truth About Stevia's Taste

Let's talk about the aftertaste — because pretending it doesn't exist doesn't help anyone.

At low doses, stevia tastes clean and pleasantly sweet. But at higher concentrations, some steviol glycosides activate bitter taste receptors alongside sweet ones, producing that distinctive bitter or liquorice-like tail. This is a real phenomenon, and individual sensitivity to it varies. Some people barely notice it; others find it a dealbreaker.

Why pure stevia is impractical for home use

If stevia is 300 times sweeter than sugar, you'd need a microscopic pinch to sweeten your chai. That creates three problems: a fraction of a gram too much and your drink becomes unbearably sweet; pure stevia provides no bulk, texture, or structure in recipes; and measuring micrograms at home is simply impractical.

The blending solution

This is why virtually every consumer stevia product is a blend. The most effective combinations pair stevia with erythritol (which provides sugar-like bulk and masks bitterness with a clean, cooling profile), FOS or inulin (prebiotic fibres that add body, round out flavour, and deliver gut health benefits), or both. The blend gives you measurable volume, a sugar-like sweetness curve, and the right texture for cooking — while the stevia provides the zero-calorie, zero-GI sweet intensity.

The new generation: Reb M and Reb D

Taste-modulation technology has progressed enormously. Newer steviol glycoside variants — particularly Reb M and Reb D — have significantly cleaner taste profiles than the Reb A that dominated early products. Globally, companies like PureCircle (now part of Ingredion) have developed stevia solutions that are up to 100 times more soluble than traditional Reb M, enabling much more refined sugar-reduction formulations. In India, Arboreal Bioinnovations stands out as the country's leading stevia manufacturer, working with homegrown stevia to build the domestic supply chain that the Indian market needs as adoption accelerates. If you tried stevia five years ago and dismissed it, it may be worth trying again — the products have genuinely improved.

Is Stevia Safe? What Regulators and Science Say (2026 Data)

Let me walk you through what every major regulatory body in the world has concluded — and then add the most recent evidence from 2025 and 2026.

Regulatory approvals

US FDA: Stevia extracts (high-purity steviol glycosides, ≥95%) hold GRAS status — Generally Recognised as Safe. This isn't a tentative approval; it's the FDA's standard for ingredients with a robust safety record.

FSSAI (India): Stevia was approved for use in Indian food and beverages in 2015, with permitted limits set across categories including carbonated water, dairy-based drinks, yoghurts, cereals, fruit nectars, and jams. FSSAI has recommended up to 200 mg/kg of steviol glycosides in beverages.

WHO/JECFA: The Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives has established an Acceptable Daily Intake of 4 mg of steviol equivalents per kg body weight. For a 70 kg adult, that's roughly 280 mg per day — far beyond what normal consumption would ever reach.

EFSA (European Food Safety Authority): Has conducted comprehensive safety evaluations and confirmed the same ADI of 4 mg/kg body weight.

The latest science: 2025–2026

A major systematic review published in Frontiers in Nutrition in January 2026 synthesised research across PubMed, Web of Science, and CNKI covering publications from 2005 through September 2025. The review examined over 140 sources and concluded: steviol glycosides show no evidence of mutagenicity or carcinogenicity, with the established ADI of 4 mg/kg body weight confirmed as safe.

A separate 2025 toxicological study published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science found no acute, sub-chronic, genotoxic, or teratogenic toxicity from stevia rebaudiana extract — providing further foundational evidence supporting stevia's safety profile.

The bottom line on safety: Every major regulatory body on the planet — FDA, FSSAI, EFSA, WHO — has evaluated stevia and approved it as safe within the ADI. The most recent 2026 systematic review, covering two decades of research, confirms no carcinogenic or mutagenic risk. Stevia's safety profile is among the most thoroughly established of any non-nutritive sweetener.

Health Benefits Beyond Just "No Sugar"

Stevia isn't just the absence of sugar. Research has identified several active pharmacological properties of steviol glycosides that go beyond zero-calorie sweetness.

Blood sugar management: Stevia doesn't just avoid raising blood glucose — some studies suggest steviol glycosides may actually support insulin secretion in people with diabetes. Importantly, this effect appears to be specific to pathological situations. Stevia does not cause hypoglycaemia in people with normal glucose levels. This makes it a particularly intelligent choice for people managing diabetes or pre-diabetes.

Blood pressure support: Research has identified antihypertensive properties linked to vasodilation and ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) inhibition. People with chronic low blood pressure or those taking blood-pressure-lowering medication should consult their doctor before using stevia in large amounts.

Antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects: Stevia extracts contain phenolic compounds — including chlorogenic acid and its analogues — that demonstrate meaningful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity in both in vitro and in vivo studies.

Dental health: Unlike sugar, stevia doesn't feed the acid-producing bacteria (Streptococcus mutans, Lactobacillus acidophilus) that cause dental cavities. Studies have confirmed the non-cariogenic properties of both stevioside and rebaudioside A.

Anticancer potential (early-stage): A 2025 study from Hiroshima University, published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences, found that stevia leaf extract fermented with Lactobacillus plantarum showed cytotoxic effects against pancreatic cancer cells while sparing healthy kidney cells. This is early-stage, lab-based research — not a clinical recommendation — but it adds to a growing body of evidence that stevia's bioactive compounds deserve continued scientific attention.

A note on proportionality: The health benefits described above come from research studies, often using concentrated extracts at doses higher than what you'd get from sweetening your daily chai. The primary, well-established benefit of stevia for most people is straightforward: zero calories, zero glycemic impact, and a practical way to reduce sugar intake. The pharmacological properties are promising, but they supplement — not replace — a balanced, metabolically conscious diet.

Stevia in the Indian Kitchen: A Practical Guide

This is where theory meets your kitchen. Having formulated with stevia since 2019, here's what I've learned about using it across Indian cooking contexts.

Kitchen Use Best Stevia Form How Much Tip
Chai / Coffee Stevia liquid drops or stevia-erythritol blend 3–4 drops or 1 tsp blend per cup Start with half and adjust. Liquid drops dissolve instantly — no grittiness
Laddoo / Barfi Stevia-erythritol blend (powdered) 70–80% of sugar's volume Erythritol provides the bulk sugar normally gives. Mix while the mixture is still warm
Halwa Erythritol-stevia blend or allulose 80–100% of sugar volume Add after initial cooking phase — high heat can cause off-flavours
Kheer / Payasam Stevia-erythritol blend 60–70% of sugar volume Add once the kheer has cooled slightly. Milk provides natural richness
Cakes / Baking Stevia-erythritol blend (allulose if available) 100% same volume as sugar Add an extra tablespoon of fat (ghee/butter) to compensate for moisture loss
Dal / Curry Stevia liquid drops 1–2 drops Replaces the traditional "pinch of sugar" to balance tanginess
Chutney / Sauces Stevia drops or stevia-erythritol blend Half the usual sugar quantity Stevia balances tanginess without adding bulk
Cold drinks / Lassi Finely powdered stevia blend or drops To taste Use powdered form for cold beverages — granular erythritol takes longer to dissolve

Why stevia alone won't work in mithai

Sugar in Indian sweets isn't just providing sweetness. It creates texture (the gooeyness of gulab jamun), structure (the firmness of barfi), colour (caramelisation in jalebi), and moisture (the syrup in rasgulla). Pure stevia provides none of these. That's why a bulking partner — erythritol for structure, FOS or inulin for moisture, allulose for caramelisation — is essential when making traditional sweets sugar-free.

Choosing a Stevia Product in India: What to Look For

The Indian stevia market has grown significantly, but not every product labelled "stevia" is created equal. Here's how to evaluate what you're buying.

The label test: flip the pack

Many popular tabletop stevia products in India — including some market leaders — use maltodextrin or dextrose as their primary bulking agents. These are high-GI fillers that can spike blood sugar, which defeats the entire purpose of choosing stevia. Maltodextrin has a glycemic index of 85–105 — higher than table sugar itself.

The 3-second check: Flip the pack. Read the ingredient list. If maltodextrin or dextrose appears before stevia in the list, you have a problem — and it's not that these are just fillers. Maltodextrin has a glycemic index of 85–105 and dextrose sits at 100. Both are higher than table sugar itself. By replacing sugar with a sweetener built on these ingredients, you're not doing yourself any favours — you've swapped one blood-sugar-spiking ingredient for another, while paying a premium for the privilege.

What to look for instead: The best stevia products use erythritol, FOS, or inulin as their base — ingredients with zero or near-zero glycemic impact that actually support the health goal you're trying to achieve. Check for high-purity steviol glycosides (≥95%, ideally Reb A or Reb M) and a clean ingredient list without hidden high-GI fillers.

Formats available in India

Liquid stevia drops are ideal for beverages — they dissolve instantly in hot or cold drinks. Brands like Sweetmate, Magicleaf, Zindagi, and Bliss of Earth offer clean formulations. A 10–30 ml bottle typically lasts 200+ servings. This is the most economical and precise format for daily chai and coffee use.

Stevia tablets work well for on-the-go convenience — one tablet typically equals one teaspoon of sugar. Look for brands like Steviocal and Bliss of Earth that use high-purity Reb A (99.8%) without fillers.

Stevia-erythritol blends (powdered, 1:1 sugar replacement) are the most versatile format for cooking and baking. Brands like Sugar.fit and Artinci offer clean blends without high-GI fillers. Always verify the ingredient order — erythritol should appear before any other bulking agent, and maltodextrin should be absent.

Stevia in sugar-free sweets: At Artinci, we use stevia in our BakeSmart and MithaiSmart ranges — blended with erythritol and other clean ingredients to deliver proper Indian sweet flavours without the aftertaste that plagued our earliest formulations. Our DrinkSmart range uses monk fruit rather than stevia, because each sweetener has a context where it performs best — and beverages are where monk fruit's clean, fruity sweetness really shines.

Stevia vs Other Sweeteners: Where It Fits

No single sweetener does everything perfectly. Here's a quick comparison so you can see where stevia excels — and where other options might suit you better.

Sweetener Sweetness vs Sugar GI Calories Taste Best For
Stevia 200–300x 0 0 Clean at low doses; bitter/liquorice at high Beverages, tabletop, blends
Monk Fruit 150–250x 0 0 Clean, fruity, less aftertaste Beverages, premium products
Erythritol 0.6–0.7x 0 ~0.2/g Cool, clean, slight cooling sensation Bulking agent, blends, mithai
Allulose 0.7x ~0 ~0.2–0.4/g Closest to sugar; caramelises Baking, cooking, keto

Stevia's sweet spot (pun intended): daily beverages, tabletop use, and as the high-intensity component in blends. For baking where you need caramelisation and browning, allulose wins. For bulk and texture in Indian mithai, erythritol is the better partner. The smartest formulations — including what we use at Artinci — combine stevia's zero-calorie sweetness with the physical properties of these complementary ingredients.

The Global Stevia Market: Why It Matters

Stevia isn't a niche health trend anymore. It's a global industry reshaping how food is formulated.

The global stevia market was valued at approximately USD 1.47 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 2.5 billion by 2035, growing at a CAGR of 6.2%. In India specifically, growth is even faster — a projected 6.3% CAGR, driven by the diabetes epidemic, rising health awareness, and government initiatives like FSSAI's Eat Right movement.

Major food and beverage companies — PepsiCo, Nestlé, Coca-Cola, Unilever — have reformulated multiple product lines to incorporate stevia. In India, brands like Amul, Mother Dairy, Paper Boat, and PepsiCo have all integrated stevia into select products. And while it's encouraging to see large FMCG players dip their toes in, I take a quiet pride in what we've built at Artinci — a niche brand that is fully committed to being a zero-sugar company. Not a sugar company with a "lite" range. Not a brand that hedges its bets. Every single product we make is sugar-free, and that singular focus is what allows us to invest the formulation depth that stevia demands.

On the innovation front, next-generation Reb M and Reb D glycosides, AI-driven flavour modelling to eliminate aftertaste, and precision fermentation to reduce production costs are all converging to make stevia cheaper, tastier, and more versatile in the coming years.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is stevia safe for diabetics?
Yes. Stevia has zero glycemic impact and does not raise blood glucose or stimulate significant insulin release. The FDA grants stevia extracts GRAS status, FSSAI permits its use in India, and the WHO has set an ADI of 4 mg per kg body weight. Both the American Diabetes Association and the Indian Council of Medical Research recognise stevia as a useful tool in diabetes management.
Does stevia cause cancer?
No. A comprehensive 2026 systematic review published in Frontiers in Nutrition, covering two decades of research across 140+ sources, found no evidence of mutagenicity or carcinogenicity for steviol glycosides. Every major regulatory body — FDA, EFSA, FSSAI, WHO — has confirmed stevia's safety at recommended intake levels.
Can pregnant women use stevia?
Purified stevia extracts (containing ≥95% steviol glycosides) are generally considered safe during pregnancy when consumed within the ADI. However, crude stevia leaves and unrefined extracts haven't been evaluated as thoroughly. As with any dietary change during pregnancy, consult your doctor.
How much stevia is too much?
The WHO/JECFA has set the ADI at 4 mg of steviol equivalents per kg of body weight. For a 70 kg adult, that's roughly 280 mg per day — far more than most people would ever consume through normal use in chai, coffee, or cooking. You would need to go significantly out of your way to exceed this limit.
Why does stevia sometimes taste bitter?
At higher concentrations, steviol glycosides activate bitter taste receptors alongside sweet ones. The solution is blending: combining stevia with erythritol, FOS, or inulin masks the bitterness while providing bulk and mouthfeel. Newer glycoside variants like Reb M and Reb D have significantly cleaner taste profiles than the older Reb A that dominated early products.
Can I grow stevia at home in India?
Yes. Stevia rebaudiana grows well in several Indian states including Maharashtra, Karnataka, Punjab, and parts of Uttar Pradesh. It prefers warm, humid conditions and well-drained soil. You can grow it in pots or garden beds, harvest the leaves, dry them, and use them directly in tea. Home-grown leaves will taste more herbal than commercially refined extracts, but it's a rewarding experiment.

Key Takeaways

✔ Stevia is a plant-derived sweetener that's 200–300 times sweeter than sugar with zero calories and zero glycemic impact — backed by centuries of traditional use and decades of modern research.

✔ Every major regulatory body (FDA, FSSAI, EFSA, WHO) has confirmed stevia's safety. The most recent 2026 systematic review found no evidence of carcinogenic or mutagenic risk.

✔ The aftertaste is real — but solvable. Modern blends with erythritol, FOS, and newer glycoside variants (Reb M, Reb D) deliver a much cleaner sweetness than earlier products.

✔ Always flip the pack. If maltodextrin or dextrose appears before stevia in the ingredient list, you're paying for a high-GI filler that defeats the purpose.

✔ Stevia excels in beverages and as a blend component. For baking and Indian mithai, pair it with erythritol for bulk and structure, or allulose for caramelisation.

✔ Beyond sweetness, stevia shows promising anti-hyperglycemic, antihypertensive, and antioxidant properties — though these supplement, not replace, a balanced low-carb diet.

Ready to Make the Switch?

Explore Artinci's sugar-free sweets — crafted with clean stevia and monk fruit blends, no maltodextrin, no compromises.

Shop Artinci

Life is sweet without sugar.

Disclosure: This article is written by Aarti Laxman, Co-Founder of Artinci. Artinci manufactures sugar-free food products using stevia, monk fruit, erythritol, and prebiotic fibre blends. All health claims in this article are supported by cited regulatory body positions and peer-reviewed research. This content is educational and does not constitute medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your diet, especially if you have existing health conditions.

Explore more