Making healthy choices

The best juice boxes for lower kJ and no added sugar

We compare the nutrition and ingredients of 30 apple and orange fruit juice boxes from the supermarket.
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Day in, day out during the school term, parents are faced with the perennial decision: what to put in their child’s lunchbox. 

Fruit juice boxes – also known as juice poppers – are one of those convenient items that you can buy in bulk and store in the cupboard, fridge or freezer. But are they a good option?

We compare the nutrition and ingredients of 30 apple and orange fruit juice boxes from the supermarket, and highlight what you need to consider before you add them to the lunchbox.

Is fruit juice healthy?

Fruit juice (100% juice)

Fruit juice tends to have a healthy image, and 100% juice can give you valuable nutrients such as vitamin C and folate. 

But on the downside, it doesn’t have the fibre of fresh fruit, it’s energy (kilojoule) dense and it’s high in sugars, albeit the naturally occurring (intrinsic) variety.  

The Australian Dietary Guidelines advise that we only occasionally substitute 100% juice for other fruits as counting towards the recommended two serves a day. The guidelines define a serve of juice as 125mL (half a cup) – but many juice boxes contain double this amount. And not all juice drinks are 100% juice.

Fruit drinks (20–25% juice)

Fruit drinks contain minimal juice (just 20–35% across the fruit drink products in our review), water and usually added sugar too.

Like soft drinks, sugar-sweetened fruit drinks offer plenty of kilojoules but few nutrients, and for the most part deserve the status of treats only. There’s mounting evidence that drinking sugar-sweetened beverages is associated with an increased risk of weight gain. 

CHOICE tip: Sugary drinks contribute to dental decay. And drinks that are both sugary and acidic – such as fruit juice, fruit drinks, and fizzy and energy drinks – tend to be the worst offenders.

Which juice boxes are best?

If you’re after the convenience of a juice box, one with no added sugar is preferable. And if it’s a lower kilojoule option, even better.

Of the 30 apple and orange juice boxes we compared, the five products below:

  • contain no added sugar
  • deliver 370kJ or less per pack – roughly the equivalent of a medium (150g) apple or orange, the fruits the juices in our review are based on.
Golden Circle No Added Sugar Orange Juice (200mL). Price/100mL: $0.31 (in a 6-pack)
Just Juice Orange Juice (200mL). Price/100mL: $0.44 (in a 6-pack)
Nudie Nothing But 2 Oranges (200mL). Price/100mL: $0.75
Just Juice Apple Juice (200mL). Price/100mL: $0.44 (in a 6-pack)
Prima Apple No Added Sugar* (200mL). Price/100mL: $0.27 (in a 6-pack). *This product is just 20% juice and contains sweeteners erythritol and steviol glycosides (stevia) rather than added sugar.

What to consider when choosing juice boxes

Size

It’s worth remembering that a serve of juice is defined as 125mL (half a cup), and many single serve juice boxes contain twice this amount (and consequently double the kilojoules).

Additives

A priority for many parents when choosing food and drinks for their kids is that they’re free from artificial additives. It’s not surprising then that a common claim on the packs of juice boxes is “no artificial colours, flavours or preservatives”. But that doesn’t mean the products are additive-free.

Many juice boxes contain natural colours and flavours, and several contain preservatives too. Food acids/acidity regulators (usually citric acid) make a regular appearance. And four of the products we reviewed contain added sweeteners, the non-nutritive varieties which offer the sweetness of sugar with fewer to no kilojoules.

Most Australians exceed the recommended dietary intake of vitamin C, so don’t let vitamin C claims or content influence your choice

Vitamin C

Fresh fruit juice is a source of vitamin C, but it’s a water soluble vitamin that’s sensitive to light, heat and air, so levels are depleted during processing – presumably why about two thirds of the products we looked at, both juices and fruit drinks, have vitamin C added.

The recommended daily intake of vitamin C for children up to eight years old is 35mg, and the products we compared have between 20 and 87.5mg of vitamin C per pack. But most Australians exceed the recommended dietary intake of vitamin C, so don’t let vitamin C claims or content influence your choice.

‘A serving of fruit’ claim

Many products are labelled ‘a serve of fruit in every pack’, or similar. While this isn’t inaccurate, bear in mind that Australian dietary guidelines advise that we only occasionally substitute 100% juice for other fruits as counting towards the recommended fruit serves a day. Chugging down two juice boxes a day doesn’t cut it!

Water is the best drink

Experts recommend that we limit our intake of sugar-sweetened drinks, so avoid sugary fruit drinks when packing lunch for your kids. 

The occasional fruit juice is fine, and can add variety to their lunchbox. Choose a small juice box and give your child a bottle of water as well for extra hydration. Or make up your own juice bottle with a 125mL serve of juice, and dilute with water to provide better hydration.

But as any dietitian will tell you, water is the best everyday drink for children – and it costs you next to nothing.

How we compared

  • We recorded label details of orange and apple juice products (juice and fruit drinks) in Aldi, Coles and Woolworths in December 2020.
  • We focused on single serve products, sold both individually and in multipacks.
  • We included both chilled and shelf-stable products.
The 30 fruit juice products we compared

We compared the ingredients, nutrition information and label claims of the following 30 fruit juice boxes:

  • Berri Apple Fruit Juice
  • Berri Orange Fruit Juice
  • Coles Apple Fruit Drink
  • Coles Apple Juice
  • Coles Orange Fruit Drink
  • Coles Orange Juice
  • Daily Juice Cloudy Apple
  • Daily Juice Orange Juice
  • Golden Circle Apple Juice
  • Golden Circle Apple Splash
  • Golden Circle Orange Burst
  • Golden Circle Orange Juice
  • Just Juice Apple
  • Just Juice Orange
  • Nudie Nothing But 2 Apples
  • Nudie Nothing But 2 Oranges
  • Pop Tops Apple
  • Pop Tops Orange
  • Prima Apple
  • Prima Apple No Added Sugar
  • Prima Orange
  • Sunraysia Organic 100% Juice Apple
  • Westcliff Apple Juice
  • Westcliff Mega Apple Juice (pop top)
  • Westcliff Orange Drink
  • Westcliff Orange Juice
  • Woolworths Apple Fruit Drink
  • Woolworths Apple Juice
  • Woolworths Orange Fruit Drink
  • Woolworths Orange Juice

Marianna worked at CHOICE from 2017–2022, writing and editing content on a range of different consumer issues as both a content editor and commissioning editor. She's conducted in-house taste tests for non-alcoholic wines, uncovered which is the best reusable water bottle, looked at the amount of sweet ingredients in infant foods, and analysed the contents of chocolate variety boxes to find out which are best for caramel lovers, fruit-goo fans and more. She previously worked for a range of publications in both Australia and the UK including the BBC's Radio Times, The Guardian, The Sun, The Sunday Telegraph and Cosmopolitan. You can find her on LinkedIn.

Marianna worked at CHOICE from 2017–2022, writing and editing content on a range of different consumer issues as both a content editor and commissioning editor. She's conducted in-house taste tests for non-alcoholic wines, uncovered which is the best reusable water bottle, looked at the amount of sweet ingredients in infant foods, and analysed the contents of chocolate variety boxes to find out which are best for caramel lovers, fruit-goo fans and more. She previously worked for a range of publications in both Australia and the UK including the BBC's Radio Times, The Guardian, The Sun, The Sunday Telegraph and Cosmopolitan. You can find her on LinkedIn.


Rachel Clemons is an award-winning journalist who worked at CHOICE from 2004–2022. During her time at CHOICE her core focus was on food and nutrition, from reviewing breakfast cereals and fast food to dispelling myths about the benefits of detox kits and gourmet salt or translating confusing food labels – with the occasional taste test thrown in for good measure. Prior to CHOICE she lived overseas, working predominantly in hospitality when she wasn't travelling and eating her way through various cuisines. She holds a Master of Science in Nutrition from King's College London (where she also researched and wrote for CHOICE's UK sister organisation, Which?), and a Bachelor of Science, Health Sciences from the University of Adelaide. In 2017 she won the Dietitians Association of Australia's Nutrition Journalism Award and she's currently on the Steering Committee as a Parent Member of Parents' Voice.  You can find her on Twitter and LinkedIn.

Rachel Clemons is an award-winning journalist who worked at CHOICE from 2004–2022. During her time at CHOICE her core focus was on food and nutrition, from reviewing breakfast cereals and fast food to dispelling myths about the benefits of detox kits and gourmet salt or translating confusing food labels – with the occasional taste test thrown in for good measure. Prior to CHOICE she lived overseas, working predominantly in hospitality when she wasn't travelling and eating her way through various cuisines. She holds a Master of Science in Nutrition from King's College London (where she also researched and wrote for CHOICE's UK sister organisation, Which?), and a Bachelor of Science, Health Sciences from the University of Adelaide. In 2017 she won the Dietitians Association of Australia's Nutrition Journalism Award and she's currently on the Steering Committee as a Parent Member of Parents' Voice.  You can find her on Twitter and LinkedIn.