Best Diabetic-Friendly High-Protein Snacks

Picking snacks for diabetes is mostly about blocking the glucose spike: low added sugar, moderate net carbs, protein and fiber present to slow digestion. The American Diabetes Association doesn't prescribe a rigid diet — but these three filters consistently appear in their guidance. Below: 12 high-protein snacks from our database that score ≥70/100 on our Diabetic-friendly diet-fit dimension AND deliver ≥8 g of protein per serving.

Not medical advice. This page describes packaged-food choices that fit a diabetes-friendly pattern at the macronutrient level. For individualized recommendations — including carb-counting targets, insulin timing, and medication interactions — work with a certified diabetes educator or your endocrinologist.

The ranked list

1. Catalina Crunch — Chocolate Banana Cereal

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · A- Labelgrade 85/100 · 11 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~5.0 g net carbs

Catalina Crunch Chocolate Banana cereal delivers 11g of protein, 9g of fiber, and 0g of sugar per 36g serving at just 110 cal. Pea protein + chicory root fiber base, stevia + monk fruit sweetened. Labelgrade A- (85/100) — one of the highest-scoring cereals in our database.

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2. Fage — Total 0% Nonfat Greek Strained Yogurt

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · A- Labelgrade 85/100 · 32.4 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~9.0 g net carbs

Fage Total 0% Nonfat is one of the highest protein-density packaged dairy products you can buy: 18g of protein per 100g, or 32g per 180g USDA serving, with only milk and live cultures in the ingredients. Full Labelgrade A- breakdown.

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3. Chobani — Zero Sugar Vanilla Greek Yogurt

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B+ Labelgrade 83/100 · 23.4 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~9.0 g net carbs

Chobani Zero Sugar Vanilla delivers 13g of protein per 100g (~19.5g per 5.3oz cup) at just 70 cal per cup with 0g added sugar. Sweetened with allulose + stevia + monk fruit. Labelgrade B+ (83/100) — the cleanest sugar-free Greek yogurt format on the US market.

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4. Quest — Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Protein Bar

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B+ Labelgrade 83/100 · 21 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~7.0 g net carbs

Quest Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Protein Bar delivers 21g of protein and 14g of fiber per 60g bar at 200 calories with effectively zero added sugar. Best-in-class protein-bar Labelgrade B+ (83/100). Honest take on the milk protein isolate + soluble corn fiber formula.

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5. Fairlife — Core Power Elite 42g Protein Shake (Chocolate)

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B+ Labelgrade 80/100 · 42 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~7.0 g net carbs

Fairlife Core Power Elite 42g chocolate shake delivers 42 g of protein per 14 fl oz bottle — among the highest-protein RTD shakes on the US market — at 232 calories with effectively zero added sugar. Labelgrade B+ (80/100).

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6. Magic Spoon — Fruity Grain-Free Cereal

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B+ Labelgrade 80/100 · 13 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~14.0 g net carbs

Magic Spoon Fruity cereal hits 13g of protein and 0g of sugar per cup using a milk-protein isolate base plus allulose + monk fruit sweeteners. Labelgrade B+ (80/100). Honest take on what's actually in 'protein cereal' and where it falls vs Catalina Crunch and Three Wishes.

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7. Quest — Protein Chips Sea Salt

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B+ Labelgrade 80/100 · 21 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~5.0 g net carbs

Quest Protein Chips Sea Salt deliver 21g of protein and just 120 calories per 1.125 oz (32g) bag — about 66g of protein per 100g, the densest snack chip on the US market. Built on milk + whey protein isolates. Labelgrade B+ (80/100).

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8. Two Good — Lowfat Vanilla Greek Yogurt

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B+ Labelgrade 80/100 · 23.4 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~7.2 g net carbs

Two Good Lowfat Vanilla Greek Yogurt delivers 23g of protein and 162 calories per 180g cup with only 3.6g sugar — about 80% less than typical vanilla yogurts. Sweetened with stevia, no added sugar. Labelgrade B+ (80/100).

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9. Optimum Nutrition — Gold Standard 100% Whey Vanilla Shake

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B Labelgrade 79/100 · 24 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~5.0 g net carbs

Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard 100% Whey ready-to-drink vanilla shake delivers 24g of protein per 11 fl oz carton with 150 calories and effectively zero sugar. The trade-off is sucralose + acesulfame K. Labelgrade B (79/100).

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10. Premier Protein — 30g Shake (Bananas & Cream)

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B Labelgrade 79/100 · 30 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~3.0 g net carbs

Premier Protein Bananas & Cream 30g shake delivers 30g of protein per 11.5 fl oz bottle at 159 calories with effectively zero sugar. Top-selling mass-market RTD shake. Labelgrade B (79/100).

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11. Premier Protein — Vanilla High Protein Shake

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B Labelgrade 79/100 · 30 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~3.0 g net carbs

Premier Protein Vanilla High Protein Shake delivers 30g of protein and just 159 calories per 11.5 fl oz bottle, with only 1g of sugar. Best protein-per-calorie ratio of any commonly-stocked RTD shake. Labelgrade B- because of artificial sweeteners and ~30-ingredient formulation.

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12. Quest — Vanilla Protein Shake

Diabetic-fit 100/100 · B Labelgrade 79/100 · 30 g protein · 0 g added sugar · ~3.0 g net carbs

Quest Vanilla Protein Shake delivers 30g of protein and 159 calories per 11 fl oz bottle, with a notably shorter ingredient list than Premier Protein. Just 10 ingredients, single artificial sweetener (sucralose). Labelgrade B-.

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How we picked these

Three filters: (1) ≥8 g of protein per serving, (2) Diabetic-friendly diet-fit score ≥70/100 (from our premium diet-fit methodology), (3) sorted by diabetic-fit descending, then overall Labelgrade. The diabetic-fit score weights added sugars heaviest, net carbs second, and fiber as a positive offset.

All nutrition data is verified against USDA FoodData Central. Last refreshed 2026-05-27.

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Related guides

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a snack "diabetic-friendly"?

Three things, in order of impact on blood glucose: (1) Low added sugar — ideally 0 g of added sugar per serving; the body processes added sugars faster than natural sugars in whole foods. (2) Low-to-moderate net carbs — typically ≤15 g per snack-sized serving, with most carbs coming from fiber-rich sources. (3) Protein and fiber together — they slow gastric emptying and blunt the glucose spike from any carbs present. The American Diabetes Association doesn't prescribe a single "diabetic diet" — but these three filters consistently appear in their guidance.

Are protein bars OK for diabetics?

Some are; most aren't. The diabetes-friendly bars use either no added sugar (real-food bars sweetened with dates count as natural sugar, which is fine in moderation) or sugar alcohols (which the body absorbs slowly or not at all). The non-friendly bars carry 12–20 g of added sugar — comparable to a candy bar. Check the "Added Sugars" line on the Nutrition Facts panel, not just "Total Sugars."

What about sugar alcohols — do they raise blood glucose?

Less than regular sugar, but not zero. Erythritol has almost zero glycemic impact (excreted unchanged). Maltitol has the highest glycemic impact of common sugar alcohols (~52 GI vs sugar's 65) — meaningful for tight glucose control. Xylitol falls in between (GI ~13). Read the specific sugar alcohol on the ingredient list; treating all "sugar alcohols" the same isn't accurate. Erythritol-only and stevia-only products are generally lowest impact.

Is Greek yogurt diabetic-friendly?

Plain non-fat Greek yogurt is excellent for diabetics — high protein, modest natural sugar (4–5 g of lactose per 100 g), no added sugar, and the live cultures may improve glucose regulation per several recent meta-analyses. Avoid the flavored fruit-on-the-bottom varieties — those add 10–15 g of cane sugar per cup and turn a friendly food into a glucose challenge. "Lightly sweetened" varieties (Two Good, Yoplait Greek 100) use stevia and are diabetic-friendly.

What about jerky?

Most plain beef jerky has no added sugar and minimal carbs — diabetes-friendly in macro terms. The sodium and sat fat trade-offs are separate concerns. "Teriyaki" or "sweet & spicy" varieties typically carry 5–10 g of added sugar per serving and lose the diabetic-friendly label. Read the Added Sugars line.

Does a low Labelgrade always mean a snack is bad for diabetics?

No — they're measuring different things. Labelgrade scores on six dimensions weighted toward general nutrition (protein density, ingredient quality, sat fat, sodium, sugar, fiber). A product can score average on overall Labelgrade but still be diabetic-friendly if its added sugar is zero and net carbs are low. For diabetic-specific picking, the diet-fit score for "Diabetic-friendly" (premium feature) is the more relevant number. We use that score directly on this roundup.

How does fiber factor in?

High fiber slows the glucose response to any carbs in the meal. Per 100 g of food, 5+ g of fiber is "high"; 10+ is excellent. The American Diabetes Association recommends 25–30 g of total fiber per day. Most packaged snacks deliver under 3 g per serving. Look for snacks with ≥2.5 g of fiber per serving — adds up across the day.

Best diabetic-friendly snack for blood sugar control?

Plain hard-boiled eggs, plain non-fat Greek yogurt, and a small handful of nuts (almonds, walnuts) are the consistent top picks across diabetes association recommendations. They're protein-dense, near-zero added sugar, deliver healthy fats (nuts), and produce essentially no glucose spike. Cottage cheese with no salt added is also a top pick if sodium isn't a concern.

What about Type 1 vs Type 2 diabetes?

The food choices are similar; the precision differs. Type 1 management is built around carb counting and insulin dosing — knowing the exact net carbs in a snack matters more than picking "low-glycemic" categories. Type 2 management focuses on overall pattern: low refined sugar, high fiber, moderate carbs. Both benefit from the snacks listed here. Always consult a certified diabetes educator (CDE) or endocrinologist for individualized guidance.