Free UK delivery on all orders · At-home saliva test · Secure checkout
Free UK delivery on all orders

Supermarket Own-Brand Mayonnaise: UK Comparison

How much sugar and salt is in supermarket own-brand mayo? Most UK supermarket own-brands contain 0.8g of sugar per 100g on average, compared to 1.4g in Hellmann's Real Mayo. That is 0.6g less sugar per 100g — a meaningful difference across regular use. 1 teaspoon (7g) delivers 0.06g of sugar and 0.09g of salt.

Try it: nutrition calculator

Choose a brand, sauce and portion size to compare sugar, salt and calories.

Table sauces nutrition calculator
How much sugar and salt is in that portion?
Choose a brand, sauce and portion size to see how sugar, salt, calories and fat compare to daily guidelines.

Your portion--
Sugar
--
--
0--
--
Salt
--
--
0--
--
Calories
--
--
0--
--
Saturated fat
--
--
020g
--

Own-brand vs branded: nutrition comparison

The table below shows sugar, salt and calories per 100g for all major UK supermarkets and the leading branded equivalent. Data sources are shown per row.

Own-brand vs branded comparison: per 100g

Supermarket / BrandCaloriesSugar/100gSalt/100gSource
Hellmann's Real Mayo (branded benchmark)720 kcal1.4g1.2gOfficial UK label
Tesco685 kcal0.8g-0.6g vs branded1.3gFatSecret UK
Sainsbury's680 kcal0.9g-0.5g vs branded1.25gFatSecret UK
ASDA690 kcal0.7g-0.7g vs branded1.2gFatSecret UK — Which? rated joint best with Hellmann's
Morrisons682 kcal0.8g-0.6g vs branded1.3gFatSecret UK consumer entry
Waitrose695 kcal0.7g-0.7g vs branded1.2gFatSecret UK (Waitrose Essential Mayo)
Aldi (Bramwells)678 kcal0.7g-0.7g vs branded1.2gFatSecret UK consumer entry
Lidl (Batts)682 kcal0.8g-0.6g vs branded1.25gFatSecret UK consumer entry
Co-op688 kcal0.9g-0.5g vs branded1.3gFatSecret UK consumer entry

Sources: McGrocer product labels (Tesco, Sainsbury's, ASDA, Morrisons), FatSecret UK (Waitrose, Aldi, Lidl, Co-op consumer entries). Figures subject to reformulation. Always check the label. Sugar vs branded benchmark: green = lower, amber = similar, red = higher.

Nutrition by portion size (average own-brand)

Nutrition by portion size (average own-brand)

PortionCaloriesSugarSalt
1 teaspoon (7g)48 kcal0.06g (0% adult limit)0.09g (2% adult limit)
1 tablespoon (15g)103 kcal0.12g (0% adult limit)0.19g (3% adult limit)
2 tablespoons (30g)206 kcal0.24g (1% adult limit)0.38g (6% adult limit)
4 tablespoons (60g)411 kcal0.48g (2% adult limit)0.75g (13% adult limit)

Supermarket Own-Brand Mayonnaise: UK Comparison: average nutrition per 100g across UK supermarket own-brands — 685 kcal, 73.9g of fat (5.8g saturated), 0.8g of sugar, 1.25g of salt.

ASDA own-brand mayo rated joint winner alongside Hellmann's in a Which? blind taste test. The calorie difference between own-brand (678-695 kcal/100g) and Hellmann's Real (720 kcal/100g) is marginal — about 25-40 kcal per 100g, equivalent to roughly one teaspoon of mayo. The main meaningful difference is price.

Sugar

Own-brand mayo contains an average of 0.8g of sugar per 100g. All sugar in condiments is free sugar under NHS guidance — unlike the naturally occurring sugars in whole fruit or dairy, sauce sugar counts in full against the daily limit of 30g for adults, 24g for children aged 7 to 10, and 19g for children aged 4 to 6.

Compared to Hellmann's Real Mayo (1.4g of sugar per 100g), most own-brand versions contain 0.6g less sugar. This is a meaningful reduction for regular use, particularly for children. Aldi and Lidl own-brand versions tend to have the lowest sugar content across most sauce categories.

Salt

Own-brand mayo contains an average of 1.25g of salt per 100g. 1 teaspoon (7g) delivers 0.09g of salt, 2% of the adult daily limit. The salt content is broadly similar across supermarket own-brands and their branded equivalents, with most variation coming from spice blend differences rather than deliberate reformulation.

Value and nutritional difference

The cost difference between own-brand and branded condiments is significant. Supermarket own-brand ketchup typically costs 15-25p per 100g, compared to 55-70p per 100g for Heinz. Supermarket own-brand mayo costs 30-50p per 100g versus 60-80p for Hellmann's. The nutritional differences are marginal in most categories, making own-brand versions a practical choice for regular household use.

Aldi and Lidl consistently offer the lowest sugar and salt content across most sauce categories in this comparison, alongside the lowest prices. ASDA own-brand products have scored closest to their branded equivalents in independent taste tests (Which?, 2024).

Ultra-processed food

Own-brand condiments, like their branded equivalents, are classified as NOVA group 4, ultra-processed food. The ingredient lists are almost identical: the same functional additives (modified starch, xanthan gum, acidity regulators, colours) are used in both own-brand and branded versions to deliver consistent texture, flavour and shelf life at scale.

The main practical difference is that most supermarket own-brand brown sauces and sweet chilli sauces use spirit vinegar rather than barley malt vinegar, making them gluten-free — unlike HP Brown Sauce, which contains barley. This is relevant for coeliacs and those with barley sensitivity.

Typical ingredients

Mayonnaise (typical own-brand formulation)

Rapeseed oil (70-75%), water, pasteurised egg and egg yolk (6-7%), spirit vinegar, salt, sugar, lemon juice, mustard powder, calcium disodium EDTA. Virtually identical recipe to Hellmann's Real Mayo — the oil percentage varies by 1-4% across stores.

Allergens

Allergen information (typical own-brand formulation)

WheatNot present
RyeNot present
BarleyNot present
OatsNot present
SesameNot present
SoyaNot present
MilkNot present
EggsContains
FishNot present
CrustaceansNot present
CeleryNot present
MustardContains
MolluscsNot present
LupinNot present

Allergen information varies by supermarket. Own-brand brown sauces are typically gluten-free unlike HP (barley malt vinegar). Always check the product label.

Frequently asked questions

Nutritionally they are very similar. Own-brand versions typically contain slightly less sugar (0.6g less per 100g) at significantly lower cost. The main differences are flavour nuances from different spice blends, and in some categories (particularly brown sauce), the type of vinegar used.

Across most sauce categories, Aldi (Bramwells) and Lidl own-brands consistently have the lowest sugar content, followed by Waitrose Essential. ASDA tends to have the highest sugar of the major own-brands, closer to branded levels.

Most supermarket own-brand ketchup, mayo, salad cream, sweet chilli sauce and light mayo are gluten-free. Own-brand brown sauces are typically gluten-free (using spirit rather than barley malt vinegar), unlike HP Brown Sauce which contains barley. Always check the label as formulations change.

A tablespoon (15g) of own-brand mayo delivers an average of 0.12g of sugar and 0.19g of salt. All sugar in condiments is free sugar and counts against the NHS daily limit of 30g for adults, 24g for children aged 7 to 10, and 19g for children aged 4 to 6.

Yes. Like branded equivalents, own-brand condiments are classified as NOVA group 4, ultra-processed food. They contain the same functional additives — modified starch, acidity regulators, colours — used in both own-brand and branded versions to deliver consistent texture and shelf life.

Track what you eat, including condiments

Track what you eat, including condiments.

The Boone app tracks the sugar, salt and calories in everything you eat in real time.

Get started with Boone

Sources: McGrocer product labels (Tesco, Sainsbury's, ASDA), FatSecret UK consumer entries (Waitrose, Aldi, Lidl, Co-op, Morrisons). Nutrition figures subject to reformulation — always check the physical label. NHS/SACN guidelines for daily limits. For guidance only, not medical advice.