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Built bars are usually high-protein snacks with lower sugar, yet macros change by flavor, so the Nutrition Facts panel should drive your pick.
Protein bars can look identical on the shelf and still differ a lot once you flip them over. Built bars make that clear because the lineup includes classic bars, Puff bars, and limited runs where the numbers can shift.
This page gives you a simple way to judge any Built bar in under a minute, plus what each label line means for hunger, sugar tracking, and digestion comfort.
What “Good” Looks Like On A Protein Bar Label
There’s no single perfect bar. “Good” is the bar that fits your goal without leaving you hungry or uneasy later.
- For staying full: higher protein plus a steady fiber number.
- For calorie control: a calorie range you can repeat, not a one-off “treat” bar.
- For sugar limits: low added sugars, not just low total sugar.
- For a calm stomach: watch big fiber jumps and sugar alcohols.
Built’s own product pages often show a quick macro snapshot (protein, calories, sugar). That’s a fast filter, then the package label finishes the job. You can see the macro snapshot on this Built listing. BUILT Coconut Puffs macros.
Built Bar Macros And Ingredients In Simple Terms
Protein
Protein is the headline. Built Puff listings commonly show 15–17 grams of protein per bar, with some variants listing 16 grams. Your best check is still the Nutrition Facts panel on the wrapper, since flavors can differ.
Calories
Calories set the trade-off line. If you eat a bar most days, a small swing per bar can add up over a week. Built Puff listings on Built’s site often show 140–160 calories, depending on flavor.
Carbs, Fiber, And “Net Carb” Math
Total carbohydrate is the bucket. Fiber and sugar alcohols can sit inside it. That’s where “net carb” math comes from, yet labels are still the source of truth.
Sugar And Added Sugars
Total sugars tell you what’s in the bar. Added sugars tell you what was added during processing. The FDA explains how “added sugars” is listed on the Nutrition Facts label. FDA added sugars on the Nutrition Facts label.
Sugar Alcohols And Sweeteners
Some protein bars use sugar alcohols to keep sweetness while keeping sugar lower. The FDA’s interactive label guide shows where sugar alcohols may appear on the Nutrition Facts panel and how to spot them in the ingredient list. FDA Nutrition Facts label: sugar alcohols.
How To Read A Built Bar Label In 60 Seconds
- Serving size: confirm numbers are per bar.
- Calories: decide if this is a snack slot or a meal-bridge slot.
- Protein: match the grams to your goal and appetite.
- Sugars: check total sugar, then added sugars.
- Fiber: higher can help fullness; start smaller if you’re not used to it.
- Ingredients: spot allergens and sweeteners fast.
Once you do this a few times, you’ll notice patterns by flavor family. Chocolate-heavy flavors often carry a different fat and sugar profile than fruit or marshmallow-style flavors.
Built Protein Bar Nutrition Facts For Real-Life Picks
Use these situations to choose faster, then confirm with the label on your exact flavor.
When You Want A Candy Swap
If the bar replaces candy for you, the bar only needs to beat that candy slot. Pick a flavor you truly like, then keep an eye on calories and added sugars.
When You Need A Workday Snack That Sticks
Protein plus fiber is the pair to watch. If your stomach is sensitive, pick a moderate fiber number and eat it slowly.
When You’re Pairing It With A Meal
If you eat a bar with lunch, a lower-calorie option can still feel satisfying. If you eat the bar alone, you may prefer a higher-calorie flavor so it feels like food, not a bite of candy.
When Allergens Matter
Built product pages list “contains” allergens and sometimes “may contain” statements. The Brownie Batter Puff listing notes milk and soy as contained allergens and mentions peanuts and tree nuts as a possible cross-contact risk. Brownie Batter Puff ingredients.
When You Track Sugar Alcohols
If sugar alcohols bother you, start with half a bar and see how you feel. Pair it with water, eat it slower, and avoid stacking two bars back to back.
| Label Line To Check | What It Tells You | How To Use It |
|---|---|---|
| Serving size | Whether numbers are per bar or per portion | Track the same portion you eat |
| Calories | Energy cost of the bar | Pick a range you can repeat daily |
| Protein (g) | Protein dose per bar | Higher can help fullness and recovery |
| Total carbohydrate (g) | Carb bucket that contains sub-lines | Use it for carb tracking, then read fiber and sugars |
| Dietary fiber (g) | Fiber dose per bar | Start smaller if you’re new to higher fiber |
| Total sugars / Added sugars | Total sugar vs added sugar | Use added sugars as the stricter line |
| Sugar alcohols (if listed) | Sweeteners that can affect digestion | If sensitive, try half first and go slow |
| Ingredient list | Protein sources, sweeteners, allergens | Spot what you tolerate and avoid |
Why Some Built Bars Feel Rough On Digestion
Most “this bar didn’t sit right” moments come from two things: a big fiber hit, or sweeteners that your gut doesn’t love.
Fiber Dose And Speed
If your usual day is low in fiber, jumping to a high-fiber bar can feel like a lot. Try half a bar first, then scale up over a week.
Sugar Alcohols And Personal Tolerance
Sugar alcohols affect people differently. If you see sugar alcohols listed and you’ve had issues before, treat the first try like a test: smaller portion, slower eating, and only one bar that day.
How To Compare Built Bars With Other Protein Bars
Comparisons work best when you keep them fair.
- Compare calories first. A 140-calorie bar is a different snack than a 220-calorie bar.
- Then compare protein per calorie. This keeps you honest when protein rises only because calories rose.
- Then compare added sugars. Use the FDA definition so labels line up cleanly.
- Then compare ingredients you tolerate. The macros won’t save a bar that upsets your stomach.
| Common Ingredient On Built Pages | Why It’s Used | What To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Whey protein isolate | Concentrated dairy protein for higher protein grams | Milk allergen; may bother lactose-sensitive people |
| Collagen | Protein source that can change texture | Not a complete protein on its own; treat it as part of a mix |
| Glycerin | Helps softness and chew | Some people feel stomach discomfort at higher amounts |
| Gelatin | Gives Puff bars their airy bite | Not vegetarian |
| Palm and palm kernel oil | Helps coating and melt feel | Can raise saturated fat; check the panel if you track it |
| Soy lecithin | Emulsifier that keeps coatings smooth | Soy allergen for some people |
| Natural flavors | Flavor system used in many packaged foods | If you’re sensitive, you may need trial and error by flavor |
Small Moves That Make Protein Bars Work Better
- Drink water with it. This helps with thicker textures and higher fiber.
- Split it. Half now and half later often feels better than one fast eat.
- Pair it. A bar plus fruit can beat two bars.
- Store it cool. Coatings and texture hold up better in heat.
If a bar has ever made you feel off, don’t write off the whole brand. Swap flavors, lower the portion, and eat slower. The label can’t predict your gut, yet it can help you pick smarter.
References & Sources
- BUILT.“BUILT Coconut Puffs 12 Ct. Box | Protein Puffs.”Macro snapshot (protein, calories, sugar) for a specific Puff flavor.
- BUILT.“Brownie Batter Puff – 12 Ct Box.”Ingredient list plus allergen statements used for label-reading examples.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Added Sugars on the Nutrition Facts Label.”Explains what added sugars mean and how they show on Nutrition Facts labels.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Interactive Nutrition Facts Label – Sugar Alcohols.”Shows where sugar alcohols may appear on labels and how to identify them.
