What This Page Gives You
- A free printable diabetic food chart — download the PDF version below
- GI-coded food tables organized by food group you can print directly from this page
- A section-by-section guide to using the chart at home, at the store, and at restaurants
- The exact foods to eat freely, limit, and avoid — in a format designed for daily kitchen use
Published: June 2026 | Last Updated: June 2, 2026
Important: This chart provides general dietary reference information and is not medical advice. Always consult your doctor or a registered dietitian before making changes to your diet. GI data sourced from publicly available USDA and FDA nutritional databases.
Most free diabetic food charts online are either too vague to be useful or too complex to read at a glance. This one is different. It is organized by food group, color-coded by glycemic index level, and formatted so you can print it, stick it on the fridge, and actually use it every day.
If you want to skip straight to the download, the free printable diabetic food chart PDF is available at the bottom of this page. If you want to understand how to use it effectively — and which foods matter most for blood sugar control — the full guide is below.
Table of Contents
- What Makes a Good Printable Diabetic Food Chart
- How to Use This Chart
- Green Zone — Eat Freely
- Yellow Zone — Eat in Moderation
- Red Zone — Minimize or Avoid
- Hidden Triggers Most Charts Miss
- How to Print and Use This Chart
- Download the Free Printable PDF
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. What Makes a Good Printable Diabetic Food Chart
A printable diabetic food chart is only useful if it gives you three things at a glance: what to eat freely, what to portion carefully, and what to avoid. Most charts fail because they either list hundreds of foods without context, use medical jargon, or are formatted for screens rather than printing.
A good chart for daily diabetes management should:
- Be organized by food group — not alphabetically — so you can scan it while cooking
- Show glycemic index (GI) values alongside real serving sizes
- Use a simple color system (green / yellow / red) so decisions are instant
- Fit on one or two printed pages without being unreadable
- Include the foods you actually eat — not just superfoods
The chart on this page meets all five criteria. It covers over 200 common foods across all food groups, uses a three-zone color system, and is available as a free printable PDF formatted for standard A4 and US Letter paper. For a deeper explanation of glycemic index values and how they work in the context of Type 2 diabetes, see our complete diabetic food chart guide.
2. How to Use This Printable Diabetic Food Chart
The chart is divided into three color zones based on glycemic index (GI) value and overall blood sugar impact:
| Zone | GI Range | What It Means | Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🟢 Green | 0–55 | Low GI — slow, gradual blood sugar rise | Eat freely in sensible portions |
| 🟡 Yellow | 56–69 | Medium GI — moderate blood sugar rise | Include in small, measured portions |
| 🔴 Red | 70+ | High GI — rapid blood sugar spike | Minimize or avoid |
The most practical way to use this printable food chart for diabetics is to keep a copy on the fridge and a second copy folded in your bag for grocery shopping. When you’re building a plate, aim for: half green-zone vegetables, a quarter lean protein (GI 0), and a quarter yellow or green-zone carbohydrates.
For a full structured week of meals built around these zones, see our diabetic meal prep guide 2026.
3. Green Zone — Eat Freely (GI 0–55)
These foods have low glycemic index values and minimal impact on blood sugar. They form the foundation of a diabetes-friendly diet and should make up the majority of your plate at every meal.
Non-Starchy Vegetables
| Food | GI | Serving Size | Carbs (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broccoli | 10 | 1 cup | 6g |
| Spinach | 15 | 1 cup raw | 1g |
| Cauliflower | 15 | 1 cup | 5g |
| Zucchini | 15 | 1 cup | 4g |
| Kale | 15 | 1 cup | 7g |
| Bell peppers | 15 | 1 medium | 6g |
| Cucumber | 15 | ½ cup sliced | 2g |
| Asparagus | 15 | 6 spears | 4g |
| Mushrooms | 15 | 1 cup | 3g |
| Tomatoes | 30 | 1 medium | 5g |
| Celery | 15 | 2 stalks | 2g |
| Cabbage | 10 | 1 cup | 5g |
Proteins (All GI 0)
| Food | GI | Serving Size | Protein (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken breast | 0 | 3 oz cooked | 26g |
| Salmon | 0 | 3 oz | 22g |
| Eggs | 0 | 2 large | 12g |
| Tuna (canned) | 0 | 3 oz | 20g |
| Turkey breast | 0 | 3 oz | 25g |
| Cod | 0 | 3 oz | 19g |
Legumes (Low GI Despite Being Carbs)
| Food | GI | Serving Size | Carbs (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lentils | 32 | ½ cup cooked | 20g |
| Chickpeas | 28 | ½ cup | 22g |
| Black beans | 30 | ½ cup | 20g |
| Kidney beans | 29 | ½ cup | 20g |
Low-GI Fruits
| Food | GI | Serving Size | Carbs (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strawberries | 40 | 1 cup | 11g |
| Blueberries | 53 | ¾ cup | 15g |
| Cherries | 22 | ½ cup | 12g |
| Apple | 36 | 1 small | 21g |
| Pear | 38 | 1 medium | 25g |
| Grapefruit | 25 | ½ fruit | 13g |
Low-GI Grains and Carbs
| Food | GI | Serving Size | Carbs (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barley | 28 | ½ cup cooked | 22g |
| Quinoa | 53 | ½ cup cooked | 20g |
| Rolled oats | 55 | ½ cup dry | 27g |
| Sweet potato | 44 | ½ cup | 21g |
| Whole grain bread | 50 | 1 slice | 15g |
4. Yellow Zone — Eat in Moderation (GI 56–69)
These foods raise blood sugar at a moderate rate. They can be included in a diabetes-friendly diet in controlled portions — generally no more than a quarter of your plate. Pairing yellow-zone foods with a lean protein or healthy fat slows glucose absorption further.
| Food | GI | Max Portion | Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brown rice | 68 | ⅓ cup cooked | Cool before eating to lower GI further |
| Whole wheat pasta | 48 | ½ cup cooked | Cook al dente — softer pasta has higher GI |
| Corn | 52 | ½ cup | Pair with protein |
| Banana | 51–62 | ½ banana | Less ripe = lower GI |
| Pineapple | 66 | ½ cup | Eat with Greek yogurt to slow absorption |
| Grapes | 59 | 15 grapes | High in natural sugars — portion strictly |
| Plain yogurt (full fat) | 36 | ¾ cup | Avoid flavored — often high in added sugar |
| Mango | 60 | ½ cup | High GL despite moderate GI — small portions |
5. Red Zone — Minimize or Avoid (GI 70+)
These foods cause rapid blood sugar spikes and should be minimized in a diabetes-friendly diet. They are not absolutely forbidden, but regular consumption makes blood sugar management significantly harder and increases the risk of long-term complications. For a full explanation of how these foods affect blood sugar and how to lower readings when they’re already high, see our guide on how to lower blood sugar fast and safely.
| Food | GI | Why It’s Problematic | Better Swap |
|---|---|---|---|
| White bread | 75 | Rapid glucose conversion | Whole grain bread (GI 50) |
| White rice | 73 | High GI, almost no fiber | Barley (GI 28) or quinoa (GI 53) |
| Baked potato | 85 | One of the highest GI whole foods | Sweet potato (GI 44) |
| Sugary cereals | 70–80 | High sugar, morning BG spikes | Rolled oats (GI 55) |
| Soda / sugary drinks | 63–90 | Fastest blood sugar spike possible | Water, unsweetened tea |
| Fruit juice | 70+ | No fiber, concentrated fructose | Whole fruit with fiber intact |
| White pasta | 71 | Refined carbs, negligible fiber | Whole wheat pasta al dente (GI 48) |
| Candy / sweets | 65–80 | Pure sugar, no nutritional value | Berries with Greek yogurt |
| Pastries / cakes | 70–85 | Refined flour + sugar combination | Oat-based snack with nuts |
| Sports drinks | 78 | High sugar unless intense exercise | Water with electrolyte tablets |
6. Hidden Triggers Most Printable Charts Miss
A standard diabetes food chart printable shows you which whole foods to eat or avoid. What most don’t show you are the hidden ingredients in packaged foods that raise blood sugar even when meals seem “healthy.” These are the triggers that catch newly diagnosed patients by surprise.
| Ingredient | Hidden In | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| High fructose corn syrup | Bread, sauces, condiments | Rapid BG spike, liver stress |
| Dextrose / maltose | Cereals, packaged snacks | Direct glucose — immediate spike |
| Modified starch | Soups, sauces, frozen meals | High GI thickener |
| Inulin / chicory root | “Healthy” fiber bars | Digestive issues for many diabetics |
| Agave nectar | Health foods, smoothies | Very high fructose content |
| Evaporated cane juice | Granola bars, “natural” snacks | Sugar by another name |
Label rule: If any form of sugar appears in the first three ingredients, avoid the product. Look for less than 5g total sugar per serving on packaged foods.
For a complete breakdown of what newly diagnosed T2D patients need beyond a food chart — including blood sugar targets, medication overview, and monitoring schedule — see the Type 2 Diabetes Starter Kit.
7. How to Print and Use This Chart
Printing the Chart
- Best format: A4 or US Letter, landscape orientation for the full tables
- Best paper: Standard 80gsm printer paper is fine — laminate it for longer use
- Color vs black and white: Color printing preserves the green/yellow/red zone coding. In black and white, the zone headers still identify each section clearly.
- PDF version: The free printable diabetic food chart PDF is pre-formatted for clean printing with optimized margins and font sizes
Where to Keep Your Chart
- Kitchen fridge — the most-used location; check it while cooking and plating food
- Grocery bag or purse — fold a copy for the store to check products on the spot
- Desk or bedside table — useful when ordering food delivery or planning tomorrow’s meals
- Doctor’s waiting room — use it as a reference when discussing food choices with your care team
How to Use the Chart Daily
- When building any meal, look at the Green Zone table first and build the majority of your plate from there
- Add a lean protein from the protein table (all GI 0)
- If you want a carbohydrate, check the Yellow Zone table and stick to the recommended portion
- Before eating anything packaged, check the label for hidden trigger ingredients listed in Section 6
- After eating, track your blood sugar response — within 2 weeks most people identify their personal high-impact foods
8. Download the Free Printable Diabetic Food Chart
The PDF version of this chart is available as a free download — no email required, no signup, no subscription. It covers over 200 foods across all food groups, formatted for clean single-page printing on standard paper.
📥 Free Printable Diabetic Food Chart — PDF Download
200+ foods · GI values · Serving sizes · Print-ready format · No signup required
Free download from Fodlist® — US Registered Trademark
If you want the physical version — a laminated, trifold chart you can keep in the kitchen permanently — the Fodlist Diabetic Food Chart is available in the shop. It covers almost 500 foods and includes glycemic index values, carbohydrate counts, calorie counts, and serving sizes.
9. Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best free printable diabetic food chart?
The best printable diabetic food chart is one organized by food group with glycemic index values and realistic serving sizes — not just a list of “good” and “bad” foods. The chart on this page and the free PDF download below cover over 200 foods across all food groups using a green/yellow/red zone system designed for daily kitchen use.
Can I print this diabetic food chart for free?
Yes. The tables on this page can be printed directly from your browser, or you can download the formatted PDF version from the free diabetes food chart page. No email, signup, or subscription is required.
What foods should a diabetic avoid chart?
The main foods to avoid on a diabetic diet are high-GI foods that cause rapid blood sugar spikes: white bread (GI 75), white rice (GI 73), baked potato (GI 85), sugary drinks (GI 63–90), fruit juice (GI 70+), sugary cereals (GI 70–80), and pastries and cakes (GI 70–85). The Red Zone section of this chart lists the most important ones with better swap alternatives for each.
Is a printable food list the same as a meal plan?
No. A printable food list tells you which foods are safe, which to portion carefully, and which to avoid. A meal plan tells you exactly what to eat at each meal. The food chart is a reference tool — the meal plan applies it. For a 7-day structured meal plan built around these foods, see our diabetic meal prep guide.
What is the glycemic index and why does it matter for diabetics?
The glycemic index (GI) measures how quickly a food raises blood glucose compared to pure glucose (scored at 100). Foods with GI below 55 cause a slow, gradual rise — easier to manage with diabetes medication or lifestyle. Foods with GI above 70 cause a rapid spike that is harder to control. The GI is one of the most practical tools for making faster food decisions without counting every carbohydrate. For a deeper explanation, see our diabetic food chart guide.
Are there printable food charts for other diets on Fodlist?
Yes. Fodlist also publishes a free FODMAP food chart PDF for people managing IBS with the Low FODMAP diet. The FODMAP chart covers safe and trigger foods organized by category with portion guidance.
Related Articles on Fodlist
Data Sources
All GI values and nutritional data are drawn from publicly available databases published by the USDA (FoodData Central) and the FDA. Fodlist® is an independent brand not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by these organizations. This article provides general dietary reference information and is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your diet or diabetes management plan.

