How to Get Rid of Stevia Aftertaste (9 Tips That Work)
This post may contain affiliate links from which I will earn a commission. Learn more in our disclosure.
If stevia tastes bitter or has a strange aftertaste, you’re not imagining it—and you’re definitely not alone.
For some people, stevia tastes perfectly sweet. For others, it has a strong, lingering bitterness or even a slightly metallic flavor that can ruin a drink or recipe.
The good news?
There are simple ways to fix it.
In this guide, you’ll learn exactly why stevia has an aftertaste—and the most effective ways to get rid of that bitter taste so it actually tastes good.

When many people first try stevia, the experience can be surprising—in a not-so-good way. What seems like a great sugar alternative can come with a strong, bitter aftertaste that’s hard to ignore.
If that’s been your experience, you’re not alone. The good news is that there are simple ways to fix it—and once you know how to use stevia properly, it can be a great option.
I actually liked stevia when I first started using it. I was thrilled to have a low-carb way to address my sweet cravings. But over time I realized that in some recipes, it could easily become too strong or develop an aftertaste if not used carefully.
Learning how to balance it made a huge difference.
How to Get Rid of Stevia Aftertaste (Quick Fixes)
Here's a quick list of how to get rid of stevia's aftertaste. Scroll down for more information about all of these.
- Use less stevia (too much = bitterness)
- Choose a better-tasting brand
- Add acid (like lemon juice or vinegar)
- Combine with another sweetener
- Use liquid stevia instead of powder
- Add fat (like cream or coconut milk)
- Chill or freeze foods
- Use strong flavors (like chocolate or vanilla)
- Let taste buds adjust
What is Stevia?
1. Stevia is a natural sweetener derived from the Stevia rebaudiana plant and can be up to 300 times sweeter than sugar (the typical range is 200-300). As a result, stevia can be difficult to use as a sweetener.
2. Stevia is a zero calorie sweetener that does not contain any sugar or carbohydrates, nor does it feed candida.
3. Easy on your digestion–stevia lacks the unpleasant tummy-lurching side effects that are a characteristic of some other low-carb sweeteners like xylitol, erythritol, and allulose.
4. Stevia comes in many forms with varying amounts of processing. Among theses are: homemade extracts, powder extracts, liquid stevia, and ground whole leaf stevia.
– Homemade extracts, also known as “teas”, are made by steeping the leaves of the stevia plant, which can often be found at local greenhouses.
– Liquid or powdered extracts are made by using either water or alcohol to extract two types of glycosides from the leaves of the stevia plant (Stevioside and rebaudioside A).
– Ground Leaves – The third process simply involves the grinding of dried stevia leaves into a green powder with no extraction process.

Does Stevia Taste Like Sugar?
While stevia and sugar share sweetness, there are some big differences. Stevia tastes different than sugar for the following reasons:
- Other compounds: Stevia, whether you are using the whole leaf or an extract, has other compounds in it that affect its taste.
- No bulk: Since stevia is so much more concentrated than sugar, that leads to its bitter taste/aftertaste.
- Taste receptors: Due to how stevia interacts with taste receptors, it tastes different than sugar and also tastes different to different people.
What Does Stevia Taste Like?
Stevia, again is super sweet but also super strong. It tastes sweet up front, but then can have a bitter, licorice, or even metallic taste for some. How it tastes varies by person based on genetically influenced taste receptors, similar to how different people feel about cilantro's taste.
Why Does Stevia Have an Aftertaste?
Our taste buds have receptors that identify sweet, bitter (and also sour and salty) flavors. Interestingly, there is only one receptor that identifies sweet tastes, but there are 25 different receptors for bitter ones! One reason for stevia's bitter taste is that the stevia plant has chemical compounds that interact with both the sweet and bitter receptors, leading to its signature bitter aftertaste.
However, if you get quality stevia (and also follow the tips in this post), a lot of that bitterness can be mitigated.
What Stevia Has the Least Aftertaste?
If you’re struggling with stevia’s taste, switching types or brands can make a big difference in your experience.
- Liquid stevia tends to have a smoother, less bitter taste (especially in drinks).
- Powdered stevia extract can taste stronger and more bitter if even slightly overused.
- Some brands are noticeably cleaner tasting than others.
- Blends (like stevia with monk fruit or erythritol) often reduce aftertaste due to the bulk and combining tips mentioned below.
Why I Didn’t Like Stevia at First (and What Changed)
9 Tips to Fix the Stevia Taste Problem
1. Use Less Stevia (Overuse Causes Bitterness)
Don't one day decide to put it in everything, on everything. Instead, start with a little bit of stevia and increase your use with time.
Using too much stevia at once causes an overload of the bitter receptors in your mouth and also a plateau effect where the sweetness of stevia plateaus and you end up sensing the bitterness more instead.
2. Buy a Good Brand
Stevia extracts are not created equal. I have purchased my share of brands and while some are palatable, others just don't make the cut. However, as you learn to like stevia you will likely be more tolerant of even the most unpalatable brands. Here are some better tasting brands to start with.
Now Brand Better Stevia
Many people love Now's Better Stevia. I seems to need more stevia to get the sweetness level that I want, but the taste is better than most.
NuNaturals
My personal favorite used to be new NuNaturals. Sadly, they had to change their formula, but they still have a smooth flavor with minimal to no aftertaste.
Got a brand of stevia you love? Let me know and I might add it to this list.
3. Let Taste Buds Adjust
Stevia can be an acquired taste. Many people find that the more they use it (especially when used correctly), the less noticeable the aftertaste becomes over time.
4. Combine with Other Sweeteners
Especially in baking, use stevia along with other sweeteners like honey, maple syrup, fruit juice, coconut sugar, molasses, xylitol, erythritol, erythritol / monk fruit blend, monk extract, allulose, bocha sweet, or some other option that works for your diet.
When stevia is mixed with another sweetener, the taste is greatly reduced and often not even noticeable. This is also true when there is fruit in the recipe (the fruit being the other sweetener), like in fruit crisp or this mixed berry chia pudding. The stevia taste is much less, if at all, noticeable.
Slowly, steadily, each subsequent time you prepare something, decrease the other sweetener and increase the stevia with the potential goal of cutting out the other sweetener completely over time.
5. Freeze It
If you added too much stevia to a recipe or if the stevia taste is too strong, don't throw out your hard work. Instead, freeze it for a day or two (letting it sit in the fridge works well too).
Chilling helps mask the strength of both the stevia sweetness and the bitterness on your tongue.
6. Add an Acid
Adding an acid like lemon juice, apple cider vinegar, or citric acid can help mask stevia’s aftertaste—especially in drinks and fruit-based recipes. In baked goods, it can help slightly, but it’s usually more effective when combined with other strategies.
7. Add Fat
Fat smooths out the bitterness of stevia. Adding coconut milk to coffee or coffee substitute, using cream or butter in drinks, and avoiding fat-free or reduced-fat baked goods are another way to help with stevia's aftertaste.
8. Use Liquid Stevia
Liquid stevia often tastes smoother than powdered versions, especially in drinks.
One big reason is that it’s easier to control the amount. Using drops instead of a scoop makes it easier to get the right level of sweetness without overdoing it.
Liquid stevia also mixes more evenly, which can help prevent strong pockets of flavor that make the aftertaste more noticeable.
9. Add Flavor
Adding strong flavors like chocolate, coffee, vanilla, cinnamon, nutmeg, and more can help mask stevia's aftertaste issues.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does stevia suddenly taste worse to me?
Stevia can seem to taste stronger over time, especially if you start using more of it or using it in different types of recipes. It’s also easier to notice the aftertaste in certain foods, like baked goods, compared to drinks.
Why does stevia taste fine in drinks but bad in baking?
In drinks, stevia dissolves evenly and is often balanced with acidity, which helps reduce bitterness. In baking, it’s easier to use too much and harder to balance flavors, so the aftertaste can stand out more.
There you have it, my tips for helping you like stevia.
As a result, why not go and try out these stevia-sweetened Dairy-Free Fudgesicles and Sugar-Free Lemonade soon!
Have any of these tips worked for you?


My story is very brief but very encouraging. The first few times I tried stevia i was so disgusted by the bitter aftertaste that I thought I would NEVER ever be able to like stevia. I was almost about to throw away the bag of stevia (with maltodextrin) that I had just bought. But after I started learning more about how bad all of the other artificial sweeteners are, I thought to myself, “Oh no, next they’re going to start telling us how bad stevia is.” But when I realized how healthy stevia actually is, I started using it in my smoothies every morning, and the taste was barely even noticeable in the smoothies. Next I started putting it in my coffee, and after a few days of doing that I now actually like the taste. I try to think of it as a unique flavor, like that slight bitterness that some high quality beers have, and now in my mind that turns the distinct stevia flavor into something desirable! I think it also helps when you have eliminated 99% of white sugar from your diet for a few weeks, because that stops a lot of the sugar addiction related cravings for the white stuff. So if you are turned off from the taste of stevia, don’t give up!
Super encouraging! I love it now too—no more sugar for me!
Thank you for this information. I cannot tolerate sugar and have used pure Stevia for a few years. Unfortunately many of the brands of Stevia in stores are cut with other products and people don’t realize this.
You are so welcome!
Yes, they are. I addressed that in this post about stevia safety. Sugar doesn’t work well for me either. So thankful for stevia!
The Trim Healthy Mama brand of stevia is the best that I’ve ever had. I’ve had others that I can’t handle, including the NuNaturals. THM is pricier, but tastes way more palatable
I do really like it but I admit I haven’t had it in awhile….I’m going to see if I have some in my pantry still….. I would love to do a taste test of that vs the Omica. There’s another brand I’m looking at as well–I would like to figure out which is the most cost effective too b/c there appear to be varying strengths. Thanks!!
I’m revisiting this article after I went to buy more NuNaturals from their website, and saw the packet formula changed. I’m so glad to see that you’ve researched other options!! 🙂 I’d greatly appreciate that coupon code! 🙂
I hope to add more in the future – thanks and I just emailed you with the code. For others who are reading this, I’m able to share private codes and other things like that in this facebook community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/171490083677560
There’s an opportunity to subscribe to email updates there too which is another place that I can share things I can’t share elsewhere due to corporate policies :).
I am so grateful for all of this information regarding Stevia! Please send me a coupon Code!
You are so welcome. I hope to have more in the future! Just emailed you :).
Hi, great article…I amnreally going to try.
I purchased alot.of NOW flavored
Stevia sweetners as I had had success with a nonflavored product. WOW truely horrible.
I don’t tolerate truely artificial sweetners so Ibwill try some honey.
I would greatly appreciate the discount codes you have. Eating has become so expensive and being on a special diet is becoming unreal.
Blessings.
Hi there! I reached out to you! What was truly horrible?
tips and tricks for stopping stevia taste bitter – mix with honey, xylitol…etc? This is a disappointing post – my hopes were so high. If you have candida, honey, any type of glucose, fructose or xylitol is banned. You must know this. The next tip, “get used to the taste”. This is not technically a tip! Ok, here is a tip from somebody who has done more research on the subject of mitigating the bitter taste of stevia – inulin. Check it out. Im not there yet, which is why i was hoping this post would have a great tip, to mitigate the taste of stevia. Has anybody else found a tip or trick, that doesn’t involve alternative sugars like maple syrup {like, you would use stevia if you could use maple syrup :)} I have breast cancer and can only use stevia. Eventually there will be an answer its just somewhere hidden on the web 🙂
Hello Robyn. I’m thinking it would be a good idea for you to go back and check out the post again–seems that you missed some content.
1) First of all, xylitol isn’t banned from all candida diets. Yes, it is from some, but not all especially since it’s known to kill candida.
This post has info about a great candida course and the author did a lot of study on candida and has been recommending candida for a long time. https://wholenewmom.com/candida-symptoms-explained/
Here is a study about the antifungal activity of candida: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29422459/
2) The next tip wasn’t “get used to it” but instead “stay committed” which means to not give up and keep trying.
3) There are other recommended sweeteners in the post besides maple syrup and honey and xylitol and I just added a few more as well.
4) Yes some people do use maple syrup and stevia. Maybe they just want to cut their high carb sweetener use without eliminating it completely. I use some raw honey personally from time to tie.
About inulin, I have seen an article about it, but not research, but I have seen research that oligofructose helps. https://www.naturalproductsinsider.com/healthy-living/research-shows-ways-improve-stevia-flavor. I personally think that xylitol works great and I have seen another writer talk about this as well. Just because there isn’t research on something doesn’t mean it’s not true.
Hope the post is more of a help to you now and remember, there’s a human on the other end of the screen–I appreciate kindness just as do most people. Thanks in advance.
The biggest thing to remember is to not use the same amount of stevia as you would another sweetener.
Some types say on the package you can use it in equal amounts as sugar in recipes, but it’s just not true.
It’s way sweeter than sugar and the more you use, the stronger the aftertaste.
Less is best, add a minimal amount then taste it, adding more a tiny bit at a time if needed.
I find that most of the preprepared protein powders have too much stevia and it makes them too sweet. I also find that more distasteful than the bitterness. Any ideas on how to correct it other than freezing? Eg with salt or something else
I really like putting a dash of salt in my shakes – just b/c salt makes all sweets taste better and for the added minerals.
Does freezing the stevia before using it in something help the aftertaste? The only sweetener I can use at the moment is sucralose which I buy in liquid form. I know it’s not the best for me and I’d really like to find something else as I’m a diabetic.
Good question. I don’t think so, but you could try it. I think liquid stevia might be a good option for you – have you tried that? Also choosing a good stevia can help. I’m going to add this to the post but this is one really good one: https://omicaorganics.com/product/stevia-extract-powder-98-reb-a-organic-and-kosher-100g-3-5-oz/?ref=WholeNewMom.
Thank you. I’m going to order a bottle of the vanilla-favored stevia and see how it works. 🙂
Please do let me know what you think!