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Glycemic data

Glycemic Index of Corn

The glycemic index of corn is 55, classified as low GI. Per typical serving, glycemic load is 9 — slower glucose response, suitable for diabetes management.

Glycemic Index
55
LOW
Glycemic Load (per 1 medium ear of corn)
9
LOW

Glycemic load by portion size

Glycemic load = (GI × available carbs in grams) ÷ 100. The same food can produce a low GL in a small serving and a high GL in a large one. Here\'s the calculation across realistic portions:

Portion Carbs (g) Fiber (g) Available carbs Glycemic load
1 medium ear of corn (~103g) 19 2.4 16.6 9
1 large ear (~143g) 26 3.4 22.6 12
1 cup cooked corn kernels (~149g) 31 3.6 27.4 15
100g cooked corn 21 2.4 18.6 10
1 cup creamed corn 46 46.0 25
Corn on the cob with butter 25 25.0 14

What this means for blood sugar

With a GI of 55, corn produces relatively slow glucose absorption. Most adults eating corn alone will see only a modest post-meal glucose rise — typically 20–35 mg/dL above baseline at 60 minutes for the typical serving.

For people with prediabetes, type 2 diabetes, or insulin resistance — and for non-diabetic adults wearing CGMs to track metabolic health — the practical strategy is pairing. Adding protein and vegetables before the carb portion of a meal reduces the glucose spike by 29% on average (Shukla 2015 Diabetes Care). Adding 10g of viscous fiber or 10–15g of fat blunts the peak by 20–40%. These pairing strategies allow most foods to fit in a glucose-conscious eating plan, even high-GI ones in controlled portions.

Comparing this to other foods

Reference points from the 2021 International Tables for context:

Use the calculators

Glycemic index of related foods

Frequently asked questions

What is the glycemic index of corn?
The glycemic index of corn is approximately 55, classifying it as low GI. Slower glucose response, suitable for diabetes management. GI values are sourced from the 2021 International Tables of Glycemic Index and Glycemic Load (Atkinson, Brand-Miller et al., Diabetes Care 2021) — the canonical reference for over 4,000 foods.
Does corn spike blood sugar?
For a 1 medium ear of corn (~103g), the glycemic load is approximately 9 — classified as low. GL captures the total blood glucose impact better than GI alone because it accounts for actual carb mass in a realistic serving. Most metabolically healthy adults will see only a modest glucose rise.
What's the difference between glycemic index and glycemic load?
Glycemic index measures how fast a standardized 50g dose of carbs from a specific food raises blood glucose vs pure glucose. Glycemic load multiplies GI by the actual carb content in a realistic serving and divides by 100. GI tells you carb quality; GL tells you the total blood-glucose impact of what you actually eat. Watermelon has GI 72 (high) but GL only 4 per typical serving because most of its weight is water. For practical meal planning, GL is the more useful metric.
How can I lower the glucose response without removing this food?
Three reliable methods. First, eat protein and vegetables 15 minutes before the carbs — Shukla 2015 in Diabetes Care showed this reduces post-meal glucose by 29% with no change in food composition. Second, add 10–15g of fat (olive oil, nuts, avocado) to slow gastric emptying and blunt the peak by 20–40%. Third, add 10g of viscous fiber (oat beta-glucan, psyllium, chia) — slows carbohydrate absorption. Adding 1 Tbsp vinegar to dressings reduces post-meal glucose by 30% in insulin-sensitive subjects (Östman 2005).
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