Choosing the wrong kind undermines the benefits; here’s how to get it right
Why Yogurt Deserves a Spot in Your Daily Routine
Yogurt has long held a quiet, unassuming place in the dairy aisle, but nutrition experts say it deserves far more credit than it gets. Protein, probiotics, calcium — yogurt packs a formidable nutritional punch into a single serving. Registered dietitian Natalie Rizzo, who also serves as a nutrition editor, calls it one of the most versatile and satisfying foods available, working equally well as a breakfast anchor, afternoon snack, or even a dessert stand-in.
The calcium alone is reason enough to keep it on the weekly rotation. That mineral quietly supports bone density, nail strength, and dental health — benefits that compound over a lifetime. Meanwhile, the probiotic bacteria naturally present in yogurt help cultivate a balanced gut microbiome, which researchers increasingly link to everything from digestion to immune function and even mood. Add the protein — which works alongside fat to promote satiety — and yogurt starts to look less like a morning convenience and more like a legitimate nutritional strategy.
Not All Yogurt Is Created Equal
Here is where the story gets complicated. The dairy case has never been more crowded, and not every cup on the shelf earns the health halo consumers tend to assign it.
Standard yogurt contains only around five grams of protein per serving — modest, by most nutritional standards. More concerning, many flavored varieties are loaded with added sugar, sometimes exceeding ten grams per cup. That figure matters more than it might seem: the American Heart Association recommends that women limit added sugar to 25 grams per day and men to 36 grams. A single flavored yogurt can quietly consume a substantial portion of that daily ceiling before breakfast is even finished.
The takeaway is not to swear off flavored yogurt entirely, but to treat it as an occasional indulgence rather than a default daily option.
The Yogurt Case for High-Protein Varieties
For daily consumption, strained yogurts are the clear frontrunners. Greek yogurt and Icelandic skyr both undergo a straining process that removes excess liquid whey, concentrating protein and delivering 12 or more grams per serving — roughly double what regular yogurt provides. The vitamins, minerals, and probiotics remain intact throughout the process, making neither variety a nutritional trade-off.
The sugar question, however, does not disappear entirely. Brands frequently flavor these products to temper their naturally sharp, tangy taste, and the added sugar in some flavored Greek or skyr options rivals that of conventional yogurt. Checking the nutrition label remains essential regardless of what type lands in the cart.
Building the Ideal Daily Yogurt Habit
Three practical adjustments make daily yogurt consumption both smart and sustainable.
Choose high-protein varieties. Greek yogurt and skyr are the obvious starting points, given their protein concentration and nutritional density. For shoppers watching added sugar without sacrificing flavor, brands like Chobani offer lower-sugar product lines, and Siggi’s skyr is widely noted for containing less added sugar than most comparable options.
Manage added sugars strategically. Plain yogurt is the cleanest choice from a sugar standpoint. From there, customization becomes the advantage — a drizzle of honey, a handful of raisins, fresh seasonal fruit, or a modest pour of granola can transform a plain cup into something genuinely appealing. Rotating toppings also introduces variety into what might otherwise become a monotonous routine, while broadening the nutritional range across nuts, seeds, and fruit.
Be intentional about fat content. Greek yogurt and skyr come in full-fat, low-fat, and non-fat versions, each suited to different health priorities. Low-fat options strike a reasonable middle ground for most people — lower in saturated fat and calories without sacrificing creaminess. For those without active heart-health concerns, whole-milk versions are a perfectly reasonable choice. Those managing cardiovascular risk, however, are better served by low-fat or non-fat alternatives.
The bottom line is disarmingly simple: yogurt is genuinely good for you, every day — as long as the right cup makes it into the cart.
Source: Today

