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FruitLitchi chinensis

Lychee โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Litchi chinensis ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

66
kcal / 100g
16.5g
Carbs
0.8g
Protein
1.3g
Fibre
50
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Lychee is one of China's most prized fruits โ€” cultivated for over 2,000 years and renowned not just for its extraordinary floral sweetness but for its exceptional vitamin C content (72mg/100g โ€” 80% RDI), copper, B vitamins and oligonol โ€” a unique polyphenol with significant research interest for weight management and antioxidant properties. Australia grows world-class lychees in Queensland's subtropical north. The flesh is white-translucent and extraordinary in flavour, surrounded by a rough red-pink shell and containing a single large seed. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
๐Ÿงฎ
Serving size calculator
Drag the slider โ€” all values update instantly
Serving size:100g
66Calories (kcal)
16.5Carbs (g)
0.8Protein (g)
1.3Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories66 kcal3%
Carbohydrates16.5g6%
Dietary fibre1.3g5%
Sugars15.2gโ€”
GI (Glycaemic Index)~50 โ€” Lowโ€”
Protein0.8g2%
Vitamin C71.5mg79%
Copper0.15mg8%
Vitamin B60.10mg6%
Potassium171mg4%
Oligonolpresentโ€”
Niacin B30.60mg4%

Based on Australian NRV. Source: FSANZ Australian Food Composition Database.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

50
Glycaemic IndexLow GILychee has a GI of approximately 50 โ€” low boundary. Despite a high sugar content (15.2g/100g), the GI is kept moderate by the fruit's organic acids and polyphenols that inhibit glucose absorption. Fresh lychees have a lower GI than canned lychees in syrup, which can be considerably higher.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Vitamin C
71.5mg
79% RDI
Oligonol
present
Antioxidant research
Copper
0.15mg
8% RDI
Potassium
171mg
4% RDI
Vitamin B6
0.10mg
6% RDI
Niacin B3
0.60mg
4% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Exceptional Vitamin C โ€” 79% RDI per 100g

Lychees provide 71.5mg of vitamin C per 100g โ€” 79% of the daily requirement, making them one of the richest common fruit sources after guava and kiwi. Ten lychees (approximately 100g flesh) provides nearly the full daily vitamin C requirement in a serving. Vitamin C at this concentration provides robust immune support, collagen synthesis, enhanced iron absorption from plant sources and comprehensive antioxidant protection.

๐Ÿ”ฌ
Oligonol โ€” unique anti-obesity polyphenol

Lychees are one of the richest known sources of oligonol โ€” a low-molecular-weight polyphenol derived from lychee fruit polyphenols during processing. Multiple randomised clinical trials have found oligonol supplementation reduces visceral fat accumulation, improves insulin resistance, reduces inflammatory markers (CRP) and improves exercise-induced fatigue recovery. While oligonol is found primarily in concentrated lychee extracts rather than fresh fruit, fresh lychees contain the polyphenol precursors that oligonol is derived from.

โค๏ธ
Cardiovascular and antioxidant protection

Lychees contain epicatechin, catechin and rutin โ€” polyphenols with documented cardiovascular protective effects including LDL oxidation reduction, platelet aggregation inhibition and arterial inflammation reduction. The combination of vitamin C with these polyphenols provides synergistic antioxidant protection. Regular fruit polyphenol intake is consistently associated with reduced cardiovascular disease risk in large population studies.

๐Ÿ’ง
Hydration and electrolyte balance

Lychees are 82% water and provide meaningful potassium (171mg/100g) โ€” the key electrolyte for fluid regulation within cells and blood pressure management. As a naturally sweet, hydrating fruit, lychees serve as an excellent post-exercise snack, particularly in tropical and hot conditions. Their natural sugars provide rapid energy replenishment alongside hydration.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

โš ๏ธ
Lychee consumption and hypoglycaemia โ€” children in South Asia

A serious public health finding deserves clear communication: consuming large numbers of lychees on an empty stomach โ€” particularly unripe lychees โ€” has been linked to outbreaks of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) in children in the Muzaffarpur district of Bihar, India. Investigation identified the culprit as hypoglycin A and MCPG โ€” toxins present in unripe lychee that inhibit gluconeogenesis (the liver's glucose production), causing life-threatening hypoglycaemia, particularly in malnourished children. This risk is negligible for well-nourished adults eating ripe lychees in normal quantities. Caution: do not give children large quantities of unripe or green lychees on an empty stomach.

๐Ÿฉธ
High sugar โ€” diabetes management

Lychees contain 15.2g of sugar per 100g โ€” high for a fruit. Despite a GI of ~50, people with diabetes should count lychees as a moderate-carbohydrate food. Ten fresh lychees (100g flesh) provide approximately 16g of carbohydrate. Fresh lychees are fine in appropriate portions; canned lychees in syrup have a significantly higher sugar and GI impact.

๐Ÿคง
Lychee allergy and oral allergy syndrome

Lychee allergy is uncommon but documented, and oral allergy syndrome can occur in people with latex allergy (latex-fruit syndrome). Cross-reactivity with other Sapindaceae family fruits (rambutan, longan, ackee) is possible. Start with a small amount if you have known fruit allergies.

โœ… For most healthy adults and well-nourished children, fresh ripe lychees are a safe and highly nutritious fruit in normal serving sizes. They are particularly valuable as a vitamin C-rich seasonal treat. The public health concern relates specifically to malnourished children eating large quantities of unripe lychees on empty stomachs.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to select & buy lychee

1
Bright pink-red shell with no browning

Fresh ripe lychees have a bright pink to crimson shell (pericarp) with a characteristic rough, bumpy texture. The shell naturally browns after harvest as it dries โ€” this is a normal process that does NOT indicate spoilage of the flesh inside. However, heavily browned, dried or cracked shells at purchase indicate age and the flesh inside may be shrunken or fermented. Choose bright pink-red shells when you have the option.

2
Gentle squeeze โ€” slight firmness, not mushy

A fresh lychee yields very slightly to gentle pressure. Completely rock-hard lychees may be underripe. Mushy lychees are overripe โ€” the flesh will be watery and fermented. The shell should feel slightly yielding but not soft. The best lychees have a small amount of give, indicating the flesh is full and juicy inside. Check several in a punnet โ€” quality can vary.

3
Look for large fruit with small seeds โ€” best varieties

The flesh-to-seed ratio is the key eating quality metric. Large lychees with visibly small seeds indicated by a slightly indented base are the best value for eating. Australian varieties including Kwai May Pink, Salathiel and Fay Zee Siu are prized for their small seeds and exceptional sweetness. Imported or commercial varieties often have larger seeds. Ask your Asian grocer which variety they stock.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Queensland produces some of the world's finest lychees โ€” the Atherton Tablelands (Mareeba, Tolga regions), Bundaberg, Bowen and Rockhampton regions are the main growing areas. The Australian lychee season runs late October to February, peaking in Decemberโ€“January. Queensland lychees have won international recognition โ€” varieties like Kwai May Pink, Salathiel, Fay Zee Siu and Wai Chee are considered premium eating varieties superior to most imports. During the season, Coles and Woolworths regularly stock Queensland lychees at excellent prices ($3โ€“6 per 500g punnet). Fresh lychees are also available at Asian grocery stores year-round (often imported from China, Vietnam or Taiwan when out of domestic season, at lower prices). For premium Queensland fruit, the Atherton Tablelands producers sell direct via roadside stalls and online during the Decemberโ€“January peak.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Bench
1โ€“2 days maximum
Cool, away from direct sun

Lychees deteriorate rapidly at room temperature in warm Australian conditions โ€” the shell browns and the flesh ferments quickly. Only leave at room temperature if eating within a day or two. In tropical Queensland conditions, refrigerate immediately on purchase.

โ„๏ธ
Refrigerator
1โ€“2 weeks in shell / 5 days peeled
Leave in shell until eating; punnet or bag

Best storage: leave lychees in their shell until ready to eat. The shell continues to brown but the flesh inside remains good for 1โ€“2 weeks. Once peeled and de-seeded, lychees keep 5 days in an airtight container submerged in their own juice. The shell browning is not an indication of flesh quality โ€” do not judge by external colour.

๐ŸงŠ
Freezer
Up to 12 months
Peel and de-seed before freezing

Lychees freeze very well โ€” peel, remove seed, freeze on a tray then bag. Frozen lychees are excellent in smoothies, cocktails and desserts. The texture softens slightly on thawing but the flavour remains excellent. Buying bulk during peak Queensland season (Decemberโ€“January) and freezing is the most economical approach for year-round use.

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๐Ÿ“– About lychee โ€” complete guide

Lychee (Litchi chinensis) is native to the Guangdong and Fujian provinces of southern China, where cultivation records date back to at least 2,000 BCE. The fruit was considered a delicacy of imperial courts โ€” Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty (8th century CE) reportedly arranged for fast horse relay systems to deliver fresh lychees from Guangdong to his beloved consort Yang Guifei in the capital Chang'an (modern Xi'an), approximately 2,000km away. The fruit's short harvest season and extraordinary perishability made it a supreme luxury available only to royalty in pre-refrigeration times. Lychee's spread from China to Southeast Asia and then globally followed trade routes โ€” arriving in India by the 17th century, reaching Europe and the Americas in the 18th century, and arriving in Queensland with Chinese immigrants in the 19th century.

The public health story of lychees and childhood encephalitis in Bihar, India represents one of the most significant applied nutritional epidemiology findings of the past two decades. Outbreaks of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) affecting children in the Muzaffarpur lychee-growing district had mystified researchers for decades. Investigation published in the Lancet Global Health (2017) by US CDC epidemiologists identified the cause: hypoglycin A and methylenecyclopropylglycine (MCPG) โ€” amino acids found particularly in unripe lychees โ€” which inhibit gluconeogenesis (the liver's ability to produce glucose). In malnourished children who had not eaten a substantial evening meal, eating large quantities of lychees provided a false caloric signal while simultaneously blocking glucose production, causing nocturnal hypoglycaemia and encephalopathy. The mortality rate was high and the solution surprisingly simple: ensure children eat a full meal before bed and do not eat large quantities of unripe lychees. This research has no practical implications for well-nourished adults eating ripe lychees in normal amounts.

โš–๏ธ Compare lychee to similar fruits

Lychee
66 kcal
VS
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Mango
VS
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VS
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Guava
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๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about lychee

๐Ÿ‘‘
1
Emperor Xuanzong of Tang Dynasty China set up relay horse systems to deliver fresh lychees 2,000km to his consort โ€” the original express delivery
Yang Guifei (Lady Yang), the legendary imperial consort of Emperor Xuanzong (r. 712โ€“756 CE), was obsessed with fresh lychees. The emperor arranged a horse relay system โ€” changing horses at posting stations every 40km โ€” to deliver fresh lychees from Guangdong to the capital Chang'an in approximately 5โ€“7 days, rather than the weeks a slow caravan would take. Chinese historians note this as an example of imperial excess; the poet Du Fu referenced it in satirical verse. It represents the original express delivery system, motivated by fruit freshness.
๐Ÿ”ฌ
2
Lychee-sourced oligonol has been studied in clinical trials for fat reduction and exercise recovery
Oligonol โ€” produced from lychee fruit polyphenols through a proprietary condensation process โ€” has been tested in over a dozen clinical trials. A 2007 trial found oligonol supplementation significantly reduced visceral fat accumulation and waist circumference in overweight subjects over 10 weeks. Multiple trials have found reduced exercise-induced oxidative stress and faster recovery with oligonol supplementation. The compound is approved as a food ingredient in Japan and sold globally as a supplement, driven primarily by the body composition and sports recovery evidence.
โš ๏ธ
3
Lychees caused a mysterious children's disease in India for decades before researchers cracked the case in 2017
Between 1995 and 2014, annual outbreaks of acute encephalitis syndrome affected hundreds to thousands of children in Bihar's Muzaffarpur district, killing 100โ€“500+ per year. The cause was unknown for two decades. In 2017, US CDC epidemiologists published a Lancet study identifying the mechanism: toxins in unripe lychees (hypoglycin A and MCPG) inhibit gluconeogenesis, causing nocturnal hypoglycaemia in malnourished children who had eaten lychees without an evening meal. The finding was both a public health breakthrough and a reminder that even beloved foods can have context-specific risks.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
4
Queensland's Atherton Tablelands produces lychees considered among the world's best โ€” the climate and altitude create exceptional sweetness
The Atherton Tablelands region, at 700โ€“900 metres elevation in tropical Queensland, has a unique climate combination โ€” tropical warmth during summer with significantly cooler winter nights that stress the lychee trees into flowering synchronously and producing high-sugar fruit. This natural cold period combined with rich volcanic soil produces lychees with outstanding sweetness and small seeds. Australian lychee varieties including Kwai May Pink and Fay Zee Siu regularly win international tasting competitions. Queensland lychee growers export premium fruit to Japan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia where they command premium prices.
๐Ÿธ
5
Lychee martini โ€” the lychee's floral sweetness made it the defining cocktail ingredient of the early 2000s luxury bar scene
The lychee martini โ€” vodka, lychee liqueur (or fresh lychee juice), and a single lychee garnish โ€” was the signature cocktail of high-end bars globally from approximately 2000 to 2010. The drink's extraordinary floral sweetness introduced millions of Western consumers to lychee flavour for the first time. Soho House, NoMad and countless Asian fusion restaurants popularised it. The cocktail drove a significant increase in lychee consumption and canned lychee sales in Western markets during this period. The lychee's natural aromatics โ€” geraniol, geranyl acetate and linalool โ€” are responsible for its distinctive rose-floral scent that translates exceptionally well to cocktail applications.
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