Advertisement
AdSense Leaderboard 728ร—90
FruitPrunus domestica / salicina

Plum โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Prunus domestica / salicina ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

46
kcal / 100g
11.4g
Carbs
0.7g
Protein
1.4g
Fibre
39
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Plums are stone fruits (Prunus) with one of the most diverse polyphenol profiles of any common fruit โ€” particularly rich in chlorogenic acid (the primary antioxidant in coffee), neochlorogenic acid and the anthocyanins cyanidin-3-glucoside and peonidin-3-glucoside in red-purple varieties. Fresh plums provide meaningful vitamin C and vitamin K. Dried plums (prunes) are one of the most clinically evidence-supported functional foods for constipation and bone health. Australia grows excellent plums in Victoria's Goulburn Valley and the Adelaide Hills. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
๐Ÿงฎ
Serving size calculator
Drag the slider โ€” all values update instantly
Serving size:100g
46Calories (kcal)
11.4Carbs (g)
0.7Protein (g)
1.4Fibre (g)
Advertisement
AdSense In-Content 336ร—280

๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories46 kcal2%
Carbohydrates11.4g4%
Dietary fibre1.4g5%
Sugars9.9gโ€”
GI (Glycaemic Index)~39 โ€” Lowโ€”
Vitamin C9.5mg11%
Vitamin K6.4ยตg5%
Chlorogenic acidvery highโ€”
Anthocyaninshigh (red varieties)โ€”
Potassium157mg3%
Copper0.06mg3%
Sorbitolpresentโ€”

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

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

39
Glycaemic IndexLow GIPlums have a GI of approximately 39 โ€” low. Despite natural sweetness, the organic acids (malic, quinic, chlorogenic), sorbitol and polyphenols significantly slow glucose absorption. Prunes (dried plums) have a higher GI per gram (~29 on its own scale, but the caloric density means more careful portion control).
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Chlorogenic acid
very high
Antioxidant/anti-inflammatory
Anthocyanins
high
Cardiovascular
Vitamin C
9.5mg
11% RDI
Vitamin K
6.4ยตg
5% RDI
Potassium
157mg
3% RDI
Sorbitol
present
Natural laxative

โœ… Health benefits

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Chlorogenic acid โ€” richest stone fruit source (same antioxidant as coffee)

Plums are the richest stone fruit source of chlorogenic acid โ€” the same polyphenol that makes coffee a strong antioxidant food. Chlorogenic acid inhibits glucose absorption in the gut (reducing post-meal blood sugar), has anti-inflammatory properties, inhibits LDL oxidation and has demonstrated anti-cancer activity in cell studies. A 100g serve of plum provides approximately 100โ€“200mg of chlorogenic acid โ€” comparable to a cup of coffee but without the caffeine. Red and purple varieties have significantly higher chlorogenic acid than yellow or green-fleshed plums.

๐Ÿ’œ
Anthocyanins โ€” cardiovascular and cognitive protection

The deep red-purple colour of most plums comes from anthocyanins โ€” cyanidin-3-glucoside and peonidin-3-glucoside โ€” with documented cardiovascular and cognitive protective properties. Anthocyanins reduce arterial stiffness, inhibit platelet aggregation and reduce inflammatory cytokines. A 2016 meta-analysis found anthocyanin-rich food consumption was associated with 9% lower cardiovascular disease risk across 23 studies. The polyphenol content is concentrated in and immediately under the skin โ€” eating the skin is essential.

๐Ÿฆด
Bone health โ€” prunes (dried plums) have the strongest evidence base

Dried plums (prunes) have one of the most evidence-backed bone health effects of any food. Multiple clinical trials โ€” including a key study in postmenopausal women โ€” have found that eating 5โ€“6 prunes daily significantly increased bone mineral density compared to dried apples over 12 months. The mechanism involves the polyphenols inhibiting bone resorption (breakdown) and promoting bone formation. UK researchers demonstrated that fresh plum consumption also improved bone density markers over 8 weeks. The vitamin K in plums additionally supports osteocalcin activation for calcium binding in bone.

๐ŸŒฟ
Digestive health โ€” sorbitol and fibre

Plums and prunes are among the most well-established dietary remedies for constipation. The mechanism is dual: sorbitol (a naturally occurring sugar alcohol that draws water into the intestine) and the fibre content. Prunes contain approximately 14.7g of sorbitol per 100g and multiple clinical trials have found prune consumption as effective as psyllium for constipation treatment, with subjects preferring prunes for palatability. The sorbitol content also means overconsumption can cause bloating and diarrhoea in sensitive individuals โ€” this is dose-dependent.

Advertisement
AdSense 728ร—90

โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿ’จ
IBS and fructose malabsorption โ€” sorbitol and fructose

Plums and especially prunes are high in both sorbitol and free fructose โ€” two FODMAPs that can trigger IBS symptoms including bloating, cramping and diarrhoea in people with fructose malabsorption. People on a Low-FODMAP diet should limit fresh plums to 1 per serve (approximately 40โ€“45g) and avoid prunes during the elimination phase.

๐Ÿ’Š
Warfarin interaction โ€” Vitamin K (minor)

Plums provide 5% of daily vitamin K per 100g โ€” a minor interaction risk at typical serving sizes. Prunes have a higher vitamin K concentration per serving due to caloric density. People on warfarin should maintain consistent plum and prune intake and inform their anticoagulation team.

๐Ÿคง
Stone fruit allergy โ€” Prunus family cross-reactivity

Plum allergy is uncommon but plums are in the Prunus family alongside cherries, peaches, apricots, nectarines and almonds. People with known Prunus allergies or oral allergy syndrome triggered by other stone fruits may react to plums. OAS symptoms (tingling, itching in mouth and throat) are common in people with birch or grass pollen allergy. Cooking denatures the reactive proteins.

โœ… For most healthy adults, plums are a delicious, low-calorie stone fruit for daily consumption. They are particularly valuable for antioxidant intake (chlorogenic acid), digestive health and bone health (especially as prunes). The skin is the most nutritious part โ€” always eat it.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to select & buy plum

1
Slight give to thumb pressure โ€” the ripeness test

A ripe plum gives slightly but evenly to gentle pressure โ€” similar to a ripe avocado. Rock-hard plums are unripe and very acidic with little sweetness. Mushy plums are overripe and will be fermented and unpleasant. Plums ripen well at room temperature from firm โ€” the transition from firm to perfectly ripe usually takes 2โ€“4 days on the bench. Refrigerating an unripe plum prevents ripening entirely.

2
Deep colour and fresh aroma

Purple-red plums should have deep, rich colour. A ripe plum has a faint sweet, fruity aroma at the stem end. No aroma means it was picked too early and will not develop good flavour even when soft. Australian varieties: Blood Plum (deep red flesh, intensely flavoured), Satsuma (large red-purple, very sweet), Santa Rosa (red-yellow, classic sweet-tart), Angeleno (large, sweet, mild). Each has distinct eating qualities โ€” ask your greengrocer which is in peak condition.

3
Fresh vs prunes โ€” choosing the right form

Fresh plums are best for eating as fruit, in salads and desserts. Prunes (sundried or oven-dried plums) are for digestive health, baking, cooking with meat (prunes with pork or lamb is classic), and bone health supplementation. The 5โ€“6 prunes per day used in bone health clinical trials equates to approximately 40โ€“50g of dried prunes (roughly 5โ€“6 individual prunes). Pitted prunes in supermarkets are convenient โ€” the Sunsweet brand is most widely available in Australia.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Australian plum production is concentrated in Victoria's Goulburn Valley (Shepparton, Mooroopna, Cobram regions) and to a lesser extent the Adelaide Hills in SA and the Granite Belt in QLD. The Australian stone fruit season runs November to April, with plums peaking from late November through January. During the season, Victorian plums at roadside stalls and farmers' markets in the Goulburn Valley are exceptional โ€” much fresher and more flavourful than supermarket product which has typically been cold-stored. Coles and Woolworths stock good Australian plums during the domestic season โ€” look for Blood Plum (most nutritious, deepest colour), Satsuma and Santa Rosa varieties. Outside the domestic season, imported plums from Chile, South Africa and the USA are available at consistent but slightly lower quality. For dried prunes (dried plums) โ€” the Sunsweet brand is widely available and provides reliable quality for therapeutic use.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Bench
2โ€“4 days (to ripen from firm)
Room temperature, not in sunlight

Firm plums ripen well at room temperature โ€” the bench is the correct storage for unripe plums. Check daily with gentle pressure. Once ripe (slight give), eat within 2 days or move to the refrigerator. Do not refrigerate hard, unripe plums โ€” cold stops the ripening process entirely.

โ„๏ธ
Refrigerator
3โ€“5 days (ripe)
Whole, uncovered or loosely bagged

Ripe plums keep 3โ€“5 days in the refrigerator. Store uncovered or in a loose bag โ€” sealed bags trap ethylene gas and accelerate decay. Bring to room temperature for 30 minutes before eating for the best flavour expression โ€” chilled plums taste less sweet than room-temperature ones.

๐ŸงŠ
Freezer
Up to 12 months
Halve, remove stone, freeze on tray

Plums freeze excellently for cooking. Halve and stone, freeze on a tray then bag. No blanching required. Frozen plum halves cook straight from frozen in crumbles, compotes, cakes and sauces. Excellent for buying in bulk when the Victorian season peaks and prices drop in January.

Affiliate ยท Amazon AU
Produce Storage Bags โ€” keep fresh fruit longer

๐Ÿ“– About plum โ€” complete guide

The plum (Prunus domestica and Prunus salicina) has a complex botanical history โ€” European plums (P. domestica) are believed to have originated as a natural hybrid in the Caucasus region approximately 2,000 years ago, while Japanese plums (P. salicina), which dominate Australian commercial production, originated in China and were introduced to Japan over a thousand years ago, then to the United States by Luther Burbank in the 1870s and subsequently to Australia. Plums arrived in Australia with the First Fleet and have been grown commercially since the early colonial period. The Goulburn Valley in Victoria became the centre of Australian stone fruit production in the late 19th century, facilitated by irrigation from the Goulburn River and the proximity of the Melbourne market via rail.

The clinical evidence for prunes (dried plums) in bone health is unusually strong for a food product โ€” placing it among the handful of foods with clinical trial-level evidence for a specific health outcome. A key 2011 study by Dr Bahram Arjmandi at Florida State University published in the British Journal of Nutrition found that postmenopausal women eating 100g of prunes daily for 12 months had significantly higher bone mineral density at the ulna and spine compared to women eating dried apples โ€” even after controlling for calcium and vitamin D intake. A follow-up study showed that eating just 50g of prunes (5โ€“6 individual prunes) daily was sufficient for significant benefit. The proposed mechanism โ€” suppression of bone resorption by plum polyphenols (particularly neochlorogenic acid) โ€” has supporting cell-study evidence. The UK government subsequently considered including prune consumption in its bone health guidance.

โš–๏ธ Compare plum to similar fruits

Plum
46 kcal
VS
๐Ÿ’
Cherry
VS
Peach
VS
๐ŸŽ
Apple
Compare in full tool โ†’

๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about plum

โ˜•
1
Plums contain the same primary antioxidant as coffee โ€” chlorogenic acid โ€” but without the caffeine
Chlorogenic acid is the polyphenol responsible for coffee's strong antioxidant activity and most of its studied health benefits related to blood sugar management and cardiovascular health. Plums โ€” particularly dark red and purple varieties โ€” contain comparable concentrations of chlorogenic acid and neochlorogenic acid to drip-brewed coffee (approximately 100โ€“200mg per 100g). For people who cannot or prefer not to drink coffee, plums provide the same polyphenol class in a whole fruit matrix with fibre and additional vitamins.
๐Ÿฆด
2
Eating 5โ€“6 prunes a day improved bone density in clinical trials โ€” one of the strongest food-bone health findings in published literature
The Arjmandi study (2011, British Journal of Nutrition) and its follow-up (2016) found that daily prune consumption (50โ€“100g) significantly improved bone mineral density and reduced bone resorption markers in postmenopausal women over 6โ€“12 months. The effect size was comparable to some pharmacological interventions. The mechanism is believed to involve plum polyphenols suppressing RANKL (a protein that promotes osteoclast activity and bone breakdown). This finding has been replicated in animal models and supported by mechanistic studies, placing prunes among the most evidence-based foods for bone health.
๐Ÿ’œ
3
The word 'prune' confused consumers so much that the US industry rebranded dried plums as 'dried plums' in 2000 โ€” sales increased 15%
By 2000, the California Prune Board found that 'prune' had acquired strongly negative associations in American consumer research โ€” associated with laxatives, nursing homes and old age. In 2000, the FDA approved renaming prunes as 'dried plums' on packaging, and the industry rebranded accordingly. Within three years, sales of the product increased by approximately 15% โ€” a remarkable example of how nomenclature affects food choices independent of the product itself. Australian products still commonly use both names, with 'prunes' remaining acceptable in Australian consumer research.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
4
Victoria's Goulburn Valley produces stone fruits consumed across Australia โ€” Shepparton's SPC cannery was built on the back of the local plum crop
The Shepparton Preserving Company (SPC), founded in 1917, was established specifically to process the excess stone fruit production of the Goulburn Valley. For over a century, SPC canned peaches, apricots, plums and pears from local orchards and distributed them nationally. At its peak, SPC processed over 50,000 tonnes of fruit annually. The factory is one of Australia's most iconic food manufacturing facilities. The Goulburn Valley's combination of hot summers, cold winters (required for stone fruit dormancy and flowering), rich alluvial soils and Murray system irrigation makes it one of the world's premier stone fruit growing regions.
๐ŸŒธ
5
Japanese plum blossom festivals (ume matsuri) celebrate the first flowering of Prunus mume โ€” and umeboshi (pickled plums) are among Japan's most distinctive health foods
Japan's relationship with plums is ancient and culturally central โ€” Prunus mume (the Japanese plum, technically an apricot hybrid) flowers in February as the first sign of spring, celebrated in ume matsuri festivals at shrines nationally. Umeboshi โ€” extremely sour, salt-pickled plum โ€” is used as a natural preservative (in rice balls), a digestive remedy (served with green tea after heavy meals), and as a condiment so quintessentially Japanese that it is considered a taste of home by Japanese people globally. Umeboshi's extraordinary acidity (pH 2.2โ€“2.5) comes from citric acid concentrations that exceed lemon juice.
Advertisement
AdSense ยท after facts
โ† Green GrapesFruits Aโ€“Z