A standard milkshake is 250 to 350 calories. Add ice cream and it crosses 400. A large café milkshake with whipped cream can hit 600. Milkshakes are liquid desserts that people drink as beverages. That classification mismatch is why they wreck diets without anyone noticing.
- Full calorie breakdown
- How milkshake compares to roti
- Milkshake vs buttermilk
- Is milkshake good for weight loss?
- How milkshake fits in your daily calories
- Best time to eat milkshake
- Who should (and shouldn't) eat milkshake regularly
- How to reduce calories when eating milkshake
- Frequently asked questions
Most people eat milkshake without thinking about the calorie count. Once you see the number, you’ll understand why your weight hasn’t been moving despite ‘eating normal Indian food.’ Here’s the complete breakdown.
Protein: 7g · Carbs: 42g · Fat: 12g · Fibre: 1g
That’s roughly 4.2x a homemade roti (72 cal)
Full calorie breakdown
The calorie count for milkshake varies significantly depending on size, stuffing, and preparation method. Here’s every variant you’ll encounter, from the lightest to the heaviest.
| Variant | Serving | Calories | Protein |
|---|---|---|---|
| Banana shake (milk, no sugar) | 250ml | 210-240 | 8g |
| Banana shake (milk + sugar) | 300ml | 270-310 | 8g |
| Mango shake (with sugar) | 300ml | 280-340 | 6g |
| Chocolate milkshake | 300ml | 320-380 | 8g |
| Milkshake with ice cream | 350ml | 400-480 | 10g |
| Café milkshake (large) | 450ml | 500-600 | 10g |
| Fruit smoothie (curd + fruit, no sugar) | 250ml | 140-180 | 5g |
| Buttermilk (comparison) | 200ml | 40 | 2g |
| Lassi sweet (comparison) | 250ml | 180 | 5g |
The gap between Buttermilk (comparison) (40 cal) and Café milkshake (large) (500 cal) is significant. Same food category, very different calorie cost. What you choose and how it’s prepared matters more than most people realise.
How milkshake compares to roti
One milkshake serving (300 calories) is equivalent to about 4.2 homemade rotis (72 cal each). That means a single serving replaces what would be 4 rotis on your plate. If you eat two servings, you’ve consumed the calorie equivalent of 8 rotis in one sitting.
This doesn’t make milkshake ‘bad.’ It makes it calorie-dense, which means you need to account for it. If milkshake is lunch, keep dinner lighter. If it’s a daily habit, the calories compound fast.
Milkshake vs buttermilk
Milkshake at 300 calories is significantly heavier than buttermilk at 40 calories. That’s a gap of 260+ calories per serving. Over a week of daily consumption, choosing milkshake over buttermilk adds 1,820 extra calories, roughly 0.2 kg of potential weight change per month.
Milkshake (300 cal) vs buttermilk (40 cal). Same dairy base concept. 7.5x the calories. The sugar, full-fat milk, and ice cream create the gap. For daily drinking, buttermilk. For occasional treat, milkshake.
Is milkshake good for weight loss?
Honestly? Milkshake is not a weight-loss-friendly food. At 300 calories per serving, it takes up a large chunk of any calorie budget. On a 1,500-calorie diet, one serving of milkshake uses 20% or more of your entire daily allowance.
The main issue: full-fat milk + sugar + fruit/flavouring + often ice cream or cream = calorie-dense liquid that does not register as a meal despite having meal-level calories. This makes milkshake calorie-dense without proportional nutritional benefit. You get a lot of calories without a lot of protein or fibre to show for it.
This doesn’t mean you can never eat milkshake. It means treating it as an occasional indulgence (once a week or less) rather than a regular meal component. On the days you eat it, compensate by keeping other meals lighter.
Milkshake at 300 calories per serving is best enjoyed occasionally, not daily, if you are watching your weight. Track it, account for it, and it fits in any Indian diet plan.
Find your daily calorie target in 30 seconds. Then every food choice makes sense.
How milkshake fits in your daily calories
Here’s what including milkshake looks like at different calorie targets:
1200 cal/day (Aggressive weight loss): Easy fit. Only 25% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.
1500 cal/day (Steady weight loss): Easy fit. Only 20% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.
2000 cal/day (Maintenance): Easy fit. Only 15% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.
Best time to eat milkshake
At 300 calories, milkshake fits comfortably in any main meal. Breakfast, lunch, or dinner, it does not matter. What matters is what you eat alongside it. Pair with protein, add vegetables, and the meal is balanced regardless of timing.
Who should (and shouldn’t) eat milkshake regularly
Be careful if: You are on a strict calorie deficit. The issue with milkshake is full-fat milk + sugar + fruit/flavouring + often ice cream or cream = calorie-dense liquid that does not register as a meal despite having meal-level calories. This does not mean ‘never eat it.’ It means ‘account for it when you do.’
For most people eating a normal Indian diet, milkshake is neither something to seek out nor something to avoid. It is a regular food that fits when you know the calorie count and plan accordingly.
How to reduce calories when eating milkshake
It is dessert, not a drink. Budget milkshakes as dessert (300-400 cal), not as a beverage. If you drink a milkshake AND eat dessert, that is double dessert.
No ice cream, no sugar. Milk + banana (no sugar, no ice cream): 220 cal. Milk + banana + sugar + ice cream: 400 cal. The additions nearly double the count.
Smaller glass. 200ml shake instead of 350ml saves 100-150 cal. You still get the taste. Your stomach does not know the glass was smaller.
Smoothie ≠ milkshake. A smoothie with curd + fruit + no sugar: 150-180 cal. A milkshake with milk + sugar + ice cream: 300-400 cal. The base and additions make them fundamentally different drinks despite sounding similar.
Frequently asked questions
Includes milkshake and all your favourite foods. Calorie-counted, portion-controlled, actually enjoyable.
Nutritional values based on IFCT (Indian Food Composition Tables) and USDA databases. Values vary with ingredients, size, and preparation. Informational content, not medical or dietary advice.