Lay's Classic Potato Chips: Labelgrade C+ (66/100)
C+ 66 / 100 — Effectively zero sugar and high sodium per 100g.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Lay’s Classic Potato Chips delivers 2g of protein and 160 calories per 1 ONZ (USDA FDC 1633665). Per 100g that’s 7.1g of protein; per oz, 2g. The Labelgrade is C+ (66 / 100): Effectively zero sugar and high sodium per 100g.
Why this Labelgrade
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C | 61 / 100 | 7.1g per 100g — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting |
| Ingredient quality | B | 77 / 100 | Short 4-ingredient list, no additive flags |
| Saturated fat load | C+ | 68 / 100 | 1.5g per serving (5.4g per 100g) — moderate |
| Sodium load | F | 35 / 100 | 170mg per serving (172mg per oz) — high; structural for cured/preserved foods |
| Sugar load | A+ | 96 / 100 | 1g sugar, no added sugar listed |
| Fiber | C- | 55 / 100 | 1.01g per serving — modest fiber contribution |
| Overall | C+ | 66 / 100 | Weighted blend: protein 25% · ingredients 22% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 12% · fiber 8% |
How it compares
| Product | Protein per serving | Per 100 g | Per oz | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lay’s Classic Potato Chips (this product) | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 160 |
| Doritos Nacho Cheese Tortilla Chips | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 140 |
| Fritos Scoops! Corn Chips | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 160 |
| Ruffles Original Potato Chips | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 160 |
| Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark) | — | 31g | 8.8g | ~165 |
”Three ingredients” is the cleanest part — and the most misread
Lay’s Classic has a marketing-ready ingredient list: potatoes, vegetable oil, and salt. Three things, all of them recognizable, none of them a chemical you’d have to look up. It’s a real point in the product’s favor — it’s why Lay’s scores a B on ingredient quality, a notch above seasoned and “multigrain” chips whose lists run 20 to 30 items deep. If you’re scanning labels to avoid maltodextrin, dyes, and preservatives, classic Lay’s genuinely passes that screen.
The trap is treating a short list as a verdict on the food itself. A short ingredient list tells you what isn’t there; it can’t tell you how the food was made. And how Lay’s is made is the whole problem: thin potato slices deep-fried in oil. That single step turns a fairly benign vegetable into 160 calories and 10g of fat per ounce with 170mg of sodium — which is exactly why the overall grade sits at a C+ despite the spotless label. Three ingredients, deep-fried, is still deep-fried. Simple is not a synonym for nutritious.
What this snack is actually for
It helps to be honest about the job a potato chip does, because it isn’t a nutrition job. At 2g of protein and 1g of fiber per serving, Lay’s gives you essentially nothing on the two levers that make a snack filling or satisfying for long — it’s salt, fat, and crunch, engineered to be pleasant and easy to keep eating. That’s fine. Not every food has to earn its place on a macro spreadsheet, and a small portion of classic chips alongside a sandwich is a normal, reasonable thing to eat.
What it can’t be is the thing you reach for because you think it’s healthy. The clean label invites that mistake, and the numbers don’t support it: there’s no protein to speak of, the fat and sodium are real, and the serving that makes those numbers look modest — 1 oz, a small handful, around 15 chips — is far smaller than the bag encourages. Treat Lay’s as the salty treat it is, portion it deliberately, and pair it with something that actually brings protein and fiber to the plate. Graded honestly, it’s a C+ chip: clean, simple, fried, and best in small amounts.
Scope
This page covers Lay’s Classic Potato Chips, UPC 028400421584, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 1633665. Lay’s sells multiple variants in this product line — other sizes, flavors, or fat levels may have different macros and Labelgrade scores. Manufacturers periodically reformulate; always cross-reference the actual package label, especially if you have allergies or dietary restrictions.
Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)
POTATOES, VEGETABLE OIL (SUNFLOWER, CORN AND/OR CANOLA OIL), AND SALT.
Where to buy
Affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. The Labelgrade score is independent of affiliate relationships. More.
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 ONZ
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 ONZ) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 160 |
| Protein | 2g |
| Total Fat | 10g |
| Saturated Fat | 1.5g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 15g |
| Dietary Fiber | 1.01g |
| Total Sugars | 1g |
| Sodium | 170mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Calcium | 0mg |
| Iron | 0.361mg |
| Potassium | 350mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Classic Potato Chips · UPC 028400421584. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.
How this fits each diet
Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.
contains no listed animal products
contains no listed meat or fish
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Lay's Classic Potato Chips a healthy snack?
No — they're a treat, not health food, even though the label is about as clean as a chip gets. Lay's Classic are fried potato slices made from just potatoes, oil, and salt. That short list is genuinely nice, but the frying is what defines the nutrition: 160 calories and 10g of fat per ounce, with only 2g of protein and 1g of fiber. Enjoy them as a treat and keep the portion honest — an ounce is a small handful.
Why do Lay's only score a Labelgrade C+ (66/100)?
The three-ingredient list earns a solid B for ingredient quality — there's nothing junky in it. But frying loads on 10g of fat (1.5g saturated, a C+) and the salt pushes sodium to 170mg per serving, scored F. Near-zero sugar keeps the grade from dropping further. A simple, fried, 2g-protein snack tops out around a C+, and that's where Lay's lands.
Lay's has only 3 ingredients — doesn't that make it a healthy choice?
It makes it a clean choice, not a healthy one, and the difference matters. 'Potatoes, vegetable oil, and salt' is a great ingredient list — no maltodextrin, no flavor powders, no preservatives — and it's the main reason Lay's scores a notch better than heavily seasoned chips on the ingredient dimension. But a short list only tells you what's absent; it says nothing about how the food is cooked. These are still potatoes deep-fried in oil, which is why the fat (10g) and sodium (170mg) hold the overall grade to a C+. Simple ingredients, simply fried, is still fried.
How many Lay's are in a serving, and is that realistic?
One serving is 1 oz (28g) — a small handful, roughly 15 chips, and the basis for every number on this page. A party-size bag holds 10-plus servings, so eating two or three handfuls (easy to do) means 320-480 calories and 340-510mg of sodium. The per-serving stats look modest only because the serving is small; with chips, portion is the entire story.
What's a cleaner or lower-sodium alternative?
For crunch with less fat and sodium, air-popped or lightly-salted popcorn is the upgrade — far more volume per calorie and easy to keep under 100mg sodium a serving. If you want something potato-like with less frying fat, baked chips or whole-grain crackers help. None of these are health food, but they each improve the fat-and-sodium math over a classic fried potato chip.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 1633665. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days when a manufacturer reformulates.