1 Rice Paper Sheet Has 16 Calories. The Flour Tortilla Next to It Has 170. Here’s Why.

How Many Calories Are in 1 Rice Paper? Complete Per-Sheet Breakdown

One small rice paper sheet (5 grams, USDA standard serving) has 16 calories. That number rises to 25–50 calories for a medium sheet (10–14 g) and 35–60+ calories for a large sheet (14–22 g). The wrapper is gluten-free, fat-free, sodium-light, and made almost entirely of rice flour and water.

How Many Calories Are in 1 Rice Paper Sheet?

For the USDA-standard small sheet (5 g, ~6-3/8 inch diameter), the answer is 16 calories.

That breaks down as:

Carbohydrates: 3.6 g (~90% of calories)

Protein: 0.25–0.3 g (~6–7% of calories)

Fat: 0.06–0.1 g (~3% of calories)

Sodium: 15–16 mg

Fiber: ~0–0.1 g

 

Per the USDA FoodData Central database, rice paper falls under the “Crackers, excludes saltines” category, with consistent data across most pure-rice formulations.

If your rice paper sheet is larger or made with added tapioca starch, the calorie count rises proportionally with weight.

1 Rice Paper Calories By Sheet Size

Sheet size is the single biggest variable that determines the calorie count. Rice paper is sold in a few common diameters:

Sheet Size Diameter Weight Calories Carbs
Small ~6-3/8 in (16 cm) ~5 g 16 3.6 g
Medium ~8 in (22 cm) ~10–14 g 25–50 5–11 g
Large ~9–12 in (28–32 cm) ~14–22 g 35–60+ 8–14+ g

A general rule: each gram of dry rice paper contributes about 3.2 to 3.5 calories. So if you can weigh one sheet, multiply by 3.3 for a quick estimate.

Why 1 Rice Paper Has So Few Calories

The math is simple. Rice paper is made from three ingredients: rice flour, water, and a pinch of salt. Some brands add tapioca starch for elasticity.

Each thin sheet weighs only about 5 grams. Compare that to a flour tortilla, which weighs 35 to 45 grams — seven to nine times more — and you immediately see why the calorie count is so low.

There is also nothing energy-dense added to a rice paper sheet:

  • No oil — most wraps contain added fats for softness
  • No sugar — many breads and tortillas include small amounts
  • No eggs or dairy — common in wonton skins and wheat wrappers
  • No leavening or yeast — no extra calorie load
  • No preservatives or fillers — pure rice paper is minimally processed

The wrapper is essentially a thin, dried sheet of milled rice and water. That is the whole reason a single sheet stays at 16 calories.

How Rice Paper Calorie Counts Are Measured

Two methods exist, and they produce slightly different numbers.

Method 1: USDA FoodData Central (laboratory analysis). The USDA tests representative product samples in food-science labs, then publishes a per-100g and per-serving nutrient profile. This is the data behind the 16 cal / 5 g sheet figure used throughout this article.

Method 2: Commercial nutrition labels. Brands calculate their own nutrition facts using the Atwater system — which counts 4 calories per gram of carbohydrate, 4 per gram of protein, and 9 per gram of fat. Brand labels are sometimes slightly higher than USDA averages because of added tapioca starch, sodium, or larger sheet sizes.

Both methods give close results. For most home cooking, the USDA reference (16 cal per small sheet) is the safest standard. For tracking apps like MyFitnessPal or Cronometer, scan the actual brand barcode to use the manufacturer’s official numbers.

1 Rice Paper Calories By Brand

Common brand examples on U.S. shelves:

Three Ladies Brand (small 5 g sheet): ~17 calories per sheet

Bento At Home (13 g sheet): 45 calories, 11 g carbs, 125 mg sodium

Galangal (Vietnamese, 8 g sheet): ~28 calories per sheet

Star Anise Foods (organic, 12 g sheet): ~40 calories per sheet

Generic Asian-market 22 g sheets (2 wrappers per serving): ~60 calories combined, 14 g carbs

Always check the printed label. Formulations and exact sheet weights differ even within the same brand from one production run to the next.

Does Soaking Rice Paper in Water Change the Calorie Count?

No. Water has zero calories. Softening rice paper in water before rolling does not add calories or change the macronutrient profile of the wrapper.

What does change:

Weight — a soaked sheet weighs about 3× more than a dry one because of absorbed water

Texture — soaked rice paper becomes pliable, sticky, and stretchy

Apparent volume — it looks bigger and more substantial on the plate

But the actual calorie load — 16 calories for a small sheet — stays exactly the same dry or soaked.

What does add calories is frying. Deep-fried rice paper absorbs 30–50 calories of cooking oil per sheet, depending on fry time and oil temperature. A fried spring roll wrapper alone can hit 50–60 calories.

1 Rice Paper vs. 1 Finished Wrap: What You Actually Eat

The wrapper alone is 16 calories. But almost no one eats rice paper alone. Once you fill it, the math changes substantially.

Dish Wrapper Filling Total Calories
Plain dry sheet 16 0 16
Veggie summer roll 16 60–130 80–150
Tofu + noodles + veg 16 100–180 120–200
Shrimp + vermicelli (classic gỏi cuốn) 16 90–140 110–160
Giant rice paper wrap 35–50 250–400 300–450
Fried spring roll 16 + frying oil ~40 60–100 120–160

So when someone asks “how many calories in 1 rice paper?” — the wrapper contributes 16, but the dish built around it can land anywhere from 80 to 450 calories depending on size, fillings, and cooking method.

Rice Paper Calories in Popular Dishes

Across global cuisines, rice paper appears in many forms. Calorie counts for the most common preparations:

Vietnamese fresh spring rolls (gỏi cuốn): 80–160 calories per roll. One small sheet (16 cal) plus shrimp, pork, noodles, herbs, lettuce.

Vegetarian summer rolls: 80–150 calories per roll. Same wrapper, tofu instead of meat.

Vietnamese fried spring rolls (chả giò): 120–180 calories per roll. Wrapper absorbs fry oil.

Korean rice paper rolls (월남쌈): 90–140 calories per roll. Often filled with bulgogi, vegetables, and rice noodles.

Thai fresh rolls (poh pia sod): 80–130 calories per roll. Lighter fillings, peanut sauce on the side.

Rice paper “chips” (air-fried): ~20–25 calories per sheet when air-fried with minimal oil.

Rice paper “bacon” (vegan): ~30–40 calories per double-layered piece with seasoning.

TikTok-style rice paper dumplings: ~50–80 calories per dumpling depending on filling.

The wrapper’s contribution stays low across all of these. The fillings determine where the dish lands.

1 Pack of Rice Paper: Total Calories

A standard 12 oz (340 g) bag of dry rice paper holds roughly 40 small sheets, with the following totals:

Per sheet: 16 calories

Per pack of 40 small sheets: ~640 calories total

Per pack of 50 smaller sheets: ~800 calories

Per pack of 20 large sheets: ~700–1,000 calories

In other words, an entire bag of rice paper holds about as many calories as 3 to 5 cups of cooked white rice. A single sheet is genuinely light. A whole pack at once is not — though no one eats a pack of dry rice paper in a sitting.

How 1 Rice Paper Compares to Other Wrappers

1 Wrapper Calories Carbs Gluten-Free
Rice paper (5 g small) 16 3.6 g Yes
Lettuce leaf (large) 5–10 1 g Yes
Nori sheet 5–10 0.5 g Yes
Corn tortilla (6 in) 60–70 12 g Yes
Wonton wrapper 18–23 4 g No
Wheat spring roll wrapper 25–35 5–7 g No
Flour tortilla (8 in) 140–170 22 g No
Coconut wrap 60–80 6–8 g Yes

One rice paper sheet has about 9× fewer calories than a flour tortilla and 4× fewer than a corn tortilla. Only lettuce and nori beat it on calorie load — and both lack rice paper’s structural ability to actually wrap a meal.

Is 1 Rice Paper Good for Weight Loss?

Yes — when used with smart fillings.

The wrapper itself is genuinely low-calorie at 16 kcal per sheet. Swapping a flour tortilla wrap (140–170 cal) for a rice paper roll saves 125–155 calories per wrap before you even touch the filling. Done daily, that adds up to roughly 875–1,085 calories saved per week — meaningful weight-management math.

What can undo the savings:

Frying — adds 30–50 calories per sheet from oil

Dense fillings — fried tofu, cheese, or noodles in heavy quantities

Dipping sauces — peanut hoisin and sweet chili can add 70–150 calories per serving

Stacking multiple sheets — three sheets equals roughly the carbs of a slice of bread

Used in a single fresh roll with vegetables, herbs, and lean protein, one rice paper sheet supports weight-loss goals well.

How to Reduce 1 Rice Paper’s Calorie Impact Further

If you are tracking calories closely, a few small choices keep the wrapper as light as possible:

Pick the smallest size that works. A 5 g sheet (16 cal) holds a small summer roll. Reach for medium or large sheets only when you need more structural strength.

Skip frying. A fresh roll keeps the wrapper at 16 calories. The same sheet, deep-fried, can hit 50–60 calories from absorbed oil. Air-frying with a light olive oil spray adds only 5–10 calories.

Use one sheet, not two. Many home cooks double up sheets for security. With a little practice, one sheet wraps a roll cleanly — saving a full sheet’s worth of calories every time.

Choose pure-rice brands. Sheets with added tapioca starch tend to weigh slightly more for the same diameter, which means slightly more calories.

Watch the soaking water. Water adds zero calories, but if you soak in broth, juice, or coconut water for flavor, you add the calories of that liquid.

Measure your sheets at home. If you weigh dry rice paper on a kitchen scale, multiply grams by 3.3 for an accurate per-sheet calorie estimate.

These small adjustments make a difference if you eat rice paper rolls multiple times a week. For occasional eaters, the wrapper is light enough that brand and technique barely matter.

Should You Track 1 Rice Paper in Your Calorie Count?

For most people, yes — but the wrapper is small enough that mis-logging it rarely changes a daily total in a meaningful way.

A few practical guidelines:

For weight loss or maintenance tracking, log each sheet at 16 calories (small) or use the manufacturer’s printed nutrition facts. A typical 3-roll meal contributes 48–150 calories from wrappers, which matters if you are eating at a strict deficit.

For macro tracking (keto, low-carb, diabetic management), the 3.6 g of carbs per small sheet matters more than the calories. Log carbs precisely; the calories will follow.

For casual healthy eating, the wrapper is light enough that you can simply log the full roll using a database entry like “Vietnamese summer roll” — which already includes the wrapper.

For chefs and recipe developers, weigh a representative sheet and multiply by 3.3 calories per gram. That gives you a precise calorie input for finished-roll calculations.

The bigger calorie contributors in any rice paper meal are the fillings and the dipping sauce, not the wrapper. If you have to choose where to focus your tracking energy, focus there first.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories are in 1 rice paper sheet?

A small 5 g sheet has 16 calories. A medium 10–14 g sheet has 25–50. A large 14–22 g sheet has 35–60+.

Does cooking or wetting rice paper add calories?

No. Water and steam contribute zero calories. The dry sheet’s calorie count stays the same after softening. Frying, however, adds 30–50 calories per sheet from absorbed oil.

Is rice paper low-calorie compared to other wrappers?

Yes. At 16 calories per sheet, rice paper is one of the lightest edible wrappers — fewer calories than corn tortillas, wonton skins, or flour tortillas, and only slightly more than lettuce or nori.

Is 1 rice paper enough for one roll?

For a small summer roll, yes. For a full-sized burrito-style wrap (like Lona’s Giant Rice Paper Wrap), most cooks use one large sheet or two stacked medium sheets for structural strength.

How many calories are in 2 rice papers?

About 32 calories for two small (5 g) sheets, or roughly 50–100 calories for two medium-to-large sheets.

How many calories are in 3 rice paper sheets?

About 48 calories for three small sheets, or 75–150 calories for three medium-to-large sheets.

Is rice paper gluten-free?

Yes, when made from pure rice flour and tapioca. Most U.S.-sold brands are certified gluten-free, but some imported brands add wheat — read the label.

Are rice paper calories all carbs?

Essentially, yes. About 90% of the 16 calories come from carbohydrates, with tiny contributions from protein (~6–7%) and fat (~3%).

Does brown rice paper have more calories?

About the same — roughly 16 calories per small sheet. The difference is in fiber, where brown rice paper offers 0.5–1 g more per sheet, plus small amounts of magnesium and B vitamins.

How many calories are in a Vietnamese spring roll wrapper?

A traditional Vietnamese rice paper wrapper is typically a small or medium sheet (5–10 g), with 16 to 32 calories per sheet.

Is rice paper keto-friendly?

Not strictly. One small sheet has 3.6 g of net carbs. While each individual sheet is light, a meal with 2–4 sheets can exceed a strict keto carb limit.

How many calories in a pack of rice paper?

A standard 12 oz (340 g) pack with ~40 small sheets contains about 640 calories total, or roughly 16 calories per sheet.

Does rice paper have any micronutrients?

Very little. One sheet provides trace amounts of iron, calcium, magnesium, and niacin — but no meaningful percentage of any daily value.

Is rice paper considered processed food?

Pure rice paper (rice flour + water + salt) is classified as minimally processed under the NOVA food classification system. There are no preservatives, no added oils, and no industrial additives.

The Bottom Line

One small rice paper sheet has 16 calories. Medium sheets sit in the 25–50 range. Large sheets reach 35–60+. The number scales linearly with weight — roughly 3.3 calories per gram of dry rice paper.

Water doesn’t change the count. Frying does. Brand variation is real but minor. And the wrapper itself is one of the lightest in any cuisine.

What you fill it with — tofu, noodles, vegetables, herbs, and dipping sauce — is what really determines whether the finished roll lands at 80 calories or 450.

At Lona’s Lil Eats, in St. Louis’s Fox Park neighborhood, our Giant Rice Paper Wrap takes that one-sheet base and builds a complete meal on it. For the full finished-roll math, see our deep dive on rice paper wraps calories, or browse our menu.

Related Reading on Lona’s Lil Eats

Rice Paper Wraps Calories: A Full Nutrition Breakdown

The Original Giant Rice Paper Wrap Recipe

Why a Vegetarian Restaurant in St. Louis Matters

Lona’s Among the Best Vegan Restaurants in St. Louis

Chinese Cooking Traditions Behind Our Dishes

Thai Cuisine Influences in Our Asian Fusion Menu

About Lona’s Lil Eats — From Kunming to Fox Park

References & Further Reading

USDA FoodData Central. Crackers, includes wafers and rice paper — Nutrient profile. https://fdc.nal.usda.gov/

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and U.S. Department of Agriculture. Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020–2025. https://www.dietaryguidelines.gov/

FDA. Gluten-Free Labeling of Foods. https://www.fda.gov/food/nutrition-education-resources-materials/gluten-free-labeling-foods

National Institutes of Health — Office of Dietary Supplements. Carbohydrates: Fact Sheet for Consumers. https://ods.od.nih.gov/

Atwater, W.O. The Atwater General Factor System for Calorie Calculation. USDA Historical Records. https://fdc.nal.usda.gov/

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