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Smaki wody gazowanej Bubly: kompletny przewodnik

Bąbelkowa woda gazowana ma zero kalorii, zero cukru, zero sodu i nie zawiera sztucznych słodzików. Oto kompletny przewodnik po każdym smaku, każdej linii i ich porównaniu.

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Smaki wody gazowanej Bubly: kompletny przewodnik

Bubly sparkling water is PepsiCo’s fruit flavored, zero calorie carbonated water, made with just two things on the label: carbonated water and natural flavor. No sugar, no sodium, no artificial sweeteners. It launched in 2018 as PepsiCo’s answer to LaCroix, and it has since grown into one of the biggest names in the flavored sparkling water aisle, with more than 20 flavors across three different product lines.

Bubly isn’t one product anymore. There’s the core lineup, Bubly Bounce (caffeinated), and Bubly Burst (juice sweetened, higher flavor intensity). Each one tastes and behaves differently, and mixing them up is an easy way to end up disappointed by the wrong can.

What's Actually in a Can of Bubly

Regular bubly contains carbonated water and natural flavor. That’s it. Per can: zero calories, zero grams of sugar, zero milligrams of sodium, and no artificial sweeteners like aspartame or sucralose. It’s also caffeine free across the entire core range.

That short ingredient list is exactly why bubly built such a loyal following. A lot of “healthy soda alternatives” quietly load up on citric acid, sodium citrate, or sugar substitutes to chase a bigger flavor punch. Bubly mostly skips that, which is also why the flavor tends to sit lighter and closer to the actual fruit than to a candy version of it.

One caveat worth knowing before you buy: this simple formula only applies to core bubly cans. Bubly Burst, the newer juice sweetened line, is a different formula entirely, and it does contain sucralose and acesulfame potassium.

Bubly Sparkling Water Flavors at a Glance

Flavor Profile Shop
CORE LINEUP
Cherry Sweet-tart, bright cherry Buy
Lime Zesty, dry citrus Buy
Grapefruit Bold, tart, citrus punch Buy
Blackberry Soft, sweet berry Buy
Mango Sweet, tropical Buy
Strawberry True strawberry, not candied Buy
Passionfruit Tart-sweet, exotic tropical Buy
Lemon Sharp, clean citrus Buy
Raspberry Tart, sour-leaning berry Buy
Orange Citrusy, straightforward Buy
Pineapple Bright tropical, top-rated Buy
NEWER ADDITIONS
Blueberry Pomegranate Deep berry, layered Buy
Watermelon Light, summery melon Buy
Coconut Pineapple Creamy piña colada vibes Buy
Orange Cream Creamsicle, dessert-style Buy
Bellini Bliss Peach-sparkling, mocktail Buy
Strawberry Sunset Warmer, layered strawberry Buy

The Core Bubly Flavors

Cherry

Cherry Bubly Sparkling Water

Cherry bubly opens with a sweet, slightly tart cherry note up front, then eases into clean carbonated water on the finish. There’s no syrupy aftertaste, which is the thing that trips up a lot of cherry flavored drinks. What you’re left with is the actual character of the fruit rather than a cherry candy approximation.

It leans a touch tart rather than purely sweet, so if you like your cherry flavor closer to real cherries than to cherry cola, this is a strong pick. No added sugar, no sweeteners, zero calories per can. Serve it cold — the fruit character fades fast once the can loses its chill and its fizz.

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Lime

Lime Bubly Sparkling Water

Lime is bubly’s most versatile flavor. The lime note is bright and zesty without tipping into the syrupy sweetness you get from a lot of flavored waters chasing a citrus profile. It reads close to fresh lime juice mixed into sparkling water — tart first, refreshing after.

That makes it the flavor most people reach for as a soda replacement, since the acidity and fizz combination scratches a similar itch to a lime soda without any of the sugar. It also doubles as a genuinely good cocktail or mocktail mixer. Zero calories, zero sugar, caffeine free.

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Grapefruit

Grapefruit Bubly Sparkling Water

Grapefruit is consistently the flavor bubly fans and reviewers point to as the standout of the whole lineup. The tartness hits immediately, without the bitterness that plain grapefruit juice sometimes carries, and the carbonation actually amplifies that citrus punch rather than diluting it.

It tastes closer to biting into an actual grapefruit segment than to a grapefruit flavored candy. If you’re new to the bubly lineup and want one can to decide whether the brand is for you, grapefruit is the one most worth starting with. It’s also a strong stand-in for a grapefruit soda or a paloma mixer, minus the sugar.

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Blackberry

Blackberry Bubly Sparkling Water

Blackberry bubly leans sweeter than the citrus flavors in the lineup, with a soft, berry forward taste that reads more dessert adjacent than tart. The sweetness comes entirely from natural flavor, not added sugar, so it stays zero calorie even though it tastes like it shouldn’t.

This is a good option if you find lime or grapefruit too sharp and want something gentler to sip on. It shows up frequently in bubly’s variety packs, which is a good sign of how well it performs as a crowd pleaser. Zero calories, no sweeteners.

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Mango

Mango Bubly Sparkling Water

Mango bubly captures the sweet, tropical character of ripe mango without tipping into artificial territory — a harder needle to thread than it sounds since mango flavoring can easily read as candy rather than fruit. The aroma is noticeably fragrant right when you crack the can, and the taste follows through rather than fading after the first sip.

It’s on the sweeter end of the bubly spectrum, and it works particularly well served over ice on a hot day. Paired with rum or tequila, mango bubly also makes a solid cocktail base. Zero calories, zero sugar.

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Strawberry

Strawberry Bubly Sparkling Water

Strawberry bubly is one of the more universally liked flavors in the lineup, largely because it doesn’t overdo the sweetness. The strawberry character reads true to the fruit — red and bright rather than artificial or candied — and the carbonation keeps it from feeling heavy.

It’s a fitting introduction for anyone moving off regular soda, since strawberry flavored drinks tend to be a familiar comfort flavor, and this version delivers that familiarity without the sugar load. Neither the boldest nor the most understated flavor in the range, which is exactly why it works as a crowd pleaser at gatherings. Zero calories, zero added sugar.

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Passionfruit

Passionfruit Bubly Sparkling Water

Passionfruit bubly brings something the rest of the lineup doesn’t: a genuinely tropical, slightly tart edge that reads more exotic than the standard citrus or berry flavors. The passionfruit character comes through as tart first, sweet after, which mirrors how the actual fruit tastes when you eat it fresh.

It’s a good option for anyone who’s worked through the more familiar flavors and wants something a little more distinctive without leaving the zero calorie, zero sweetener format behind. It also plays well as a mixer, standing in nicely for a tropical soda in a mocktail.

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Lemon

Lemon Bubly Sparkling Water

Lemon bubly is about as close as the lineup gets to classic lemonade energy, minus the sugar. The flavor is tart and clean, without any of the artificial sweetness that a lot of lemon flavored sodas lean on to mask a thin lemon profile.

It works well cold on a hot day, and it holds its flavor reasonably well even as the ice melts. Bubly has since expanded into a Lemon Sorbet variant as part of its dessert inspired line — if you’re after the classic sharp lemon flavor rather than the sorbet style dessert version, make sure you’re grabbing the original lemon can.

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Raspberry

Raspberry Bubly Sparkling Water

Raspberry bubly delivers a tart and slightly sour profile that sets it apart from the sweeter berry flavors like blackberry or strawberry. It’s a good option if you want fruit forward flavor without leaning into dessert territory, since raspberry naturally carries more acidity than most other berries.

The tartness pairs particularly well with the fizz, since the carbonation amplifies that sharper edge rather than smoothing it out. Raspberry also shows up in Bubly Bounce’s Triple Berry blend. It tends to be one of the more polarizing picks — people who like tart flavors love it, people who prefer sweeter profiles tend to reach for something else.

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Orange

Orange Bubly Sparkling Water

Orange bubly is straightforward, citrusy, and sweet without added sugar — closer to fresh squeezed orange juice diluted with sparkling water than to an orange soda. The flavor is upfront on the first sip and mellows into a light fizzy finish, which makes it an easy one to drink through a whole can without the flavor getting fatiguing.

It’s a reliable, unfussy option if you’re looking for something familiar rather than adventurous, and it tends to work well for people new to flavored sparkling water in general. PepsiCo has since expanded with Orange Cream, a newer dessert inspired variant that layers vanilla creamsicle sweetness on top — the two are related but distinct, so if you want plain citrus, stick with original orange.

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Pineapple

Pineapple Bubly Sparkling Water

Pineapple bubly is bright, tropical, and a genuine standout in several independent flavor rankings — sometimes cited as the single best flavor in the whole lineup. The sweetness is well balanced against the tang that real pineapple carries, so it avoids tasting like pineapple candy the way a lot of tropical flavored sodas do.

It works particularly well iced, and it holds its tropical character even after the carbonation starts to fade. Bubly has also since built a Coconut Pineapple flavor (covered below) for anyone who wants the tropical profile with a creamier, more rounded finish.

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New Flavors Added Since the Original Lineup

Blueberry Pomegranate

This one blends the deep, slightly tart character of blueberry with the sweeter, more floral notes of pomegranate, landing somewhere between a berry flavor and a fruit punch. It’s more complex than most of the single fruit flavors in the core lineup, which makes it a good pick if you’ve already worked through the standard options and want something layered. The blueberry side keeps it from tipping too sweet, while the pomegranate rounds out the finish. It also appears in Bubly Bounce’s caffeinated lineup.

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Watermelon

Watermelon bubly captures that light, slightly sweet, unmistakably summery character of fresh watermelon, without the heaviness that watermelon flavored candy or soda usually carries. It’s one of the more delicate flavors in the newer additions — the fruit character is there but not overpowering — which some people love and others find a little too subtle compared to bolder options like grapefruit or pineapple. An easy drinking, refreshing choice for hot weather that also pairs well with mint or lime as a mocktail base.

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Coconut Pineapple

Coconut Pineapple takes the tropical brightness of pineapple bubly and layers in a creamy coconut undertone, landing somewhere close to a piña colada without the sugar or the alcohol. It’s sweeter and richer than standard pineapple, with the coconut note rounding out the sharper citrus tang. If you like tropical flavors but find plain pineapple too sharp on its own, this is the softer, rounder version of that same profile.

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Orange Cream

Orange Cream is part of Bubly’s dessert inspired expansion, and it delivers exactly what the name promises: orange citrus layered with a vanilla creamsicle style sweetness. It’s noticeably richer and sweeter than the original orange flavor, closer to an orange popsicle than to fresh orange juice. This one tends to divide people more than most flavors. If you want your sparkling water to taste like dessert, it delivers. If you prefer a cleaner, more straightforward citrus profile, the original orange or grapefruit will serve you better.

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Bellini Bliss

Bellini Bliss was bubly’s first mocktail inspired flavor, built to echo the peach and sparkling wine profile of a classic bellini cocktail, minus the alcohol. The peach character leads, with a light, slightly floral sweetness that reads more sophisticated than most of the fruit forward flavors in the core lineup. It’s a strong choice for anyone hosting a gathering and wanting a nonalcoholic option that still feels a little more special than a straightforward flavored water.

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Strawberry Sunset

Strawberry Sunset takes the familiar strawberry base and shifts it toward something warmer and more layered, with notes that lean into a sunset inspired blend rather than pure strawberry. It reads sweeter and slightly more complex than the standard strawberry flavor, positioning it closer to bubly’s mocktail inspired additions like Bellini Bliss than to the original fruit lineup. It currently appears in bubly’s three flavor variety pack alongside Bellini Bliss and Coconut Pineapple.

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Variety Packs Worth Buying

The old variety pack lineup (Tropical Thrill, Passionfruit Bliss) has largely been phased out. Here’s what’s currently available:

Lime Yours 3 Flavor Pack (Lime, Cherry, Blackberry) — a tighter, citrus and berry focused assortment for people who already know they like these three.

6 Flavor Variety Pack (Blackberry, Lime, Cherry, Grapefruit, Strawberry, Mango) — the broadest, most beginner friendly assortment, covering both the tart and sweet ends of the lineup.

Triple Berry Variety Pack (Blackberry, Raspberry, Blueberry Pomegranate) — a berry only pack for anyone who’s decided the fruity, sweeter flavors are their thing.

3 Flavor Variety Pack (Bellini Bliss, Strawberry Sunset, Coconut Pineapple) — the newest, more indulgent assortment, built around bubly’s dessert and mocktail inspired flavors.

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Bubly Bounce and Bubly Burst: The Two Lines That Aren't Just Sparkling Water

These two get confused with core bubly constantly, and they’re genuinely different products.

Bubly Bounce is the caffeinated line, carrying 35 milligrams of caffeine per can — roughly what you’d get from a cup of green tea, well under a cup of coffee. It comes in flavors including Citrus Cherry, Triple Berry, Mango Passionfruit, and Blood Orange Grapefruit. It stays close to core bubly otherwise: no added sugar, no artificial sweeteners, just carbonated water, natural flavor, and caffeine. It’s positioned as a lighter alternative to energy drinks or an afternoon coffee substitute, not as a replacement for your morning cup.

Bubly Burst is a different animal entirely. Launched in 2024, it’s a juice sweetened sparkling water sold only in 16.9 ounce bottles, with 10 calories or less per serving. Unlike core bubly, Burst does contain sucralose and acesulfame potassium, along with fruit juice concentrate for color and flavor intensity. Flavors include Triple Berry, Peach Mango, Watermelon Lime, Pineapple Tangerine, Cherry Lemonade, and Tropical Punch. If artificial sweeteners are something you specifically avoid, this is the one line in the bubly family where you’ll want to check the label before buying.


Seltzer, Club Soda, Sparkling Water, and Tonic: What's Actually Different

Bubly gets lumped in with a handful of other bubbly drinks that aren’t the same thing at all.

  • Seltzer: plain water with carbon dioxide added, nothing else. Flavored seltzer adds natural or artificial flavoring but no minerals or salt.
  • Sparkling water (bubly’s category): can be naturally carbonated or have CO2 added, often carries a small amount of natural mineral content depending on source water.
  • Club soda: carbonated water with minerals deliberately added back in — sodium bicarbonate and potassium sulfate — which is where its slightly salty edge comes from. A 12 ounce serving runs around 95 milligrams of sodium.
  • Tonic water: carbonated, sweetened with sugar or HFCS, and flavored with quinine. The only one of the four that isn’t calorie free.
Brand Calories Sodium Sweetener Flavor Source
Bubly 0 0mg None Natural flavor essence
LaCroix 0 0mg None Natural flavor essence
Waterloo 0 0mg None Natural flavor, more intense
Spindrift 3–17 (varies) 0mg None Real squeezed fruit
Club soda 0 ~95mg Added minerals Not flavored
Tonic water 80–130 Low Sugar or HFCS Quinine + sweetener

Is Bubly Sparkling Water Good for You?

Short answer: for most people, yes. Longer answer, with the actual research:

Hydration. Carbonated water hydrates you just as well as still water. The CO2 bubbles don’t pull water out of your system, and there’s no meaningful diuretic effect from typical sparkling water consumption.

Digestion. Research reviewed by the National Institutes of Health has found that carbonated water may improve swallowing ability and ease constipation in some people, and can extend the feeling of fullness after a meal more than still water does. If you deal with IBS or bloating, the carbonation can work against you.

Teeth. The American Dental Association has stated plainly that plain sparkling water is not meaningfully more erosive to enamel than regular water. Flavored sparkling water is a different story — because citric acid lowers the pH, flavored carbonated waters do cause some enamel erosion in lab studies, though consistently less than regular or diet soda. The habit dentists flag is sipping it constantly through the day, not having it with a meal.

Pregnancy. Plain and flavored sparkling water is generally considered safe during pregnancy. Since core bubly has no caffeine, no added sugar, and no artificial sweeteners, it clears the usual concerns. If you’re drinking Bubly Bounce, keep in mind total caffeine intake during pregnancy is typically capped around 200 milligrams a day by most obstetric guidelines.

🤪 bubly Flavor Finder Quiz

Answer 2 quick questions to find your ultimate bubly flavor match!

1. Choose your flavor direction:

Frequently Asked Questions

Is bubly sparkling water healthy?

For most people, yes. It has zero calories, zero sugar, zero sodium, and no artificial sweeteners in the core lineup, making it a solid substitute for soda or juice. If you have IBS or are sensitive to carbonation, the fizz itself can cause bloating regardless of the drink's ingredients.

Does bubly sparkling water have caffeine?

Core bubly and Bubly Burst are both caffeine free. Only Bubly Bounce contains caffeine, at 35 milligrams per can.

Is bubly safe to drink during pregnancy?

Plain and flavored sparkling water is generally considered safe during pregnancy, and core bubly's simple, caffeine free, sugar free formula doesn't raise typical pregnancy related concerns. Check with your doctor if you have specific health considerations, and be mindful of caffeine totals if you're drinking Bubly Bounce.

Is bubly kosher?

Yes, bubly is kosher certified in certain markets. PepsiCo confirms this through its consumer relations line, so if you need certainty for your specific product, check the can for the kosher symbol.

Is bubly gluten free?

Yes, by ingredients. Carbonated water and natural flavor contain nothing derived from gluten. It isn't third party certified gluten free, so if you have celiac disease and need that formal guarantee, that's a distinction worth knowing.

Who owns bubly sparkling water?

Bubly is owned and distributed by PepsiCo. It launched in February 2018 as PepsiCo's entry into the flavored sparkling water category, aimed primarily at competing with LaCroix.

What's the difference between bubly and seltzer?

Not much, honestly. Seltzer is plain carbonated water with no additives. Flavored bubly is carbonated water plus natural flavor. Neither contains added minerals or sodium, unlike club soda.

Does bubly hurt your teeth?

Plain sparkling water doesn't meaningfully erode enamel. Flavored versions, including bubly, contain natural acids that can contribute to enamel wear over time with frequent, sipped throughout the day consumption. Drinking it with meals rather than constantly through the day is the easiest way to reduce that risk.

Which bubly flavor is the best?

Grapefruit and lime are the two most consistently praised across independent taste tests and community feedback, with grapefruit often cited as the strongest introduction to the brand for people who haven't tried it before.