Low Syn Sauces, Spreads & Condiments: Slimming World Guide

Updated on 
9 March, 2026

Finding the right condiments and flavourings on Slimming World can make the difference between a boring plate and a meal you genuinely look forward to. The good news? Plenty of your favourite sauces, dressings, spreads, and seasonings are either syn-free or surprisingly low in syns — you just need to know which ones to reach for.

This guide covers every major category of condiments and flavourings, from ketchup and mayo to cooking oils and gravy granules. We've included syn values, serving sizes, and practical swaps so you can add flavour to your food without blowing your daily allowance. Whether you're building a sandwich, dressing a salad, or jazzing up a midweek stir-fry, you'll find what you need right here.

Quick Reference: Syn-Free & Lowest Syn Condiments

Before we get into the detail, here's your at-a-glance cheat sheet. These are the condiments and flavourings that won't cost you a single syn — or barely any at all. Keep these stocked in your kitchen and you'll never have a bland meal again.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Passata Any amount Free Use as a base for sauces, soups, and stews
Mustard (English, Dijon, wholegrain) 1 level tsp Free Free in small amounts; check flavoured varieties
Soy sauce (light or dark) 1 tbsp 0.5 Virtually free — brilliant for stir-fries
Tabasco / hot sauce 1 tsp Free Most plain hot sauces are syn-free
Worcestershire sauce 1 tbsp 0.5 Adds depth to casseroles and gravies
Henderson's Relish 1 tbsp Free The vegetarian alternative to Worcestershire
Vinegar (any type) Any amount Free Balsamic, malt, white wine — all free
Lemon/lime juice Any amount Free Fresh is best; bottled is fine too
Herbs & most spices Any amount Free Dried or fresh — go wild
Garlic (fresh or granules) Any amount Free A kitchen essential on plan
Frylight 5 sprays Free Use for frying, roasting, baking
Fat-free natural yoghurt Any amount Free Use as a dip base or dressing
Marmite 1 level tsp 0.5 Adds umami to gravies and stews

Print this table and stick it on your fridge — seriously. When you know what's free or nearly free, meal prep becomes so much easier. Now let's break each category down properly.

Sauces: Ketchup, Brown Sauce, BBQ & More

Sauces are probably the most-used condiments in any kitchen, and they're where a lot of people unknowingly rack up syns. A generous squirt here and a dollop there can easily add 3-4 syns to a meal if you're not paying attention. Here's how the most popular sauces stack up.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Heinz Tomato Ketchup 1 level tbsp (15g) 1 Reduced sugar version is 0.5 syns per tbsp
HP Brown Sauce 1 level tbsp (15g) 0.5 Slightly lower than ketchup — good swap
BBQ Sauce (standard) 1 level tbsp (15g) 1 Some brands are 1.5 — always check the label
Hellmann's Light Mayo 1 level tbsp (15g) 1 Full-fat is 3 syns per tbsp — big difference
Hellmann's Real Mayonnaise 1 level tbsp (15g) 3 Use sparingly or switch to light
English Mustard 1 level tsp Free Brilliant with roast beef and in dressings
Soy Sauce 1 tbsp (15ml) 0.5 Dark or light — both very low
Sriracha 1 tsp (5g) 0.5 A little goes a long way
Sweet Chilli Sauce 1 level tbsp (15g) 1.5 Higher sugar — measure carefully
Worcestershire Sauce 1 tbsp (15ml) 0.5 Essential for Bolognese and stews
Tabasco 1 tsp Free Adds heat without syns
Henderson's Relish 1 tbsp Free Vegetarian and vegan friendly
Salad Cream (Heinz Light) 1 level tbsp (15g) 1 Full-fat version is 1.5 syns per tbsp

The biggest wins here are mustard (free in small amounts), soy sauce (practically free), and Tabasco (completely free). If you're currently using full-fat mayo or mayonnaise, switching to light saves you 2 syns per tablespoon — that adds up fast over a week.

For ketchup, the reduced-sugar versions are worth trying. They taste almost identical and halve the syn cost. Brown sauce and HP sauce are naturally lower than ketchup, so if you like both, brown sauce is the smarter choice. BBQ sauce varies wildly between brands, so always check the label rather than guessing.

Sriracha and sweet chilli sauce are popular with stir-fries and rice dishes. Sriracha is the lower-syn option, but sweet chilli has a flavour profile that's hard to replicate. If you love it, just measure properly and account for it.

Salad Dressings

Salads are a Slimming World staple, but a heavy-handed pour of dressing can turn a free meal into a 6-syn one. The trick is knowing which dressings give you the most flavour for the fewest syns — and learning to make your own.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Balsamic Vinegar 1 tbsp (15ml) Free The ultimate SW salad dressing
Red/white wine vinegar Any amount Free Mix with mustard for a free vinaigrette
Fat-free vinaigrette 1 tbsp 0.5 Check brands — some are free, some aren't
Caesar Dressing (standard) 1 tbsp (15g) 2.5 One of the highest-syn dressings — use sparingly
Ranch Dressing 1 tbsp (15g) 2 Make a lighter version with fat-free yoghurt
Salad Cream (Heinz) 1 level tbsp (15g) 1.5 Light version is 1 syn — worth the swap
Olive oil (as dressing) 1 tsp (5ml) 2 Flavourful but high-syn — a little goes a long way

Balsamic vinegar is your best friend here. It's completely free, it tastes amazing on its own, and you can mix it with free mustard to create a proper vinaigrette that costs you nothing. Drizzle it over roasted vegetables, use it in marinades, or splash it on a simple tomato and mozzarella salad.

If you prefer creamy dressings, make your own using fat-free natural fromage frais or yoghurt as a base. Add garlic, herbs, a squeeze of lemon, and a touch of mustard — you'll get something that tastes like ranch or Caesar without the syns. Shop-bought Caesar and ranch dressings are among the highest-syn options in this category, so they're best saved for a treat.

Salad cream sits somewhere in the middle. The light version at 1 syn per tablespoon is reasonable, and for many people it's a non-negotiable part of a salad. If that's you, budget for it and enjoy it.

Cooking Sauces

Jar sauces and cooking pastes can be a real timesaver on busy weeknights, but they vary enormously in syn value. Some are practically free while others can cost you 5+ syns per serving. Here's what you need to know.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Passata Any amount Free Your go-to base for pasta sauces, curries, stews
Dolmio Bolognese Original Half jar (250g) 3 Lower-syn options available — check the range
Dolmio Light Pasta Sauce Half jar (250g) 1.5 Worth the switch from the original
Curry Paste (Patak's) 1 level tbsp (30g) 1.5-3 Varies by type — tikka is usually lower
Green/Red Thai Curry Paste 1 tbsp 0.5-1 Generally lower than Indian-style pastes
Pesto (green, standard) 1 level tbsp (15g) 2.5 High in oil — reduced-fat versions exist
Pesto (reduced fat) 1 level tbsp (15g) 1.5 Better option if you use pesto regularly
Tomato Purée 1 level tbsp Free Concentrated flavour, no syns
Soy Sauce (in cooking) 1 tbsp 0.5 Use freely in stir-fries and marinades

Passata is absolutely free and should be a cupboard essential. Use it as the base for Bolognese, chilli con carne, shakshuka, pizza sauce, curry — basically anything that needs a tomato base. Once you get comfortable cooking with passata and tinned tomatoes, you'll rarely need jar sauces at all.

That said, we all have those evenings where a jar sauce is the only thing standing between us and a takeaway. Dolmio's light range is a solid option at around 1.5 syns per serving. Curry pastes are generally more efficient than jar curry sauces — a tablespoon of paste plus passata, stock, and spices gives you a better curry for fewer syns.

Pesto is one of those ingredients people assume is healthy because it's "Mediterranean," but standard pesto is quite high in syns due to the oil and cheese content. If you use it regularly, either switch to the reduced-fat version or make your own using less oil and more basil.

Spreads: Butter, Margarine, Cream Cheese & More

Spreads are where many people on Slimming World spend a significant chunk of their daily syns — and often without realising it. A thick layer of butter on toast at breakfast, a smear of cream cheese at lunch... it adds up. Here's the full picture.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Butter 1 level tsp (7g) 2 Highest-syn spread — use your HEb or count carefully
Flora Light 25g (thick spread) 3 Can use as HEb (25g portion)
Low-fat spread (generic) 1 level tsp (7g) 1 About half the syns of butter
Philadelphia Light 1 level tbsp (30g) 1.5 Philly Lightest is only 0.5 syns per tbsp
Philadelphia Lightest 1 level tbsp (30g) 0.5 Excellent low-syn option for wraps and bagels
Hummus (standard) 1 level tbsp (30g) 1.5 Reduced-fat versions are around 1 syn
Jam (standard) 1 level tsp (15g) 1 Reduced-sugar jam is 0.5 syns per tsp
Honey 1 level tsp (7g) 1.5 Higher than jam — use sparingly
Marmite 1 level tsp (4g) 0.5 Love it or hate it — at least it's low-syn
Nutella 1 level tsp (12g) 3 Very high — keep portions tiny or save for a treat
Peanut Butter 1 level tsp (12g) 3 Can use as HEb — check your Slimming World app for amounts
Golden Syrup 1 level tbsp (20g) 3 Pure sugar — treat only
Maple Syrup 1 level tbsp (20g) 3 Same syn cost as golden syrup

Let's be honest — butter and margarine are where most of us feel the pinch. If you can't do without butter on your toast, use your Healthy Extra B allowance (many low-fat spreads qualify at 25g). Otherwise, switching from butter to a low-fat spread halves your syn cost immediately.

Cream cheese is a useful one to know about. Philadelphia Lightest at 0.5 syns per tablespoon is genuinely brilliant — spread it on a Healthy Extra B bagel, use it in pasta sauces, or mix it with smoked salmon for a quick lunch. The jump from Lightest to Light to full-fat is dramatic in syn terms, so always check which one you're buying.

Hummus is popular but not as low as people assume. At 1.5 syns per tablespoon for standard hummus, a generous dip with carrot sticks can easily hit 4-5 syns. Reduced-fat versions help, or you can make your own with less tahini and more lemon juice.

Jam and honey are both relatively high-syn for the amount you use. Reduced-sugar jam is the better option for toast, while Marmite is the clear winner at just 0.5 syns per teaspoon if you're a fan.

The real syn traps in this category are Nutella, peanut butter, golden syrup, and maple syrup. They're all around 3 syns per tiny teaspoon. Peanut butter can be used as a Healthy Extra, which is often the smartest way to enjoy it. For Nutella, golden syrup, and maple syrup, treat them as occasional indulgences rather than daily staples.

Spices, Herbs & Seasonings

Here's the really good news: almost all herbs and spices are completely syn-free. This is your secret weapon on Slimming World. If your food tastes bland, it's not because you can't have flavour — it's because you're not using enough seasoning.

Syn-Free Seasonings (Use Freely)

  • All dried herbs — basil, oregano, thyme, rosemary, parsley, coriander, dill, mint, sage
  • All fresh herbs — the same list but even more flavourful
  • Ground spices — cumin, coriander, turmeric, paprika, smoked paprika, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, chilli powder, cayenne, mixed spice, garam masala, Chinese five spice
  • Whole spices — cumin seeds, mustard seeds, fennel seeds, cardamom pods, cloves, star anise, peppercorns
  • Garlic — fresh cloves, garlic granules, garlic powder, garlic purée
  • Ginger — fresh root, ground ginger, ginger purée
  • Chilli — fresh chillies, dried chilli flakes, chilli powder
  • Salt, pepper, stock cubes, bouillon

Seasonings That Do Have Syns

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Flavoured seasoning blends (e.g., Schwartz) Varies 0-1 Some contain sugar or starch — check labels
Curry powder blends with oil 1 tsp 0.5 Pure spice blends are free; oily pastes aren't
Lazy garlic/ginger in jars 1 tsp Free Most are free — check for added oil
Nutritional yeast 1 tbsp 1 Popular for "cheesy" flavour — counts as protein

The rule of thumb is simple: if it's a pure spice or herb, it's free. If it's a blend or paste that contains oil, sugar, or starch, check the label. Most of the time you'll be fine, but products like some Schwartz seasoning sachets can contain hidden syns.

Top tip: Invest in a decent spice rack and learn a few basic spice combinations. Cumin + smoked paprika + garlic for Mexican-inspired food. Garam masala + turmeric + chilli for curries. Italian herbs + garlic for pasta dishes. These cost nothing in syns and transform simple ingredients into proper meals.

Oils & Frying Alternatives

Oil is the single highest-syn ingredient in most kitchens. One tablespoon of any cooking oil is around 6 syns. That's why Frylight has become such a Slimming World staple — it lets you cook without the massive syn cost of pouring oil from a bottle.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Frylight (any variety) 5 sprays Free Treated as free for cooking on SW plan
Olive Oil 1 tsp (5ml) 2 1 tbsp = 6 syns — measure carefully
Coconut Oil 1 tsp (5ml) 2 Same syn cost as olive oil despite the "health" label
Vegetable/sunflower oil 1 tsp (5ml) 2 All cooking oils have the same syn value
Sesame oil 1 tsp (5ml) 2 Use tiny amounts for flavour in Asian dishes

Frylight is genuinely one of the most important products for anyone on Slimming World. Use it for frying eggs, stir-frying vegetables, roasting potatoes, greasing baking trays — basically anywhere you'd normally use oil. The original, olive oil, coconut, and butter varieties are all treated as free.

That said, there are times when you want a little real oil for flavour. A teaspoon of olive oil in a salad dressing or a tiny drizzle of sesame oil in a stir-fry can make a dish taste noticeably better. At 2 syns per teaspoon, it's an affordable treat if you measure properly. The danger is free-pouring — that's where the syns skyrocket.

Coconut oil is worth mentioning because it's often marketed as a "healthy" alternative. On Slimming World, it carries exactly the same syn value as any other oil. Don't be swayed by health claims — a syn is a syn regardless of the source.

Gravy & Stock

A proper gravy or a good stock can elevate a simple roast dinner or casserole into something special. Most gravy and stock products are low in syns, making them a great way to add flavour and moisture to meals.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Bisto Gravy Granules (Original) 4 heaped tsp (25g, made up) 1.5 Enough for a generous serving
Bisto Best Gravy Granules 25g made up 1.5 Richer flavour, same syns
Oxo Cube (beef/chicken) 1 cube 0.5 Brilliant for stock in cooking
Knorr Stock Pot 1 pot 0.5 Slightly more flavour than a cube
Homemade stock Any amount Free Use bones, veg trimmings, herbs — syn-free and delicious
Bovril 1 tsp (8g) 0.5 Use in stews or as a drink

Bisto gravy at 1.5 syns for a proper serving is a great deal, and most people find it well worth the syns on a roast dinner. If you want to reduce that further, make your own gravy using meat juices, Oxo cubes, and a little cornflour — you can get it down to under 1 syn for a full jug.

Gravy made entirely from scratch using roasting juices and stock is essentially free. It takes a bit more effort, but the taste is incomparably better than granules, and you save syns in the process.

Dips

Dips are a classic Speed Food companion — pair them with carrot sticks, pepper strips, cucumber, and cherry tomatoes for a filling snack. But not all dips are created equal in syn terms.

Product Serving Size Syns Notes
Salsa (tomato-based) 1 level tbsp Free Most fresh salsas are syn-free — check for sugar
Guacamole (shop-bought) 1 level tbsp (30g) 1.5 Avocado-heavy — higher syns than you'd expect
Tzatziki (standard) 1 level tbsp (30g) 0.5 Low-syn option — make your own for free with fat-free yoghurt
Sour Cream 1 level tbsp (30g) 1.5 Fat-free natural yoghurt is a free swap
Hummus (standard) 1 level tbsp (30g) 1.5 Reduced-fat versions save 0.5 syns per tbsp
Piccalilli 1 level tbsp 0.5 Great with cold meats and cheese
Pickle (Branston-style) 1 level tbsp 1 A ploughman's lunch essential
Chutney (mango/onion) 1 level tbsp 1.5 Higher sugar content — use sparingly

Salsa is the obvious winner here — most tomato-based salsas are completely free, and they're genuinely delicious with vegetable sticks or as a topping for jacket potatoes. Tzatziki is another great option, and if you make your own with fat-free natural yoghurt, cucumber, garlic, and mint, it's free.

Guacamole surprises a lot of people. Avocado is a high-syn food on Slimming World (despite being nutritious), so guacamole costs more than you'd think. A couple of tablespoons is 3 syns — not terrible, but not free either.

Sour cream is easily swapped for fat-free natural yoghurt in most situations. On a chilli or a jacket potato, most people honestly can't tell the difference, and you save 1.5 syns per tablespoon. That's a swap worth making.

For piccalilli, pickle, and chutney, these are typically used in small amounts alongside cold meats or cheese, so the syn cost is manageable. Just don't go overboard — a tablespoon of chutney with your Healthy Extra A cheese and some lean ham on a salad is a perfectly balanced meal.

Smart Swaps: How to Cut Syn Costs Without Sacrificing Flavour

Now that you know the numbers, here are the most impactful swaps you can make. These aren't about deprivation — they're about getting the same satisfaction for fewer syns.

  • Full-fat mayo → Hellmann's Light: Saves 2 syns per tbsp. Use it in coleslaw, potato salad, and sandwiches.
  • Butter → low-fat spread (or HEb): Saves 1 syn per tsp, or use your Healthy Extra B and save all the syns.
  • Sour cream → fat-free natural yoghurt: Saves 1.5 syns per tbsp. Works perfectly on chilli, fajitas, and jacket potatoes.
  • Cooking oil → Frylight: Saves 6 syns per tbsp. The single biggest syn-saver in your kitchen.
  • Jar sauce → passata + spices: Saves 1-5 syns per serving and usually tastes better too.
  • Caesar/ranch dressing → balsamic vinegar + mustard: Saves 2+ syns per serving. Free vinaigrette that actually tastes great.
  • Ketchup → reduced-sugar ketchup: Saves 0.5 syns per tbsp. Barely noticeable taste difference.
  • Nutella → Marmite (if you're brave): Saves 2.5 syns per tsp. Obviously a completely different flavour, but a much cheaper spread in syn terms.

These swaps alone could save you 5-10 syns per day if you're currently using the higher-syn versions. That's an extra snack, a dessert, or a glass of wine — your choice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are all condiments high in syns?

Not at all. Many condiments are completely syn-free or very low. Mustard, vinegar, soy sauce, hot sauce, passata, herbs, spices, and Frylight are all free or nearly free. The higher-syn culprits tend to be oil-based products (mayo, pesto, salad dressings) and sugar-heavy ones (sweet chilli sauce, chutney, Nutella). Stick to the syn-free options as your daily staples and save the higher-syn condiments for when they really count.

Can I have unlimited Frylight?

Frylight is treated as syn-free on Slimming World when used as intended — a few sprays to prevent sticking. It's not designed to be poured or pooled in a pan. Use 5-10 sprays per cooking session and you're fine. If you find yourself spraying half a can per meal, you're probably using too much and it won't technically be free anymore.

Is olive oil worth the syns?

At 2 syns per teaspoon, olive oil is expensive in syn terms. However, a small drizzle of good extra virgin olive oil adds a flavour that Frylight simply can't replicate. Our advice: use Frylight for everyday cooking and save real olive oil for when you'll genuinely taste it — a finishing drizzle on bruschetta, a salad dressing, or a dip for bread.

What's the best low-syn mayo?

Hellmann's Light Mayonnaise at 1 syn per tablespoon is the most popular choice. If you want to go even lower, some people mix fat-free natural yoghurt with a tiny amount of light mayo to stretch it further. For coleslaw and potato salad, this 50/50 mix works really well and halves the syn cost.

Are herbs and spices really all free?

Yes — all dried and fresh herbs and pure ground spices are syn-free on Slimming World. This includes everything from basil and oregano to cumin, turmeric, smoked paprika, and cinnamon. The only exceptions are blends that contain added oil, sugar, or starch — always check the ingredients list on pre-mixed seasoning sachets.

How do I make a syn-free salad dressing?

Mix balsamic vinegar or red wine vinegar with a teaspoon of Dijon mustard, a crushed garlic clove, salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lemon juice. Shake it all together in a jar. It's completely free and tastes far better than most shop-bought dressings. For a creamy version, blend fat-free natural yoghurt with garlic, lemon juice, fresh herbs, and a pinch of salt.

Can I use my Healthy Extras for condiments?

Some spreads qualify as Healthy Extra B choices — certain margarines and low-fat spreads at specific portion sizes. Peanut butter can also sometimes be used as a Healthy Extra. Check the current Slimming World food search tool or app for the latest HEb options, as the list is updated regularly.

What are the biggest syn traps in condiments?

The products that catch people out most often are: cooking oil poured freely (6+ syns per tbsp), full-fat mayo (3 syns per tbsp), peanut butter and Nutella (3 syns per tsp), golden syrup and maple syrup (3 syns per tbsp), and creamy salad dressings like Caesar and ranch (2-2.5 syns per tbsp). The fix is always the same: measure, check, and swap where you can.

Your Condiment Cheat Sheet

Here's your complete summary, organised from lowest to highest syns. Bookmark this page or screenshot this table — it's the only condiment reference you'll need.

Syn Cost Products
Free Passata, all herbs & spices, garlic, ginger, vinegar (all types), mustard, Tabasco, Henderson's Relish, lemon/lime juice, Frylight, fat-free natural yoghurt, salsa, tomato purée, homemade stock
0.5 syns Soy sauce (1 tbsp), Worcestershire sauce (1 tbsp), Marmite (1 tsp), Oxo cube, Sriracha (1 tsp), Bovril (1 tsp), piccalilli (1 tbsp), Philadelphia Lightest (1 tbsp), HP brown sauce (1 tbsp), tzatziki (1 tbsp)
1 syn Ketchup (1 tbsp), light mayo (1 tbsp), salad cream light (1 tbsp), jam (1 tsp), pickle (1 tbsp), low-fat spread (1 tsp)
1.5 syns Sweet chilli sauce (1 tbsp), hummus (1 tbsp), guacamole (1 tbsp), sour cream (1 tbsp), honey (1 tsp), Bisto gravy (25g), chutney (1 tbsp), Philadelphia Light (1 tbsp), cream cheese light (1 tbsp), Dolmio Light (½ jar)
2+ syns Olive oil (1 tsp = 2), butter (1 tsp = 2), pesto (1 tbsp = 2.5), Caesar dressing (1 tbsp = 2.5), ranch (1 tbsp = 2), peanut butter (1 tsp = 3), Nutella (1 tsp = 3), golden syrup (1 tbsp = 3), maple syrup (1 tbsp = 3), full-fat mayo (1 tbsp = 3)

The pattern is clear: vinegar-based, tomato-based, and spice-based condiments are almost always free or very low. Oil-based, sugar-based, and cream-based condiments cost more. Once you internalise this, you'll instinctively reach for the lower-syn options without even thinking about it.

For more ways to keep your meals on track, check out our guides to low syn meals and low syn snacks — both packed with practical ideas that make Slimming World feel easy rather than restrictive.

Syn values are based on the most recently available Slimming World data at the time of writing. Always verify values using the official Slimming World syns calculator or app, as products and formulations can change. When in doubt, check the label and calculate manually using the syn formula.

Jennifer
Jennifer is a certified nutritionist and weight loss coach with a Master's in Nutrition from Cambridge. With over 10 years experience, she shares healthy recipes and science-backed slimming tips on SheCooksSheEats to help people reach their wellness goals. Jennifer stays up-to-date by regularly attending conferences and continuing her nutrition education. She aims to provide research-backed advice to inspire balanced, happy living.
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