Comparing E950 - Acesulfame k vs E962 - Salt of aspartame-acesulfame

Synonyms
E950
Acesulfame k
Acesulfame potassium
E962
Salt of aspartame-acesulfame
Aspartame-acesulfame
Aspartame-acesulfame salt
E-962
E 962
Products

Found in 7,919 products

Found in 72 products

Search rank & volume
#8129.9K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#351310 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.55
under-aware

×0.65
under-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 6 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Is acesulfame potassium bad for you?

    For most people, no—acesulfame potassium is approved by major regulators and considered safe at permitted levels; typical diets keep intakes well below the acceptable daily intake.

  2. Why is acesulfame potassium bad for you?

    It isn’t generally considered ‘bad’; concerns come from older animal studies or theoretical effects (like on the gut microbiome), but human evidence hasn’t shown harm at normal food-use levels.

  3. Does acesulfame potassium cause cancer?

    There’s no convincing evidence that it causes cancer in humans, and FDA, EFSA, and WHO/JECFA evaluations have not found it carcinogenic at permitted intakes.

  4. Is acesulfame potassium bad for kidneys?

    No—at typical intakes it’s excreted unchanged in urine and hasn’t been shown to harm kidneys; it adds negligible potassium, though people with severe kidney disease should follow their clinician’s advice.

  5. Is acesulfame potassium safe?

    Yes—major regulators (FDA, EFSA, WHO/JECFA) consider it safe within established intake limits, including for people with diabetes and during pregnancy when used as part of a balanced diet.

  1. Is acesulfame potassium the same as aspartame?

    No—acesulfame potassium (E950) and aspartame (E951) are different sweeteners; E962 is a separate ingredient that combines them into a single salt to blend their properties.

  2. Acesulfame potassium how does it compared to aspartame?

    Acesulfame K is more heat- and shelf-stable but can have a slight bitter aftertaste, while aspartame tastes more sugar-like but is less heat-stable; E962 merges them into a roughly 350×-sweeter, more stable salt used for improved flavor.

  3. Acesulfame potassium is it aspartame?

    No—acesulfame potassium is not aspartame; E962 is the salt formed from both to create a combined high-intensity sweetener.

  4. Acesulfame potassium vs aspartame which is better than?

    It depends on use: acesulfame K suits high-heat or long-shelf-life products, while aspartame is favored for a more sugar-like taste in cold/ready-to-drink items; E962 is often chosen to get both taste and stability benefits.

  5. Aspartame and acesulfame what is it?

    Together they form aspartame-acesulfame salt (E962, Twinsweet), a high-intensity sweetener about 350× sweeter than sugar that combines the two into one ingredient for better taste and stability.