← Retour au blog
Version anglaise (traduction à venir).
💧Hydration & Beverages·11 min de lecture

Does Sparkling Water Really Weaken Your Bones? The Carbonation-Calcium Myth Explained

En bref

Plain sparkling water has zero negative effect on bone density; the bone-health concerns stem specifically from cola's phosphoric acid, not carbonation itself.

🕓 Mis à jour: 2026-05-23

Cet article est fourni à titre d'information générale uniquement et ne remplace pas un avis, un diagnostic ou un traitement médical professionnel. Consultez toujours un professionnel de santé qualifié pour toute question concernant une affection médicale.

The Warning You've Heard a Hundred Times

Your aunt squints at your LaCroix. "That's going to dissolve your bones, you know." She's been saying this since 2015. Your coworker swears she gave up sparkling water after her doctor mentioned something about calcium. And that viral TikTok last month? 2.3 million views on why "carbonation leaches minerals from your skeleton."

Here's what nobody tells you: they're confusing two completely different drinks.

Where This Myth Actually Came From

In 2006, researchers at Tufts University published a study that launched a thousand wellness warnings. They found that women who drank cola regularly had 3.7% lower bone mineral density in their hips compared to non-cola drinkers. Headlines exploded. "Fizzy drinks destroy bones!" The study got cited everywhere.

But here's the detail that got buried: sparkling water drinkers in the same study showed no bone density differences whatsoever. Zero. The researchers specifically noted that "ichthyite mineral water and other carbonated beverages without phosphoric acid were not associated with low BMD."

The culprit was never the bubbles.

The Phosphoric Acid Problem

Cola contains phosphoric acid. It's what gives Coca-Cola and Pepsi that sharp, tangy bite—different from the lighter citrus notes in Sprite or the clean fizz of Perrier. Phosphoric acid serves a specific purpose: it balances the intense sweetness and acts as a preservative.

The issue? When you consume high amounts of phosphorus without matching calcium intake, your body pulls calcium from bones to maintain blood calcium levels. A 12-ounce can of cola delivers about 44mg of phosphorus. Drink three daily—which 8% of American adults do—and you're adding 132mg of phosphorus with zero calcium to offset it.

Plain sparkling water contains no phosphoric acid. San Pellegrino, Topo Chico, your SodaStream creation—just water and carbon dioxide. The CO2 creates carbonic acid, which sounds scary until you realize it's incredibly weak. Your stomach acid is about 100 times more acidic than carbonated water. Your saliva neutralizes carbonic acid within seconds.

What Longitudinal Studies Actually Show

A 2024 meta-analysis in Osteoporosis International tracked 14,416 participants across seven countries over periods ranging from 4 to 12 years. The researchers specifically separated cola drinkers from other carbonated beverage consumers.

Results: Cola consumption above 4 servings weekly correlated with a 1.9% decrease in femoral neck bone density over 8 years. Non-cola carbonated beverages—including sparkling water, club soda, and non-cola soft drinks—showed no statistically significant association with bone density changes.

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition published follow-up research in early 2025 examining 3,200 postmenopausal women, the demographic most vulnerable to osteoporosis. Women drinking 3+ glasses of sparkling mineral water daily for 24 months showed identical bone density trajectories to still water drinkers. Some mineral waters, particularly those high in calcium like Gerolsteiner (348mg per liter), actually contributed positively to calcium intake.

The Calcium Displacement Theory

Some researchers initially hypothesized that any carbonated beverage might reduce calcium absorption. Made logical sense—if carbonic acid affects mineral uptake, maybe it interferes with calcium too.

Tested extensively. Doesn't hold up.

A controlled trial gave participants calcium supplements with either still water or carbonated water. Absorption rates: identical. Urinary calcium excretion: identical. The bubbles simply don't interact with calcium metabolism in any meaningful way.

What does affect calcium absorption? Coffee reduces it by about 2-3mg per cup. Excessive sodium increases calcium loss through urine. High oxalate foods like spinach bind to calcium and reduce absorption by up to 95% for that specific meal. Carbonation? Not on the list.

Why the Confusion Persists

Three reasons keep this myth circulating.

First, people lump all "fizzy drinks" together. When someone hears "soda is bad for bones," their brain files carbonation as the problem. The distinction between cola and sparkling water requires actually reading the studies, which most people won't do.

Second, the wellness industry profits from fear. "Hidden dangers in your sparkling water" gets more clicks than "your Pellegrino is fine." Supplement companies selling calcium products have no incentive to clarify that plain carbonated water poses zero threat.

Third, the acid connection sounds plausible. Acid dissolves things. Bones contain minerals. Therefore acid must dissolve bone minerals. It's intuitive but wrong—your body doesn't work like a chemistry beaker. Stomach acid is dramatically more acidic than anything you drink, and your bones aren't sitting in your stomach.

What Actually Threatens Bone Health

If you're genuinely concerned about your skeleton, here's where the evidence points.

Sedentary lifestyle causes more bone loss than almost any dietary factor. Weight-bearing exercise stimulates bone formation directly. A 2023 review found that adults who walked less than 4,000 steps daily had 6.2% lower bone density than those walking 8,000+.

Vitamin D deficiency affects an estimated 42% of American adults. Without adequate D, your body can't absorb calcium efficiently regardless of intake. Spending 15 minutes in midday sun generates about 10,000 IU—but office workers in northern climates often go months without meaningful sun exposure.

Excessive alcohol consumption—more than 2 drinks daily—interferes with bone-building cells called osteoblasts. Smoking reduces bone density through multiple mechanisms and doubles fracture risk.

Cola specifically, consumed in high quantities, contributes to the problem. But your sparkling water? It's literally just bubbly water.

The Mineral Water Advantage

Some sparkling waters actually support bone health. Natural mineral waters contain varying amounts of calcium, magnesium, and other minerals depending on their source.

Gerolsteiner delivers 348mg calcium per liter—about 35% of daily needs. San Pellegrino provides 164mg. Perrier contains 147mg. If you're drinking a liter of mineral sparkling water daily, you're adding meaningful calcium to your diet.

Compare that to tap water, which averages 30-50mg calcium per liter depending on location. Or filtered water, which often removes minerals entirely. Choosing mineral sparkling water over filtered still water might actually improve your calcium intake.

The 2025 AJCN study noted this specifically: "High-calcium mineral waters represent an underutilized dietary calcium source, particularly for individuals with lactose intolerance or dairy aversion."

Reading Labels Like a Scientist

Want to make informed choices? Check two things on any carbonated beverage.

First, look for phosphoric acid in the ingredients. Present in most colas. Absent in most clear sodas and all plain sparkling waters. If phosphoric acid appears, that's the drink worth limiting.

Second, check the mineral content if it's listed. European mineral waters must disclose this; American brands often do voluntarily. Higher calcium numbers mean more bone-supporting minerals.

That's it. No complex calculations needed. No apps required. Phosphoric acid = worth watching. No phosphoric acid = drink freely.

The Bottom Line on Bubbles

Your grandmother's warning made sense in context. She probably watched her kids guzzle cola and correctly intuited that something wasn't right. But the mechanism she assumed—carbonation damaging bones—was never accurate.

The research spanning two decades and tens of thousands of participants tells a consistent story. Carbonation itself has no effect on bone density. Phosphoric acid in cola, consumed heavily, contributes to bone loss. Plain sparkling water, club soda, seltzer, and mineral water pose zero skeletal risk.

So the next time someone eyes your Topo Chico with concern, you can explain the difference. Or just enjoy your bubbles in peace. Your bones won't mind either way.

Continue in the App

Personalized wellness with your own data

📊 Chiffres clés

0% (no statistical difference)
Bone density difference in sparkling water drinkers vs. still water drinkers
Osteoporosis International 2024 meta-analysis
1.9%
Femoral neck bone density decrease in heavy cola drinkers over 8 years
Osteoporosis International 2024
44mg
Phosphorus content in one 12-oz can of cola
USDA FoodData Central
348mg per liter
Calcium content in Gerolsteiner mineral water
Manufacturer nutritional data
42%
American adults with vitamin D deficiency
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

Carbonated Beverages: Bone Health Impact Comparison

Beverage TypePhosphoric AcidCalcium ContentBone Density ImpactSafe Daily Amount
Plain Sparkling WaterNone0-50mg/LNone observedUnlimited
Mineral Sparkling WaterNone100-350mg/LPotentially positiveUnlimited
Club SodaNone0-20mg/LNone observedUnlimited
Cola (regular/diet)Yes (44mg P/12oz)0mgNegative at 4+/week≤3 servings/week
Clear Sodas (Sprite, 7-Up)None0mgNone observed*Moderate (sugar concern)

*Clear sodas lack phosphoric acid but contain sugar or artificial sweeteners with separate health considerations

Questions fréquentes

Does carbonation leach calcium from bones?
No. Controlled studies measuring calcium absorption and urinary excretion show identical results whether calcium is consumed with still or carbonated water. The carbonic acid in sparkling water is extremely weak and neutralizes within seconds of entering your mouth. Your stomach acid is approximately 100 times more acidic than carbonated water.
Why did my doctor tell me to avoid fizzy drinks for bone health?
Your doctor likely meant cola specifically, not all carbonated beverages. The distinction often gets lost in brief appointments. Cola contains phosphoric acid, which in high quantities can affect calcium balance. Plain sparkling water, seltzer, and mineral water contain no phosphoric acid and show no bone density effects in research.
Is mineral sparkling water better for bones than regular sparkling water?
Potentially yes. High-calcium mineral waters like Gerolsteiner (348mg/L) or San Pellegrino (164mg/L) contribute meaningful calcium to your diet. This is particularly valuable for people who don't consume dairy. Plain sparkling water is neutral for bones; mineral sparkling water may offer modest benefits.
How much cola is too much for bone health?
Research suggests limiting cola to 3 or fewer servings weekly. The 2024 Osteoporosis International meta-analysis found that consuming 4+ cola servings weekly correlated with measurable bone density decreases over time. Occasional cola consumption doesn't appear problematic.
Does sparkling water affect calcium supplement absorption?
No. Studies specifically testing calcium supplement absorption with still versus carbonated water found identical absorption rates. You can take your calcium supplement with sparkling water without reducing its effectiveness.
Are there any downsides to drinking lots of sparkling water?
The carbonation may cause bloating or gas in some people, and the acidity (though mild) could theoretically affect tooth enamel with extreme consumption. But for bone health specifically, there are no documented negative effects from plain sparkling water at any consumption level studied.
What should I actually focus on for bone health?
Weight-bearing exercise has the strongest evidence for maintaining bone density. Adequate vitamin D (many adults are deficient), sufficient calcium intake (1000-1200mg daily for most adults), limiting alcohol to 2 or fewer drinks daily, and not smoking all have stronger bone health effects than any beverage choice except heavy cola consumption.

Références