Last Updated on May 2, 2026 by Brian Kachejian

Feature Photo and design by Brian Kachejian
Sour Patch Kids have built a reputation on one simple idea, start sour, then turn sweet. But not every flavor delivers that balance the same way, and some stand out much more than others.
Sour Patch Kids have been one of the most recognizable candy brands for decades. That combination of a sour coating followed by a sweet finish has made them a staple in movie theaters, convenience stores, and candy aisles across the country. It is a simple concept, but when it works, it works every time.
What makes the brand even more interesting is how much it has expanded. What started as a handful of original fruit flavors has turned into a wide range of variations, including specialty mixes and limited flavor releases. Some of these push the sour element harder, while others lean more into sweetness and flavor balance.
That balance is everything with a candy like this. If the sour hits too hard and never settles, it can overwhelm the experience. If the sweetness dominates too quickly, it loses what makes Sour Patch Kids unique. The best flavors are the ones that manage both, delivering that sharp opening followed by a strong, recognizable fruit flavor.
A Brief History of Sour Patch Kids
Sour Patch Kids were originally created in the 1970s by Canadian confectioner Frank Galatolie under the name “Mars Men.” The candy was later rebranded as Sour Patch Kids in the 1980s, playing off the popularity of the Cabbage Patch Kids at the time.
The brand eventually became part of the Mondelēz International portfolio, one of the largest snack companies in the world. Under that ownership, Sour Patch Kids expanded significantly, moving beyond the original assortment into new flavors, shapes, and themed varieties.
One of the defining features of Sour Patch Kids has always been the texture and coating. The sugar and acid blend creates the signature sour hit at the start, followed by a softer chew and a sweeter fruit flavor underneath. That formula has remained consistent even as new flavors have been introduced, which is why the differences between flavors come down to how well they balance those two elements.
The Flavor Breakdown and Rankings
Each flavor was judged based on three things, the intensity of the sour coating, the strength of the fruit flavor, and how well those two elements worked together.
Lemonade Fest Mix
The Lemonade Fest mix introduces multiple lemonade-inspired flavors, including strawberry lemonade and blue raspberry lemonade. This variety leans heavily into the sour profile, delivering a sharper and more aggressive opening than most standard Sour Patch flavors.
The sour coating is strong and immediate, and it takes a moment before the lemonade-style sweetness starts to come through. Once it does, there is a noticeable fruit layer underneath, but the sourness remains the dominant feature throughout the experience.
For people who prefer a more intense sour candy, this mix delivers exactly what it promises. However, the balance leans more toward sour than sweet, which keeps it just below the very top tier.
Score: 9 out of 10
Blue Raspberry
Blue raspberry is one of the most recognizable flavors in candy, and here it pushes the sour element even further. The initial hit is strong and immediate, with very little delay before the sourness takes over.
What separates this from the Lemonade mix is the lack of a strong follow-through on sweetness. The flavor is there, but it stays behind the sour coating rather than rising to meet it. That creates a more one-dimensional experience, where the sour dominates instead of working alongside the fruit flavor.
It still delivers intensity, but it lacks the balance that defines the best versions of Sour Patch Kids.
Score: 7 out of 10
Peach
Peach stands out immediately because of how different it feels compared to the others. The texture is slightly softer, and the balance between sour and sweet is much more controlled.
There is a noticeable sour note at the start, but it never overwhelms the flavor. Instead, it transitions quickly into a strong peach sweetness that carries the rest of the experience. The fruit flavor is clear, distinct, and consistent from start to finish.
This is where the formula works perfectly. The sour is present, the sweetness is strong, and neither one takes over. It delivers exactly what this type of candy is supposed to do.
Score: 10 out of 10
Watermelon
Watermelon has long been one of the most popular Sour Patch flavors, and it shows why here. It delivers a familiar balance that sits very close to the top.
The sour coating is slightly stronger than the peach, but not by much. Once it settles, the watermelon flavor comes through clearly and holds its place throughout. It is consistent, recognizable, and well-balanced overall.
The difference comes down to how smooth the transition is. While watermelon performs extremely well, it does not quite match the seamless balance that peach delivers.
Score: 9.9 out of 10
Final Ranking
- Peach – 10
- Watermelon – 9.9
- Lemonade Fest – 9
- Blue Raspberry – 7
The Winner
Peach takes the top spot.
It delivers the most complete experience, balancing sour and sweet in a way that feels natural from start to finish. While other flavors either leaned too far into sourness or came close without fully matching it, peach stayed consistent and controlled the entire way through.
Sour Patch Kids have built their reputation on contrast, and this test shows how much that balance matters. The best flavors are not just the most sour or the sweetest, they are the ones that bring both elements together without losing either one.
This one came down to small differences, but those differences made it clear.






































