Big Red has more caffeine than Vanilla Coke: 34mg vs 34mg in the same 12 oz can. That is a 0mg gap, and since the cans match, the per-serving number is the whole story.
Big Red vs Vanilla Coke: the numbers
| Big Red | Vanilla Coke | |
|---|---|---|
| Caffeine per serving | 34mg per 12 oz can | 34mg per 12 oz can |
| Caffeine per fl oz | 2.8mg | 2.8mg |
| Servings to reach 400mg (FDA context) | 11.8 | 11.8 |
Sources: Big Red's figure is verified in our Big Red caffeine guide against Caffeine Informer (source); Vanilla Coke's figure is verified in our Vanilla Coke guide against Caffeine Informer (source).
Which one should you pick?
Pick Vanilla Coke when you want the lighter dose or a slower ramp, and Big Red when you actually need the bigger hit and know your tolerance. If you are stacking either with other caffeinated drinks through the day, run the math against the 400mg reference rather than guessing.
For context, the FDA cites 400mg of caffeine a day as an amount generally not associated with negative effects in healthy adults. Tolerance and health vary, so treat these numbers as information, not advice.
Related reading
- Big Red: the full caffeine guide
- Vanilla Coke: the full caffeine guide
- The verified caffeine database
FAQ
Does Big Red or Vanilla Coke have more caffeine? Big Red: 34mg per 12 oz can versus 34mg per 12 oz can for Vanilla Coke.
Which is stronger per ounce? Big Red, at about 2.8mg per fluid ounce versus 2.8mg for Vanilla Coke.
Comparing caffeine? The caffeine comparison tool puts hundreds of drinks side by side, and the caffeine curfew calculator can check your cutoff time for tonight.