A viral image claiming a time-lapse experiment reveals something shocking about Coke and Coke Zero after being left out for 100 days has people second-guessing their drink choices. At first glance, it looks alarming: two glasses of soda, one supposedly transforming into something far worse than the other. But before panic sets in, it’s important to understand what’s really happening — and what isn’t.
When soda is left exposed to air for weeks or months, the most significant change is evaporation. Water slowly disappears, leaving behind whatever doesn’t evaporate — sugars, acids, colorings, or sweeteners. Regular Coke contains sugar, so as the liquid evaporates, it leaves a sticky, syrupy residue. Coke Zero, which uses artificial sweeteners, evaporates more cleanly, often leaving less visible buildup.
That difference doesn’t mean one drink is “rotting” or becoming toxic. It’s simply basic chemistry. Sugar is a solid when water is removed; artificial sweeteners are used in much smaller amounts, so there’s less residue to see. The dark color that remains comes from caramel coloring — something already present in both drinks from the first sip.
What this experiment does not show is how soda behaves inside the human body. Your digestive system doesn’t work like an open glass on a table. Liquids are processed, diluted, and broken down quickly. No soda sits in your body evaporating for 100 days. Using this visual as proof of health danger is misleading, even if it looks dramatic.
That doesn’t mean soda is healthy — both versions have downsides — but viral experiments like this rely on shock value, not context. The real takeaway isn’t fear, it’s awareness: visuals can exaggerate reality. Understanding what you’re seeing matters more than reacting to how scary it looks.