Comparisons
Mealworms vs Superworms: Nutrition, Sizing, and Which Is Better

Mealworms and superworms are the two most common beetle-larva feeders in the reptile-keeping hobby. They look similar at a glance — both are elongated tan/brown larvae with hardened cuticles — but they differ meaningfully in size, nutrition, behavior, and storage practices. Each fills a slightly different feeder role. The frequent question "mealworms or superworms?" doesn't have one universal answer; the right choice depends on your reptile's size, calorie needs, and the role you want the feeder to play in the diet.
Quick species ID
- Mealworms (Tenebrio molitor): 1–1.5 inches, ~120 mg each, slim brown larvae of the darkling beetle
- Superworms (Zophobas morio): 1.5–2.5 inches, ~500–600 mg each, larger and chunkier larvae of the giant darkling beetle
Superworms are roughly 4–5× heavier per worm. They're not just bigger mealworms — different species, different beetle stage, different practical considerations.
Side-by-side nutrition
| Metric | Mealworms | Superworms |
|---|---|---|
| Protein (dry weight) | ~50% | ~52% |
| Fat (dry weight) | ~28% (high) | ~17% (moderate) |
| Calcium : Phosphorus | ~1 : 14 | ~1 : 18 |
| Moisture | ~62% | ~58% |
| Chitin | Hard exoskeleton | Hard exoskeleton, larger |
Headline: mealworms are higher in fat than superworms. This is the opposite of what many keepers assume (because superworms are bigger, they "feel" richer). Per gram, superworms are leaner.
Where mealworms win
Sizing flexibility for smaller reptiles
Mealworms come in mini (small), medium, and large sizes. Mini mealworms (8–10 mm) are appropriately sized for hatchling leopard geckos, baby bearded dragons, and small lizards. Superworms — even small ones — are too large for animals under 6 inches.
Long shelf life
Mealworms can be refrigerated to slow their development. A batch in a fridge stays viable for 4–8 weeks before adverse changes. Superworms cannot be refrigerated — cold kills them.
Lower cost per worm
Mealworms are typically cheaper per individual. For high-volume feeders for small reptiles, the cost difference compounds.
Easier feeders to handle
Mealworms don't bite. Superworms can bite — the powerful mandibles meant for chewing wood and fruit can pinch fingers (or, more concerning, pinch reptiles' mouths during feeding).
Where superworms win
Lower fat per gram
Surprising but true: superworms are leaner than mealworms by dry weight. For reptiles managing weight, superworms are the better choice.
Single-meal portion size for large reptiles
One adult superworm provides as much volume as 4–5 mealworms. For adult bearded dragons, ackie monitors, large lizards, this means fewer prey items per meal — useful both for the keeper and for the reptile's feeding response.
Calcium-poor but movement-rich
Superworms are very active — they squirm vigorously, triggering strong feeding responses. Mealworms are sluggish in comparison, which sometimes means reptiles don't notice them as readily.
Where they're roughly equivalent
- Calcium ratio: both are calcium-poor (1:14 vs 1:18). Both require dusting before feeding off.
- Protein content: nearly identical at ~50%
- Acceptance: virtually all insectivorous reptiles eat both
- Gut-loadability: both can be gut-loaded 24–48 hours before feeding off
Where neither should be the staple
This is the important caveat: mealworms and superworms are calcium-poor relative to what reptiles need. A diet that's 70%+ mealworms or superworms produces calcium-deficient reptiles even with dusting. Both are appropriate as variety feeders in a 10–25% rotation — not as the protein column.
The right staples are discoid roaches (Ca:P 1:3) or BSFL (Ca:P 3:1). Mealworms and superworms supplement those, not replace them.
Sizing for different reptiles
| Reptile | Mealworm size | Superworm size |
|---|---|---|
| Hatchling leopard gecko | Mini (8–10 mm) | Not appropriate |
| Adult leopard gecko | Medium-large | Small only |
| Juvenile bearded dragon | Medium | Small |
| Adult bearded dragon | Large | Small to medium |
| Ackie monitor / blue tongue skink | Large | Medium-large |
| Adult monitor / large lizards | Large | Adult superworms |
Storage practices
Mealworms:
- Refrigerate (40–55°F) to slow development — keeps for 4–8 weeks
- Bring to room temperature 2 hours before feeding off (cold mealworms are sluggish)
- Provide oats or wheat bran as bedding/food in the storage container
Superworms:
- Never refrigerate — cold kills them within a day or two
- Keep at 70–80°F
- Provide oats, wheat bran, and occasional vegetable scraps
- Single-house separation triggers pupation if you want to breed; communal storage prevents pupation
The fat-management approach
Both mealworms and superworms are appropriate as occasional variety feeders. To use them well:
- Dust with calcium every time before feeding off
- Limit to 1–2 days per week for any reptile (more for very young or active animals; less for adults prone to obesity)
- Pair with leaner feeders in a varied rotation — silkworms, BSFL, hornworms, roaches
- For weight-management adults: superworms are the better choice (lower fat); mealworms can build fat fast in adult lizards
Common keeper mistakes
- Mealworm-only diet: causes obesity and calcium deficiency. Variety always.
- Skipping calcium dust: critical for both, given the bad Ca:P ratios
- Refrigerating superworms: kills them. Room temperature only.
- Feeding superworms to too-small reptiles: bite risk + size risk. Mealworms scale down better.
- Ignoring that mealworms are higher fat than superworms: the "bigger=fattier" intuition is wrong.
Bottom line
Mealworms are smaller, more flexible in sizing for tiny reptiles, fattier per gram, and refrigeratable for long storage. Superworms are bigger, leaner per gram, more active (better feeding response), and not refrigeratable. Both are calcium-poor and shouldn't be the main protein in any reptile's diet. Use mealworms for small reptiles, superworms for adult-sized reptiles, both as 10–25% rotation feeders alongside calcium-positive staples like discoid roaches and BSFL. Browse our mealworm collection, superworm collection, or compare to other feeders in our Creature Insights blog.
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