Swedish candy refers to the pick-and-mix (lösgodis) tradition built around soft gummies, wine gums, foam sweets, and salty licorice (salmiak). It has a cult following abroad because of its texture variety, bold sour and salty flavors, and the build-your-own-bag format.
The pick-and-mix culture
In Sweden, lösgodis — loose candy sold by weight from open bins — is a weekend ritual. The category spans soft and firm gummies, foam (skum) sweets, wine gums, chocolate-covered pieces, and licorice in both sweet and salty styles, which is why a Swedish wall offers so much textural variety.
Salty licorice (salmiak)
Salmiak, flavored with ammonium chloride, gives Nordic licorice its distinctive salty, slightly numbing bite. It is an acquired taste that travels surprisingly well as a novelty, and it anchors the Swedish and broader licorice category.
Stocking Swedish candy
A pick-and-mix wall or a curated bagged selection both work. Lead with crowd-pleasing sour gummies and wine gums, then add salty licorice and foam sweets for the enthusiasts. See the full range under Swedish candy.
FAQ
What is Swedish candy called?
The pick-and-mix tradition is called lösgodis — loose candy sold by weight. It includes gummies, wine gums, foam sweets, and licorice.
Why is Swedish candy so popular?
Its texture variety, bold sour and salty flavors, and the interactive build-your-own-bag format give it a cult following well beyond Sweden.