That line is usually referring to soft drinks—especially cola-type sodas like Coca-Cola or Pepsi.
🥤 What the claim is about
People say “it destroys bones” because sodas:
- contain phosphoric acid
- may replace milk or calcium-rich drinks in the diet
- are often linked with high sugar intake
🧠 What science actually shows
Research has found a possible association between high soda consumption and:
- slightly lower bone mineral density in some groups
- higher fracture risk in people with poor overall nutrition
But important detail:
👉 Soda does not literally destroy bones
Bone health depends on many factors, including:
- calcium and vitamin D intake
- physical activity (especially weight-bearing exercise)
- hormones and age
- overall diet quality
A condition like Osteoporosis develops over time due to multiple risk factors—not one drink alone.
⚖️ The real problem
The risk comes mainly from patterns, not a single beverage:
- drinking lots of soda daily
- not getting enough calcium
- low physical activity
Bottom line
Soda isn’t a “bone destroyer,” but too much of it can indirectly contribute to weaker bones if it replaces healthier nutrition.
If you want, I can tell you which everyday drinks actually help strengthen bones and which ones are neutral or mildly risky.