Spring rolls are one of the most popular appetizers in Asian cuisine but the term actually covers many different dishes. From Vietnamese gỏi cuốn wrapped in rice paper to crispy Chinese chūnjuǎn, Filipino lumpia, and large American-Chinese egg rolls, each version uses a different wrapper, filling, and cooking method.
In this guide, you'll learn the major types of spring rolls across Asia, how fresh and fried spring rolls differ, what wrappers they use, and how many calories each type typically contains.
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What Is a Spring Roll?

A spring roll is a type of Asian appetizer made by wrapping a filling inside a thin sheet of dough, rice paper, or crepe, then serving it either fresh or deep-fried. The filling typically includes vegetables, noodles, and protein such as pork, shrimp, or chicken.
The concept originated in China with chūnjuǎn (春卷), but over time many Asian cuisines developed their own versions. Vietnam created fresh rice paper rolls, the Philippines popularized lumpia, Thailand serves poh pia, and American-Chinese restaurants developed the larger egg roll.
Today, the term “spring roll” refers to a family of dishes across Asian cuisines, each defined by three key elements:
- Wrapper – rice paper, wheat pastry, egg wrapper, or crepe
- Cooking method – fresh or deep-fried
- Filling style – herbs and vegetables (fresh rolls) or savory meat and noodle mixtures (fried rolls)
Because of these variations, the phrase spring roll can describe many different foods depending on the country, restaurant, and preparation style.
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The Wrappers: What They're Made Of and How They Behave
The wrapper is the most meaningful variable in any spring roll — it determines whether the roll is fresh or fried, soft or crispy, neutral or flavored, and which cuisine tradition it belongs to. There are five major wrapper types used across Asian spring roll traditions.
Rice Paperbánh tráng · Vietnamese origin
Wheat Spring Roll Pastrychūnjuǎn pí · Chinese origin
Egg Roll WrapperAmerican Chinese · wheat + egg
Tofu Skin (Yuba)腐皮 fǔpí · Chinese and Japanese
Nori / Lettuce / Creperegional alternatives
Major Type of Spring Roll, Country by Country

Vietnamese – Gỏi Cuốn (Fresh Spring Roll)
Calories: ~70–100 kcal per roll
Also called: Summer roll, salad roll, fresh roll
The most internationally recognized fresh spring roll. It uses rice paper softened in warm water and rolled around shrimp, pork belly, rice vermicelli, lettuce, bean sprouts, mint, and perilla leaves.
The shrimp are deliberately placed against the outer wrapper so their pink color shows through the translucent rice paper — the signature look of gỏi cuốn.
Unlike fried spring rolls, gỏi cuốn is served fresh at room temperature and dipped in nước chấm (fish sauce, lime, chili, sugar, garlic) or hoisin–peanut sauce.
Originating in southern Vietnam, the dish reflects Saigon’s style of cooking: fresh herbs, light flavors, and minimal cooking.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rice paper | Fresh / uncooked | 70–100 kcal | Gluten-free wrapper |
Vietnamese – Chả Giò (Fried Spring Roll)
Calories: ~120–160 kcal per roll
Also called: Nem rán (Northern Vietnam), Vietnamese egg roll
The fried counterpart to gỏi cuốn.
Chả giò contains a filling of ground pork, mung bean vermicelli, wood ear mushrooms, carrot, and taro, seasoned with fish sauce and pepper. The rolls are wrapped in rice paper in southern Vietnam or wheat spring roll pastry in the north.
When fried correctly, the rice paper develops a lace-like bubbled crust, creating an extremely crisp texture.
In southern Vietnam, the rolls are often wrapped in lettuce with fresh herbs before dipping in nước chấm, balancing the hot crispy roll with cool freshness.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rice paper or wheat wrapper | Deep-fried | 120–160 kcal | Often eaten wrapped in lettuce |
Chinese – Chūnjuǎn (Spring Roll)
Calories: ~100–140 kcal per roll
Also called: Chun juan, Shanghai spring roll
The original spring roll. The name literally means “spring roll” and refers to a traditional food eaten during Chinese New Year.
Classic fillings include julienned pork, cabbage, bean sprouts, shiitake mushrooms, garlic chives, and ginger, all stir-fried before wrapping.
Chinese spring rolls are usually smaller and thinner than American egg rolls — about the width of a finger.
They are a staple dish in dim sum restaurants around the world.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin wheat wrapper | Deep-fried | 100–140 kcal | Common dim sum dish |
Chinese Hokkien – Popiah
Calories: ~100–130 kcal per roll
Popiah is the fresh spring roll tradition of Fujian (Hokkien) Chinese cuisine, widely eaten in Singapore, Malaysia, and Taiwan.
The base filling is a braised jicama (turnip) stew cooked with shrimp, pork belly, tofu, and aromatics. Additional layers include cucumber, bean sprouts, egg, lettuce, peanuts, and shrimp paste.
Unlike many spring rolls, popiah is assembled in layers, making it a carefully composed dish rather than a simple snack.
It is traditionally eaten during the Qingming Festival (Tomb-Sweeping Day).
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin wheat wrapper | Fresh | 100–130 kcal | Layered assembly |
Filipino – Lumpia Shanghai
Calories: ~50–65 kcal per piece
Lumpia Shanghai is one of the most iconic Filipino party foods.
These rolls are much smaller than Chinese spring rolls, usually finger-length and eaten in one or two bites. The filling is mostly ground pork with onion, carrot, garlic, and water chestnuts.
They are typically served in large quantities with banana ketchup or sweet chili sauce.
The name reflects Chinese immigrant influence — lumpia derives from a Hokkien word for thin pancake.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin wheat wrapper | Deep-fried | 50–65 kcal | Bite-size rolls |
American Chinese – Egg Roll
Calories: ~180–280 kcal per roll
Despite the name, the American egg roll is not traditional Chinese food.
It was developed in Chinese-American restaurants in the early 20th century, likely in New York City.
Egg rolls differ from Chinese spring rolls in three major ways:
- Thicker wrapper containing egg
- Much larger size
- Heavier cabbage-based filling
They are usually served with duck sauce (a sweet apricot sauce) or Chinese hot mustard.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thick egg wrapper | Deep-fried | 180–280 kcal | American adaptation |
Thai – Poh Pia Thod
Calories: ~90–120 kcal per roll
Also called: Poh pia sod (fresh version)
Thai spring rolls developed from Hokkien Chinese popiah combined with Thai flavors.
The fried version contains glass noodles, ground pork or chicken, cabbage, carrot, and seasonings like fish sauce, oyster sauce, and white pepper.
Compared to Vietnamese rolls, Thai spring rolls rely less on fresh herbs and more on savory sauces.
They are common street food across Thailand.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin wheat wrapper | Fried or fresh | 90–120 kcal | Thai–Hokkien fusion |
Indonesian – Lumpia Semarang
Calories: ~110–150 kcal per roll
Named after Semarang city in Central Java, this is Indonesia’s most famous spring roll.
Its defining feature is the filling of bamboo shoots stewed with shrimp, dried shrimp, egg, and soy sauce.
The bamboo shoots give the roll a distinct earthy and savory flavor not found in other spring roll traditions.
Both fried (goreng) and fresh (basah) versions exist.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin wheat wrapper | Fried or fresh | 110–150 kcal | Bamboo shoot filling |
Taiwanese – Rùnbǐng
Calories: ~160–200 kcal per roll
Taiwan’s version of the fresh spring roll is larger and more filling than most other types.
The wrapper holds stir-fried cabbage, bean sprouts, tofu, carrot, egg, and pork.
The defining ingredient is sweet peanut powder, which adds fragrance, crunch, and sweetness.
Rùnbǐng is traditionally eaten during the Qingming Festival, though it is widely available in Taiwanese night markets.
Key Facts
| Wrapper | Cooking Style | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin flour wrapper | Fresh | 160–200 kcal | Peanut powder topping |
Fresh vs Fried: The Fundamental Split
Before worrying about which country's version you're eating, the more important question is: fresh or fried? These two categories produce radically different nutrition profiles, eating experiences, and appropriate contexts.
Fresh Spring Rolls: Uncooked, served at room temperature or cold
- WrapperRice paper (Vietnamese) or thin wheat wrapper (popiah, rùnbǐng). Both used without any cooking.
- TextureSoft, slightly sticky, translucent. The filling's individual textures (crunchy bean sprouts, tender shrimp, slippery vermicelli) are distinct. The wrapper itself is nearly invisible — a soft glue holding everything together.
- Flavor profileClean, bright, herb-forward. The fresh herbs (mint, perilla, cilantro) and the light dipping sauce provide most of the flavor. Not rich or heavy.
- Calories70–200 kcal per roll. The lowest-calorie spring roll category.
- TimingMust be made and eaten within 30–60 minutes of assembly. Rice paper dries out and becomes brittle if left uncovered. Cannot be made ahead for more than 1 hour.
- Serving contextAppetizer, light lunch, summer food. Requires individual assembly — not practical for large-scale service without a preparation station.
- ExamplesVietnamese gỏi cuốn, Hokkien popiah, Taiwanese rùnbǐng, lumpiang sariwa (Philippines)
Fried Spring Rolls: Deep-fried to a crispy sealed shell
- WrapperThin wheat spring roll pastry (Chinese, Vietnamese, Thai, Filipino), or thicker egg-and-wheat wrapper (American egg roll). All are designed to crisp when fried.
- TextureShatteringly crispy shell — the defining characteristic. The contrast between the crispy exterior and the hot, savory, slightly moist filling inside is the whole point. Texture is immediate and satisfying in a way fresh rolls are not.
- Flavor profileRich, savory, umami-heavy from the fried wrapper and seasoned filling. The frying itself adds flavor through Maillard browning of the wrapper.
- Calories100–300 kcal per roll. 2–4x higher than fresh rolls of equivalent size, almost entirely due to oil absorption during frying.
- TimingBest served immediately after frying — the wrapper loses its crispness within 20–30 minutes of frying as steam from the filling softens it. Can be made and frozen before frying for kitchen efficiency.
- Serving contextAppetizer, party food, dim sum. Practical for large-scale service — can be batch-fried and held briefly. The most common spring roll format in restaurants globally.
- ExamplesChinese chūnjuǎn, Vietnamese chả giò, Filipino lumpia shanghai, American egg roll, Thai poh pia thod
🌿 The crispness window: The most common mistake with fried spring rolls — at home and in restaurants — is serving them after their crispness has faded. A fried spring roll's ideal eating window is 3–8 minutes after leaving the fryer. After 15–20 minutes, the moisture from the filling migrates through the thin wrapper and it becomes soft and greasy. In restaurants, batches that sit under a heat lamp for 10+ minutes are significantly worse than freshly fried. If ordering takeout spring rolls that will travel 20+ minutes, fresh rolls (gỏi cuốn) survive the journey better — they don't lose quality the same way.
Calorie Comparison Across All Types of Spring Rolls

These are per-roll estimates for a typical single serving. Fresh rolls are typically larger (a Vietnamese gỏi cuốn is roughly 100–120g per roll); fried spring rolls vary from finger-size lumpia to large American egg rolls.
- Gỏi cuốn — Vietnamese fresh
85 kcalrice paper
- Popiah — Hokkien fresh
115 kcalwheat wrapper
- Chinese spring roll (fried, small)
115 kcalchūnjuǎn
- Lumpia shanghai — Filipino fried (×3)
165 kcal×3 pieces
- Chūnjuǎn — Chinese fried (restaurant)
150 kcalmedium size
- Chả giò — Vietnamese fried
140 kcalrice paper fried
- Egg roll — American Chinese
220 kcalthick egg wrapper
| Spring Roll Type | Wrapper | Cooking Method | Cal / Roll | Protein | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gỏi cuốn (Vietnamese fresh) | Rice paper | Fresh | 70–100 | 7–9g | Gluten-free wrapper; lowest calorie |
| Popiah (Hokkien fresh) | Thin wheat | Fresh | 100–130 | 5–7g | Braised turnip filling is the base |
| Rùnbǐng (Taiwanese fresh) | Thin flour | Fresh | 160–200 | 7–9g | Peanut powder topping is unique |
| Chūnjuǎn (Chinese fried) | Thin wheat | Fried | 100–140 | 4–6g | Thinnest fried wrapper; most delicate |
| Chả giò (Vietnamese fried) | Rice paper or wheat | Fried | 120–160 | 5–8g | Rice paper version: lacework texture when fried |
| Lumpia shanghai (Filipino) | Thin wheat | Fried | 50–65 / piece | 3–4g/piece | Finger-size; serve 4–6 per person |
| Poh pia thod (Thai fried) | Thin wheat | Fried | 90–120 | 4–6g | Glass noodle filling; similar to Chinese |
| Egg roll (American Chinese) | Thick egg-wheat | Fried | 180–280 | 6–9g | 3–4× the size of a Chinese spring roll |
| Lumpia sariwa (Filipino fresh) | Soft egg crepe | Fresh | 110–150 | 5–7g | Heart of palm filling; sweet peanut sauce |
Dipping Sauces: What Goes With What
The dipping sauce is as important as the roll itself — and the pairing is not arbitrary. Each spring roll tradition has developed sauces that specifically complement its filling flavors, wrapper texture, and cooking method. Using the wrong sauce is one of the most common ways the spring roll eating experience falls flat.
Nước ChấmVietnamese gỏi cuốn · chả giò
Hoisin sauce thinned with warm water or coconut milk, stirred with peanut butter, topped with crushed roasted peanuts and a small piece of chili or fresh bird's eye chili. Richer and thicker than nước chấm — a dunking sauce rather than a dipping sauce. Particularly well-suited to gỏi cuốn because its sweetness and fat balance the clean freshness of the rice paper and herbs. Popular with children and with non-fish-sauce drinkers. The hoisin-peanut sauce version of fresh spring rolls is the most commonly served in Vietnamese restaurants outside Vietnam.
Sweet Chili SauceChinese fried · Thai poh pia · lumpia
Jarred or made fresh from sugar, vinegar, garlic, and red chili — sweet, tangy, mildly spicy. The most versatile commercial dipping sauce for fried spring rolls across Southeast Asian cuisine. It doesn't compete with the filling's flavors but brightens them — a foil for the savory richness of fried wrappers. Used as standard accompaniment at Thai restaurants and with Filipino lumpia. Does not have the depth or complexity of nước chấm — traded for approachability and universal appeal.
Sweet Bean Paste / HoisinChinese fried spring rolls · popiah
Hoisin (海鮮醬) is a thick, fermented soybean-based sauce with a sweet-savory-spiced profile — used both as a dipping sauce and as an ingredient spread directly onto the wrapper in popiah assembly. The sweet complexity of hoisin complements the earthy, vegetable-forward fillings of Chinese spring rolls better than it does the protein-forward Vietnamese ones. In popiah, hoisin is layered inside the roll as a base before the filling — not just served alongside.
Duck Sauce / Plum SauceAmerican egg rolls
Soy-Vinegar Dipping SauceFilipino lumpia · dim sum spring rolls
Spring Rolls by Country: Regional Overview
Two distinct traditions: fresh and fried
Vietnam has both the most internationally recognized fresh spring roll (gỏi cuốn with rice paper) and a distinct fried roll (chả giò / nem rán). North-south differences are significant: southern chả giò uses rice paper and often includes taro; northern nem rán uses wheat wrapper and more cabbage. Fresh herbs and nước chấm are the unifying elements.
Origin of the concept; wide regional variety
The chūnjuǎn (fried spring roll) is the original from which all others derived. Regional variations exist across Shanghai, Cantonese, Fujianese (Hokkien), and Shandong cooking. Popiah is the Hokkien fresh roll. The Shanghai fried version is the most widely exported internationally through Cantonese dim sum.
Lumpia: the social food
Lumpia shanghai (tiny fried rolls) is the dominant form — made in batches of 50–100 for parties. Lumpiang sariwa (fresh, with soft crepe wrapper) and lumpiang ubod (heart of palm) are more refined versions. Philippine lumpia reflects Hokkien Chinese immigration to the archipelago over several centuries, adapted with local ingredients and banana ketchup accompaniment.
Poh pia: both fried and fresh
Thai poh pia thod (fried) is a standard street food and restaurant appetizer. Poh pia sod (fresh) is closer to the Hokkien popiah tradition brought by Chinese migrants. Thai spring rolls are typically smaller and more delicate than Chinese versions, with a Thai-specific seasoning profile (oyster sauce, white pepper, fish sauce). Available at virtually every Thai restaurant and market.
Lumpia Semarang: the bamboo shoot roll
Indonesia's lumpia tradition is centered on Semarang and reflects the Peranakan (Straits Chinese-Indonesian) food culture of coastal Java. The bamboo shoot filling is uniquely Indonesian. Both goreng (fried) and basah (fresh/moist) forms are common. Indonesian spring rolls are more substantial than Thai versions and reflect the richer, more complex Peranakan cooking style.
Rùnbǐng: the peanut powder roll
Taiwan's rùnbǐng is the most distinctive national variation — the powdered peanut candy topping is found nowhere else. Primarily a seasonal food (Qingming Festival) but available year-round at night markets. Larger and more filling than any other fresh roll. The combination of stir-fried vegetables, tofu, pork, egg, and sweet peanut powder creates a uniquely Taiwanese flavor profile that is instantly recognizable.
What "Spring Roll" Means at Different Restaurants

Ordering "spring rolls" without knowing what type of restaurant you're in can produce very different results. Here's how to interpret the menu term by restaurant context.
| Restaurant type | What "spring roll" likely means | Key identifiers |
|---|---|---|
| Vietnamese restaurant | Menu distinguishes: gỏi cuốn = fresh (rice paper), chả giò = fried. "Spring roll" may refer to either — check for "fresh" or "fried" modifier. | Fresh: translucent wrapper, served at room temperature. Fried: golden, crispy. |
| Chinese restaurant / dim sum | Chūnjuǎn — thin, crispy, small-to-medium fried rolls. At dim sum: served in bamboo steamers or on plates of 3–4. At sit-down Chinese restaurants: typically 2–3 per appetizer order. | Thin, bubbly, crispy wrapper; small diameter; pork-and-cabbage filling. |
| American Chinese restaurant | Egg roll — larger, thicker fried roll with a denser shell. Not the same as Chinese spring rolls despite similar names on the menu. | Thick, chunky wrapper; large diameter (like a sausage); served with duck sauce. |
| Thai restaurant | Poh pia thod — small fried rolls with glass noodle and vegetable filling. Very similar in appearance to Chinese spring rolls. | Small, crispy; served with sweet chili sauce; often 3–4 per order. |
| Filipino restaurant | Lumpia shanghai — multiple small finger-size fried rolls. Or lumpiang sariwa — one large fresh roll with crepe wrapper. | Very small and numerous (shanghai) or very different crepe wrapper (sariwa). |
| Pan-Asian / fusion restaurant | Varies widely. Could be any of the above. Look for: wrapper description, origin cuisine label, serving temperature cues. | Ask specifically: fresh or fried? Rice paper or wheat wrapper? |
💡 The useful question to ask at any Asian restaurant: "Is the spring roll fresh or fried, and what's the wrapper made from?" These two questions immediately clarify what you're getting. Rice paper = Vietnamese fresh. Thin wheat, fried = Chinese/Thai/Vietnamese fried. Thick egg wrapper, large = American egg roll. Soft crepe = Filipino sariwa or Vietnamese bánh cuốn-style.
Frequently Asked Questions: Types of Spring Rolls
What are the different types of spring rolls?
What is the difference between a spring roll and an egg roll?
What is the difference between a fresh spring roll and a fried spring roll?
Are spring rolls healthy?
What is a Vietnamese spring roll called?
What wrapper is used for spring rolls?
Conclusion
Spring rolls are not a single dish but a family of wrapped foods across Asian cuisines. The wrapper rice paper, thin wheat pastry, or egg wrapper — defines the style, texture, and cooking method.
Fresh rolls like Vietnamese gỏi cuốn highlight herbs and light fillings, while fried versions such as Chinese chūnjuǎn or Filipino lumpia focus on crisp texture and savory fillings. Understanding these differences makes it easier to order, cook, or compare spring rolls across restaurants and regions.
