A mango daiquiri sounds easy until the blender turns it into a watery mango slush, a spoon-thick smoothie, or a drink that tastes sweet but flat. Mango, rum, lime, ice — the ingredient list is short, but the balance matters.
This recipe is built for the glass you actually want: cold, golden, lime-bright, mango-forward, and still cocktail-like. It is not a boozy smoothie, melted mango ice, or a bottled-mix drink hiding under too much sugar.
The best version should pour slowly, smell like ripe mango and fresh lime, and taste cold before it tastes sweet. Frozen fruit gives the drink body, lime keeps it awake, white rum keeps the finish crisp, and simple syrup lets you adjust for the mango you have.
Quick Answer
A mango daiquiri is made with mango, rum, fresh lime juice, sweetness, and ice. For the best frozen version, blend frozen mango chunks with white rum, lime juice, simple syrup, and crushed ice until smooth, frosty, and still loose enough to sip.
The easiest ratio for 2 drinks is 2 cups frozen mango, 4 oz white rum, 1½ oz fresh lime juice, 1 oz simple syrup, and 1 cup crushed ice. Frozen mango gives the thickest blender texture. For deeper aroma, use ripe fresh mango, but chill or freeze the cubes first so the drink does not melt too quickly.
When the balance is right, the first sip should taste like mango and lime before it tastes like alcohol. The rum should support the fruit, not bully it.
The core rule: ice makes a frozen daiquiri cold. Frozen fruit makes it taste like mango.

Make It Now
Already holding the blender jar? Liquids first, mango next, ice last. Blend only until it looks like a soft frozen cocktail, then taste before you pour.

- Base ratio: 2 cups frozen mango, 4 oz white rum, 1½ oz lime juice, 1 oz simple syrup, 1 cup crushed ice.
- Blend time: 20–30 seconds, just until frosty and slow-pouring.
- Syrup range: ½ oz for very sweet mango or bottled mix; up to 1½ oz for tart or flat fruit.
- Fast fix: lime sharpens, syrup softens, frozen fruit thickens, and 1 tablespoon liquid loosens the blender.
- Serve: pour right away.
Recipe Card
Yield: 2 drinks · Prep time: 5 minutes · Total time: 5 minutes · Method: blender · Serve: immediately
This is the full frozen mango daiquiri recipe in one place. Start with frozen mango for the easiest texture, use fresh lime for the brightest flavor, and serve in a chilled coupe, margarita glass, martini glass, or rocks glass.
Ingredients
| Ingredient | US measure | Metric measure |
|---|---|---|
| Frozen mango chunks | 2 cups | About 300 g |
| White rum or light rum | 4 oz | 120 ml |
| Fresh lime juice | 1½ oz / 3 tbsp | 45 ml |
| Simple syrup | 1 oz / 2 tbsp | 30 ml |
| Crushed ice | 1 cup | About 150 g |
| Mango nectar, pineapple juice, coconut water, or cold water, optional | 1–2 tbsp, only if needed | 15–30 ml |

Lighter drink: use 3 oz / 90 ml rum total for 2 drinks instead of 4 oz / 120 ml.
Sweeter mango or bottled mix: start with ½ oz / 15 ml simple syrup, then add more only if needed.
Instructions
- Chill 2 glasses in the freezer.
- Pour the rum, lime juice, and simple syrup into the blender.
- Add the frozen mango chunks.
- Top with crushed ice.
- Blend for 20–30 seconds, until smooth, slushy, and slow-pouring.
- Taste and adjust: lime for brightness, syrup for sweetness, frozen fruit for thickness, or 1 tbsp liquid if too thick.
- Pour into chilled glasses, garnish if you like, and serve immediately.
Notes
- Fresh lime juice gives the brightest flavor.
- Crushed ice blends better than large cubes.
- Do not blend too long or the drink will warm and thin out.
- Lime wheel, mango wedge, mint, or chili-lime rim all work as garnishes.
- For the best texture, serve right away.
Need to adjust the drink? Fix the texture, choose fresh vs frozen mango, or pick a version.
Choose Your Mango Daiquiri
Once the base glass tastes right, the variations are easy. Use the same balance to make it lighter, stronger, fruitier, coconut-leaning, or alcohol-free.

| What you want | Best version |
|---|---|
| Thick frozen cocktail | Use the main frozen recipe |
| Fresh ripe mango flavor | Cube fresh mango and freeze 30–60 minutes before blending |
| No blender | Shake mango puree or thick juice with rum, lime, and syrup |
| Sweeter tropical version | Use coconut rum or Malibu, then reduce syrup and add lime |
| Non-alcoholic drink | Use frozen mango, lime, pineapple juice or coconut water, and sparkling water |
| Party batch | Prep liquids ahead and blend in batches right before serving |
At its best, this is not a sugary frozen drink. It is mango with a lime edge, a crisp rum finish, and just enough sweetness to make the next sip feel easy.
What Is a Mango Daiquiri?
A mango daiquiri is a fruit version of the classic daiquiri, a rum cocktail built around rum, lime juice, and sweetness. At its core, the classic drink is just rum, fresh lime, and sugar; the International Bartenders Association’s daiquiri formula is a useful reference for that simple base.
The mango version can be frozen and blended, or shaken and strained when made with puree or juice. Either way, it should still taste like a cocktail: fruit first, lime brightness next, and a crisp rum finish.
For a broader look at the drink family, see our Daiquiri Recipe guide. This page stays focused on keeping the mango version balanced at home.
Why This Works
This drink works because frozen fruit does the heavy lifting, not the ice. It gives the daiquiri body, so you do not have to rely on flavor-diluting cubes to create texture.

Fresh lime keeps the sweetness lively. White rum gives structure without hiding the mango. Simple syrup stays adjustable because mangoes are unpredictable — one batch may be candy-sweet, the next may be tart or flat.
The blender order matters more than it seems: liquids first, fruit second, ice last. That small step makes the mixture easier to blend and reduces the urge to pour in extra liquid too early.
Ingredients You Need
With a drink this simple, every ingredient shows up in the glass. The goal is not to bury the mango under sugar or ice. It is to let the fruit, lime, rum, cold, and sweetness show up in the right order, so every sip tastes bright instead of heavy.
Mango
Frozen chunks are the easiest win because they give the drink body without watering it down. They also make the texture more predictable from batch to batch.

Fresh mango is lovely when it is ripe, fragrant, and sweet. Taste a piece first. If it tastes bland, the drink will need more lime, a little more syrup, and possibly a tiny pinch of salt. For better texture, cube it and freeze for 30–60 minutes.
If your mango is fibrous, puree it first or use frozen chunks for a smoother blend. For another look at how mango changes texture in drinks, our Mango Lassi Recipe also works through fresh mango, frozen mango, and mango pulp.
Rum
Reach for white rum or light rum first. It keeps the mango and lime clear. Aged rum gives a warmer flavor. Dark rum can work in a richer tropical version, but it can cover the fruit. Coconut rum is sweeter, so pull the syrup back if you add it. Avoid overproof rum unless you deliberately want a stronger drink.
If you like crisp rum-and-lime drinks, our Mojito Recipe is another useful ratio to keep in rotation.
Fresh Lime Juice
Lime is what wakes the whole glass up. It gives the drink its proper daiquiri shape and keeps mango from tasting heavy. Lime is better than lemon here because it gives a sharper cocktail edge. Bottled lime works in a pinch, but fresh juice tastes brighter in a drink this simple.
Simple Syrup
Simple syrup smooths the lime and fruit. Start with 1 oz / 30 ml for 2 drinks, then taste. Very sweet mango may only need ½ oz / 15 ml. Tart or flat fruit may need up to 1½ oz / 45 ml.
To make a small batch, stir ¼ cup sugar with ¼ cup hot water until dissolved. Cool it before using. Store the rest in the fridge for more drinks.
Ice
Crushed ice gives the blender a head start, especially when the mango is rock-solid. Large cubes work in a strong blender, but they can leave chunks if the blender struggles. Add more only after tasting, because ice fixes texture for a moment but weakens flavor as it melts.
Fresh vs Frozen Mango for Daiquiris
The mango you start with decides the kind of drink you get. Choose based on whether you want thick frozen texture, fresh aroma, a shaken cocktail, or a shortcut.

| Mango form | Best for | How to adjust |
|---|---|---|
| Frozen mango chunks | Thick frozen drinks | Start with less ice because the fruit already thickens the blend. |
| Fresh ripe mango | Best fresh flavor | Chill or freeze the cubes first; add ice gradually. |
| Mango puree | Smooth blender drinks or shaken versions | Pull back the syrup because puree is often concentrated and sweet. |
| Mango nectar | Shortcut flavor or loosening a thick blend | Add lime and reduce syrup because nectar is usually sweet. |
| Bottled daiquiri mix | Convenience | Skip or reduce syrup, then add fresh lime and frozen fruit. |
| Mango juice | Light shaken version | Expect a thinner drink; keep the lime strong. |
Best default: frozen chunks for the main recipe. They give the easiest texture and the strongest flavor after blending.
If you actually want a creamy breakfast-style drink instead of a cocktail, this Mango Smoothie Recipe is the better direction.
Once you know what your mango is bringing, the fixes get simple: more lime to balance sweetness, less syrup for nectar, and more frozen fruit for body.
Using Mango Nectar, Puree, or Bottled Mix
Mango nectar can help when your blender needs liquid, but it should not take over the drink. Think of it as a mango boost, not the base.

Puree gives a smooth texture and works especially well in the shaken version. Bottled mixes are usually sweet, so skip or reduce the syrup, add fresh lime, and blend in frozen fruit if the flavor tastes thin or artificial.
For another mango cocktail that handles fresh fruit, nectar, frozen texture, and pitcher options, see our Mango Margarita Recipe.
How to Make a Mango Daiquiri Less Watery
You should be able to sip it, not scoop it. The ideal texture is thick enough to feel frozen, but loose enough to pour slowly from the blender. If it behaves like juice, it needs more frozen fruit. When it behaves like sorbet, it needs a small splash of liquid.

Watery vs Perfect Mango Daiquiri Texture
Use this visual check before adding more ice. A watery daiquiri usually needs more frozen mango, while a scoop-thick one needs a small splash of liquid.

The common mistake is trying to fix a thin daiquiri with more ice. That makes it colder for a minute, then more watery. Frozen fruit is the better fix because it adds body and flavor at the same time.
The same fruit-first idea is what keeps our Frozen Strawberry Daiquiri Recipe thick and bright without leaning too hard on ice.
Quick Texture Fixes
| Goal | What to do |
|---|---|
| Thicker | Add frozen fruit. |
| Slushier | Add crushed ice gradually. |
| Smoother | Blend 5–10 seconds more, but avoid warming the drink. |
| Looser | Add 1 tbsp mango nectar, pineapple juice, coconut water, or cold water. |
| Brighter | Add lime juice. |
| Sweeter | Add syrup. |
| More fruit-forward | Reduce ice and add more mango. |
| Less flat | Add lime and a tiny pinch of salt. |
That pinch of salt is optional, but useful when frozen fruit tastes dull. The drink should not taste salty; the salt simply makes the mango and lime feel more awake.
Once the texture is right, the pour should look slow, glossy, and still loose enough to drink through a straw.
Blender Help
A powerful blender makes this easier, but you do not need a bar machine to make a good frozen drink. The right order and small corrections matter more. For a Thermomix, use the same ingredients and blend only until slushy; if the machine struggles, let the fruit soften for a few minutes first.
- Liquids first: rum, lime juice, and syrup help the blades start moving.
- Fruit second: frozen chunks should be close to the blades, but not packed too tightly.
- Crushed ice last: it blends faster than large cubes.
- Pause before adding liquid: if the blender forms an air pocket, stop and stir first.
- Small corrections: add liquid only 1 tablespoon at a time.

If the blender stalls, it is not a failure. Stop, stir, and only then add liquid. Extra liquid fixes movement, but it also thins the drink fast.
No crushed ice? Wrap cubes in a clean towel and tap them smaller, or pulse the ice briefly before adding the mango. For a weaker blender, let the frozen chunks sit at room temperature for 3–5 minutes.
No blender or still struggling? Try the shaken mango daiquiri, or return to the main recipe.
Mango Daiquiri Without a Blender
For a lighter, cocktail-bar-style drink, use mango puree or thick juice and shake it instead of blending. This no-blender mango daiquiri is smooth and chilled, not frozen.
It will not have the plush frozen texture of the blender version, but it should feel cleaner, sharper, and more cocktail-bar-like.

| For 1 drink | Amount |
|---|---|
| White rum | 2 oz / 60 ml |
| Mango puree or thick mango juice | 1–1½ oz / 30–45 ml |
| Fresh lime juice | ¾ oz / 22 ml |
| Simple syrup | ½ oz / 15 ml |
| Ice | For shaking |
Add everything to a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake hard for 10–15 seconds, then strain into a chilled coupe or martini glass. Reduce the syrup if your puree is already sweet. Add a little more lime if the drink tastes flat.
Variations
Once the base tastes good, the fun part starts. Strawberries make it fruitier, pineapple makes it sharper, coconut makes it softer, passion fruit makes it tangier, and chili-lime makes it party-ready.
Looking for a specific version? Jump to the mocktail, mango strawberry, coconut rum, or spicy mango version.
Virgin Mango Daiquiri / Mocktail Version
For a non-alcoholic version, do not simply leave out the rum. Without the spirit, the drink still needs lift. Pineapple juice, coconut water, lime, and a splash of sparkling water keep it from becoming just a smoothie.
- 2 cups / 300 g frozen mango
- ⅓ cup / 80 ml pineapple juice, orange juice, or coconut water
- 1½ oz / 45 ml fresh lime juice
- 1–2 tbsp simple syrup, honey syrup, or maple syrup
- ½–1 cup ice
- Optional splash of sparkling water or lime seltzer after blending
Blend the fruit, juice or coconut water, lime, syrup, and ice until slushy. Add sparkling water after blending if you want it to feel more like a mocktail. Pineapple juice and orange juice are already sweet, so start with less syrup.

If coconut water is your favorite way to lighten tropical drinks, these Coconut Water Cocktails give you more rum, tequila, vodka, and mocktail-style directions.
Mango Strawberry
Replace half the mango with frozen strawberries. The drink turns brighter, pinker, and a little tarter, so taste before adding extra lime. Keep the same rum and syrup base, then add ice only as needed.

Mango Pineapple
Replace 1 cup mango with 1 cup frozen pineapple. Pineapple is naturally sweet and acidic, so taste before adding extra syrup.
Mango Daiquiri with Malibu or Coconut Rum
Use coconut water as the optional thinning liquid, or replace part of the white rum with coconut rum or Malibu. Coconut rum is sweet, so reduce the syrup and add lime if the drink tastes heavy. If you want to move creamier and more pineapple-coconut, our Piña Colada Variations are the better next stop.

Mango Passion Fruit
Add 1–2 tablespoons passion fruit pulp or puree. Passion fruit is tart, so taste before adding extra lime. This version is sharp, fragrant, and very tropical.
Spicy Mango
Add a chili-lime rim, a pinch of Tajín, or one very thin slice of jalapeño to the blender. Start small. Mango takes spice well, but too much heat can overpower the lime and rum.

For a full chili-lime cocktail built around jalapeño and a Tajín-style rim, try the Spicy Margarita Recipe.
Vodka Mango
Vodka works as a 1:1 swap for rum, but the result is technically a mango vodka frozen cocktail rather than a daiquiri. The flavor will be cleaner and less rummy, so keep the lime strong.
Pitcher Batch and Make-Ahead Tips
Scale the ingredients, but blend close to serving time. Frozen cocktails are best in the first few frosty minutes, before the ice melts and the fruit starts to separate.

For 4 Drinks
| Frozen mango | 4 cups / about 600 g |
| White rum | 8 oz / 240 ml |
| Fresh lime juice | 3 oz / 90 ml |
| Simple syrup | 2 oz / 60 ml |
| Crushed ice | 2 cups / about 300 g |
For 8 Drinks
| Frozen mango | 8 cups / about 1.2 kg |
| White rum | 16 oz / 480 ml |
| Fresh lime juice | 6 oz / 180 ml |
| Simple syrup | 4 oz / 120 ml |
| Crushed ice | 4 cups / about 600 g |
Blend in batches if your blender jar is smaller than 64 oz / 1.9 L. Do not fill the blender to the top with frozen ingredients; leave room for movement or the blades will struggle. For parties, prep the fruit, juice the limes, make the syrup, and chill the rum mixture ahead of time. Blend only when guests are ready for drinks.
- Best texture: serve immediately after blending.
- Mango prep: peel, cube, and freeze fresh mango ahead.
- Syrup prep: make simple syrup ahead and keep it chilled.
- Avoid the fridge: a blended frozen drink will melt, separate, and lose texture.
- Leftovers: freeze in a container, then re-blend briefly before serving.
If you want a rum drink that can sit chilled in a pitcher instead of being blended at the last minute, our Rum Punch Recipe is the easier party option.
Troubleshooting
Most mango daiquiri problems are easy to fix while the drink is still in the blender. A little lime, a little syrup, a little frozen fruit — that is usually enough to bring the glass back into balance.

| Problem | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Watery | Too much ice, melted ice, or blended too early | Add frozen fruit and serve immediately. |
| Overly thick | Too much frozen fruit or not enough liquid | Add 1 tbsp liquid at a time and blend briefly. |
| Too sweet | Very ripe mango, sweetened nectar, bottled mix, or too much syrup | Add lime juice. |
| Overly sharp | Tart mango or too much lime | Add syrup or a splash of mango nectar. |
| Weak fruit flavor | Too much ice | Add more mango and reduce ice next time. |
| Smoothie-like | Not enough lime or rum structure | Add lime and check the sweetness balance. |
| Ice chunks remain | Large cubes or weak blender | Use crushed ice, pulse first, or soften frozen mango for a few minutes. |
| Too boozy | Rum is too high for your taste | Add fruit, ice, or a splash of juice. |
| Flat flavor | Fruit is dull or lime is low | Add lime and a tiny pinch of salt. |
| Separates quickly | The drink sat too long after blending | Re-blend briefly with a little frozen fruit. |
What to Serve with It
This drink loves salty, spicy, grilled, and tropical food. Anything salty or chili-lime makes the mango taste even brighter.
| Pairing style | Serve with mango daiquiris |
|---|---|
| Salty snacks | Chips, guacamole, salted nuts, tortilla chips |
| Spicy food | Shrimp Tacos, spicy chicken skewers, paneer tikka |
| Grilled seafood | Grilled shrimp, fish tacos, limey prawns |
| Fresh sides | Mango Salsa, pineapple salsa, cucumber salad |
| Party spread | Tacos, nachos, grilled corn, sliders |

This is where the drink becomes a poolside glass, a taco-night cocktail, or the cold thing people reach for between spicy bites.
FAQs
Is this always a frozen drink?
No. It can be frozen and blended or shaken and strained. The frozen version is more common at home because mango gives the drink a naturally thick texture.
Fresh or frozen mango: which is better?
Frozen mango is better for thick frozen drinks. Fresh mango has stronger ripe flavor, but it needs more ice or a short chill in the freezer before blending.
What rum works best?
White rum or light rum is the best default. It keeps the cocktail crisp and lets mango and lime stand out.
How do you keep it from getting watery?
Use frozen fruit, control the ice, blend briefly, and serve right away. If the blend gets thin, add more frozen mango instead of more ice.
Do you need simple syrup?
Usually, yes, but the amount depends on the fruit. Very sweet mango may need little or no syrup. Tart mango may need a little extra.
What if I only have mango puree?
Mango puree works well. Use it in the shaken version, or use it in the blender version with less syrup.
Is mango nectar okay?
Yes. Use it as a shortcut or thinning liquid, but reduce syrup and add fresh lime because nectar is usually sweet.
How do you make a virgin mango daiquiri?
Blend frozen mango with fresh lime juice, pineapple juice or coconut water, a little syrup, and ice. Add sparkling water after blending for a brighter mocktail feel.
Does vodka work instead of rum?
Yes, vodka works as a 1:1 swap, but the drink becomes a mango vodka frozen cocktail rather than a classic daiquiri.
How far ahead can you make it?
Prep the ingredients ahead, but blend right before serving. Once blended, the ice starts melting and the drink loses its thick texture.
Next Drinks to Try
Next, try the Lychee Martini Recipe for another tropical fruit cocktail, the Lemon Drop Martini Recipe for a sharper citrus-sweet balance, or the Appletini Recipe when you want something crisp, cold, and shaken instead of frozen.
Once you stop asking ice to do all the work, the drink becomes what it should be: golden, frosty, mango-bright, and sharp enough with lime to stay refreshing. That is the glass people finish quickly — and ask you to make again.
