Olive Garden’s gluten-free rotini is real GF pasta, but it’s not a gluten-free kitchen.
Sometimes. Olive Garden offers a gluten-free rotini made from corn and rice — genuinely gluten-free pasta — plus a gluten-sensitive menu. But Olive Garden is not a gluten-free kitchen: gluten-free pasta cooked in shared pasta water (used for wheat pasta) is a cross-contact risk unless prepared separately, the breadsticks are wheat, and some sauces use flour. Order the rotini cooked in fresh/separate water, choose a confirmed gluten-free sauce, and inform the server.
Olive Garden’s gluten-free pasta is a genuine gluten-free product — corn-and-rice rotini — but whether your plate is celiac-safe comes down to how it’s cooked. The pasta is fine; the shared pasta water and wheat breadsticks are the risk.
What Olive Garden Offers
Olive Garden’s gluten-free rotini is made from corn and rice. Per FDA labeling rules, the gluten grains are wheat, barley, rye, and hybrids — corn and rice are not among them, so the pasta is gluten-free by recipe. Olive Garden also has a gluten-sensitive menu identifying sauces and dishes made without gluten ingredients. But Olive Garden states it is not a gluten-free kitchen.
Cross-Contamination Risk
Manufacturing
Low
- Not applicable — restaurant-prepared.
- The rotini itself is corn/rice, gluten-free by recipe.
Restaurant
High
- Shared pasta water/pots with wheat pasta — ask for separate water.
- Breadsticks are wheat and ubiquitous.
- Not a dedicated GF kitchen; some sauces use flour.
Home
Low
- Not applicable — restaurant menu.
Olive Garden Items — GF Status
- Gluten-free rotini (corn/rice), cooked in separate water — gluten-free pasta (shared kitchen caveat)
- GF rotini cooked in shared wheat-pasta water — cross-contact; not safe
- Breadsticks — NOT gluten-free (wheat)
- Standard pasta — NOT gluten-free (wheat)
- Sauces — Alfredo/marinara commonly GF; some use flour — confirm on the gluten-sensitive menu
What to Look For — Or Avoid
- Order the gluten-free rotini cooked in fresh/separate water
- Choose a sauce confirmed on the gluten-sensitive menu
- Tell the server you have celiac disease
- GF pasta boiled in shared wheat-pasta water
- Breadsticks and standard pasta (wheat)
- Treating the gluten-sensitive menu as a celiac guarantee
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Olive Garden’s gluten-free pasta actually gluten-free?
The gluten-free rotini is genuinely gluten-free pasta — made from corn and rice, not a gluten grain. But Olive Garden is not a gluten-free kitchen, so celiac safety depends on it being cooked in fresh/separate water and a careful sauce choice. The verdict is “sometimes.”
What is Olive Garden’s gluten-free pasta made of?
It is a rotini made from corn and rice. Neither corn nor rice is a gluten-containing grain, so the pasta itself is gluten-free by recipe.
Why is shared pasta water a problem?
Gluten-free pasta boiled in the same water used to cook wheat pasta picks up gluten from that water. This is the single biggest cross-contact risk at any Italian restaurant — always ask for the gluten-free pasta to be cooked in fresh, separate water.
Are the breadsticks gluten-free?
No. Olive Garden’s signature breadsticks are made with wheat and are not gluten-free. They are also brought to the table by default, so request that they not be served if you are managing celiac disease.
Which Olive Garden sauces are gluten-free?
Alfredo and marinara are commonly gluten-free, but some sauces use a flour thickener. Confirm the specific sauce on Olive Garden’s gluten-sensitive menu rather than assuming.
Can someone with celiac disease eat the gluten-free pasta at Olive Garden?
Many do, by ordering the gluten-free rotini cooked in separate water with a confirmed gluten-free sauce and informing the server. Because it is a shared kitchen with wheat pasta and breadsticks, you must request separate preparation and weigh the cross-contact risk.