Froot Loops are not gluten-free — the grain blend includes wheat flour and oat flour.
No. Kellogg’s Froot Loops are made from a grain blend that includes whole grain corn flour, wheat flour, and whole grain oat flour, and the box carries a “Contains: Wheat” declaration. Wheat is a gluten grain and the oat flour is not certified gluten-free, so Froot Loops are not safe for celiac disease. Wheat is an intentional ingredient — there is no gluten-free version of Froot Loops.
Froot Loops are not gluten-free. People assume a brightly colored “fruit” cereal is corn-based and safe, but Froot Loops use a multi-grain blend that includes wheat flour and oat flour. The box even says “Contains: Wheat.” This is an ingredient, not a cross-contamination footnote.
Why Froot Loops Aren’t Gluten-Free
Kellogg’s Froot Loops are made from a grain blend that includes whole grain corn flour, wheat flour, and whole grain oat flour, with a “Contains: Wheat” allergen declaration on the package. Per FDA labeling rules, wheat is a gluten-containing grain under 21 CFR 101.91, and the oat flour used is not the certified gluten-free type.
Cross-Contamination Risk
Manufacturing
High
- Not cross-contact — wheat flour is an intentional ingredient.
- The grain blend includes wheat and oat flour.
- “Contains: Wheat” declared on the box.
In the Bowl
High
- No version of Froot Loops is gluten-free.
- Picking out pieces is impossible — the loops are the wheat blend.
- Choose a cereal specifically labeled gluten-free.
Home
High
- Wheat by recipe — not safe for celiac.
- Store away from gluten-free cereals; use a clean scoop.
Fruit-Ring Cereal — GF Status
- Kellogg’s Froot Loops — NOT gluten-free (wheat + oat flour)
- Other multi-grain “corn” cereals with wheat in the blend — NOT gluten-free
- Cereal specifically labeled “gluten-free” — gluten-free (corn/rice based)
- Certified gluten-free fruit-ring cereals — gluten-free (verify the box)
- Any cereal with “Contains: Wheat” — NOT gluten-free
What to Look For — Or Avoid
- An explicit “gluten-free” label on a fruit-ring cereal
- A grain list of only corn and/or rice (no wheat or non-GF oats)
- “Contains:” statement with no wheat
- Froot Loops — wheat flour and oat flour in the blend
- “Contains: Wheat” on the box
- Assuming a colorful “fruit” corn cereal is gluten-free
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Froot Loops gluten-free?
No. Kellogg’s Froot Loops are made from a grain blend that includes wheat flour and oat flour, with a “Contains: Wheat” declaration. Wheat is a gluten grain, so Froot Loops are not gluten-free or safe for celiac disease.
Isn’t Froot Loops a corn cereal?
It contains corn flour, but it is a multi-grain blend that also includes wheat flour and oat flour. The corn does not make it gluten-free — the wheat and non-GF oat flour are gluten sources.
Is there a gluten-free version of Froot Loops?
No. Kellogg’s does not make a gluten-free Froot Loops. For a gluten-free fruit-ring cereal, choose a different product specifically labeled gluten-free and made from corn and/or rice without wheat or non-GF oats.
Is the gluten in Froot Loops from cross-contamination?
No. Wheat flour is an intentional ingredient in the Froot Loops grain blend. This is not a trace cross-contact issue, so there is no preparation step that makes Froot Loops gluten-free.
Are the oats in Froot Loops gluten-free oats?
No. The oat flour in Froot Loops is not the certified gluten-free type. Combined with the wheat flour in the blend, Froot Loops are not gluten-free regardless of the oat question.
What gluten-free cereal can I have instead?
Choose a fruit-ring or colorful cereal specifically labeled gluten-free. Several brands make corn- or rice-based gluten-free cereals; always confirm the “gluten-free” label and the “Contains:” statement.