Is Parmesan Cheese Gluten-Free? Your Guide to Enjoying This Delicious Dairy!

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GLUTEN-FREE

Parmesan cheese is naturally gluten-free — milk, cheese culture, salt, and enzymes are the only ingredients.

Yes. The recipe for real parmesan is milk, cheese culture, salt, and enzymes (rennet) — no gluten anywhere. BelGioioso explicitly labels their parmesan gluten-free; Kraft Parmesan contains no gluten ingredients (only allergen is milk); Parmigiano-Reggiano PDO from Italy is regulated to those four ingredients only. Pre-grated parmesan adds wood-pulp cellulose anti-caking — also gluten-free.

Last reviewed: May 15, 2026

Parmesan is one of the cleanest gluten-free cheeses on the dairy aisle. The classic recipe is just milk, salt, cheese culture, and rennet — four ingredients, none containing gluten. The wrinkles are pre-grated containers with anti-caking ingredients (which are gluten-free) and Italian-restaurant contexts where the parmesan is served on top of pasta or bread.

Why Parmesan Is Gluten-Free

Per FDA labeling rules, gluten-containing grains are wheat, rye, barley, and crossbred hybrids. None appears in parmesan. The recipe is universally simple:

  • BelGioioso Parmesan: pasteurized milk, cheese culture, salt, enzymes — labeled gluten-free
  • Kraft Parmesan (grated): pasteurized part-skim milk, cheese culture, salt, enzymes, cellulose powder, potassium sorbate — no gluten ingredients (not formally labeled GF but allergen-only “Milk”)
  • Parmigiano-Reggiano DOP: raw cow’s milk, salt, rennet — Italian consortium regulation permits only these three

The “Powdered Cellulose” Question

Katie’s Tip: Pre-grated parmesan often lists “powdered cellulose” as an anti-caking agent. The name sounds technical but it’s just wood-pulp cellulose — the same fiber used in many gluten-free baking and food applications. It’s gluten-free, FDA-approved, and not a celiac concern. Same for potassium sorbate (a preservative).

Cross-Contamination Risk

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Manufacturing
Low
  • Simple cheese recipe with no gluten ingredients.
  • BelGioioso labels GF; Kraft contains no gluten ingredients per allergen statement.
  • Anti-caking agents (cellulose, potassium sorbate) are gluten-free.
🍽️
Restaurant / Deli
Medium
  • Deli slicers may transfer gluten from bread and wheat-coated meats.
  • Italian restaurants serve parmesan on pasta and bread — the cheese is GF, the substrate often isn’t.
  • Pre-grated parmesan from sealed containers is the safer restaurant option.
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Home
Low
  • Sealed package, standard refrigerator storage.
  • Grate fresh from a wedge for the cleanest GF approach.

What to Look For — Or Avoid

  • BelGioioso Parmesan (labeled GF), Parmigiano-Reggiano DOP, Kraft Parmesan — all gluten-free
  • Ingredient list with just milk, cheese culture, salt, enzymes (plus cellulose for pre-grated)
  • “Contains: Milk” allergen callout (expected — milk is the primary ingredient)
  • “Parmesan-flavored topping” or “Italian-style cheese topping” — verify ingredients individually (may include modified food starch)
  • Imitation parmesan / vegan parmesan — different recipes; verify each package
  • Parmesan in restaurant dishes served on pasta or bread — the cheese is GF, the dish may not be

Frequently Asked Questions

Is parmesan cheese gluten-free?

Yes. Parmesan cheese is naturally gluten-free. The classic recipe is just milk, cheese culture (or rennet), salt, and enzymes — none of which contain wheat, barley, rye, or oats. BelGioioso labels their parmesan gluten-free. Kraft contains no gluten ingredients (only allergen: milk). Parmigiano-Reggiano DOP from Italy is regulated to milk, salt, and rennet only.

Is grated parmesan gluten-free?

Yes. Pre-grated parmesan adds powdered cellulose anti-caking agent and sometimes potassium sorbate (preservative) — both gluten-free. The “powdered cellulose” wording sometimes worries celiac readers but it’s wood-pulp-derived cellulose, not a wheat product.

Is Kraft Parmesan gluten-free?

Kraft Parmesan contains no gluten ingredients. The allergen statement lists only milk. Kraft does not formally label their grated parmesan as “Gluten Free” but the ingredient list (pasteurized part-skim milk, cheese culture, salt, enzymes, cellulose powder, potassium sorbate) has no wheat, barley, rye, or oats.

Is BelGioioso Parmesan gluten-free?

Yes. BelGioioso explicitly labels their parmesan gluten-free. It’s rBST-free, made from raw cow’s milk and aged a minimum of 10 months. Ingredients are pasteurized milk, cheese culture, salt, and enzymes.

Is parmesan in Italian restaurants gluten-free?

The parmesan itself is gluten-free, but Italian restaurants serve it on pasta, bread, and other dishes that frequently contain gluten. The cheese is fine; the substrate is the question. If you’re ordering pasta, ask for gluten-free pasta or a gluten-free option, and confirm the parmesan grater hasn’t been used on cheese mixed with breadcrumb-topped dishes.

Is Parmigiano-Reggiano gluten-free?

Yes. Parmigiano-Reggiano DOP (the Italian consortium-protected designation) is regulated to only three ingredients: raw cow’s milk, salt, and rennet. It’s the strictest version of parmesan available and is inherently gluten-free.

About the Author

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Katie WilsonRN

Katie is the founder of Lets Go Gluten Free and a registered nurse with a decade of experience helping families navigate celiac disease, gluten sensitivity, and the gluten-free diet. She personally researches every food, ingredient, and brand featured on the site.