Is Butter Gluten-Free? What Every GF Kitchen Needs

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GLUTEN-FREE

Plain butter is gluten-free — it’s churned cream, sometimes with salt, no grain.

Yes. Plain butter is churned cream, sometimes with added salt; cultured butter adds a culture — none of which is a gluten grain. Salted, unsalted, cultured, clarified butter, and ghee are all gluten-free. Watch flavored/compound butters (read the label), “cookie butter” (made from wheat cookies — NOT gluten-free despite the name), and a shared butter dish contaminated with bread crumbs.

Last reviewed: May 15, 2026

Plain butter is gluten-free. It’s about as simple as food gets — churned cream, maybe a little salt. The traps aren’t the butter itself: it’s flavored butters, the misleadingly named “cookie butter,” and a shared butter dish that’s been double-dipped with bread.

What’s in Butter

Plain butter is churned cream, sometimes with added salt; cultured butter adds a bacterial culture. Per FDA labeling rules, the gluten-containing grains are wheat, barley, rye, and their hybrids — cream and salt are not on that list. Salted, unsalted, cultured, clarified butter, and ghee are all gluten-free.

Important Note: “Cookie butter” / speculoos spread is the big naming trap — it is made from WHEAT cookies and is NOT gluten-free, despite “butter” in the name. Flavored or compound butters (garlic-herb, honey, cinnamon-sugar) are multi-ingredient — read the label. And the most common real-world exposure is a shared butter dish or tub double-dipped with a bread knife or cracker: that’s crumb cross-contact, not the butter. Keep a dedicated butter dish and knife at home.

Cross-Contamination Risk

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Manufacturing
Low
  • Churned cream (± salt); no gluten grain.
  • Salted, unsalted, cultured, clarified, ghee — all GF.
  • “Cookie butter” is a different, wheat-based product.
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Shared Dish
Medium
  • Shared butter dish/tub double-dipped with a bread knife.
  • Restaurant butter touched by bread/cracker crumbs.
  • The butter is GF; the crumb cross-contact is the risk.
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Home
Low
  • Keep a dedicated butter dish/knife (no double-dipping).
  • Read flavored/compound butter labels.

Butter Types — GF Status

  • Salted / unsalted butter — gluten-free
  • Cultured butter, clarified butter, ghee — gluten-free
  • Flavored / compound butter (garlic-herb, honey) — verify the full ingredient list
  • “Cookie butter” / speculoos spread — NOT gluten-free (made from wheat cookies)
  • Shared/double-dipped butter dish — crumb cross-contact risk, not the butter

What to Look For — Or Avoid

  • Single ingredient: cream (± salt) / cultured cream
  • A “gluten-free” label where available
  • A dedicated butter dish and knife (no double-dipping)
  • “Cookie butter” / speculoos spread (wheat cookies)
  • Flavored/compound butter with an unread ingredient list
  • A shared butter tub contaminated with bread crumbs

Frequently Asked Questions

Is butter gluten-free?

Yes. Plain butter is churned cream, sometimes with salt — neither is a gluten grain. Salted, unsalted, cultured, clarified butter, and ghee are all naturally gluten-free.

Is cookie butter gluten-free?

No. “Cookie butter” (speculoos spread) is made from wheat cookies and contains gluten. The word “butter” in the name does not make it dairy or gluten-free — it is not safe for celiac disease.

Is salted butter gluten-free?

Yes. Salt is not a grain, so salted butter is gluten-free, just like unsalted butter. Both are simply churned cream with or without added salt.

Is flavored or compound butter gluten-free?

Usually, but verify. Garlic-herb, honey, or cinnamon-sugar butters are multi-ingredient. The dairy butter base is gluten-free; read the label for any wheat-based additive in the flavoring.

Can restaurant butter have gluten?

The butter itself is gluten-free, but a shared butter dish or tub can be contaminated by other diners double-dipping with a bread knife or cracker. Ask for an individually wrapped pat or a fresh portion if you have celiac disease.

Can people with celiac disease eat butter?

Yes. Plain butter and ghee are naturally gluten-free and safe for celiac disease. Avoid “cookie butter,” verify flavored butters, and use a dedicated butter dish and knife to prevent crumb cross-contact.

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.