Plain green tea is naturally gluten-free — just Camellia sinensis tea leaves.
Yes. Plain green tea is a single ingredient — the minimally oxidized leaves of the Camellia sinensis plant — with no wheat, barley, rye, or oats. Sencha, matcha, gunpowder, and dragonwell are all naturally gluten-free, and The Republic of Tea maintains a dedicated gluten-free tea category. Watch genmaicha (green tea with roasted rice — usually fine, verify the brand), barley “teas,” and flavored matcha-latte mixes that add barley malt.
Plain green tea is gluten-free. It’s one botanical ingredient — tea leaves — and there’s no grain in it. The only things to think about are a few specific blends: genmaicha (green tea with toasted rice), barley “tea,” and flavored matcha-latte powders. The leaf itself is never the problem.
What’s in Green Tea
Plain green tea is the minimally oxidized leaves of Camellia sinensis — the same plant as black, white, and oolong tea, just processed differently. Per FDA labeling rules, the gluten-containing grains are wheat, barley, rye, and their hybrids — the tea plant is not one of them. The Republic of Tea maintains a dedicated gluten-free tea category and states its pure teas are gluten-free.
Cross-Contamination Risk
Manufacturing
Low
- Single-ingredient tea leaf; no grain.
- Republic of Tea maintains a gluten-free category.
- Plain green teas have no barley/malt added.
Café / Restaurant
Low
- Brewed plain green tea / matcha is gluten-free.
- Matcha-latte mixes may add barley malt — verify.
- Barley “tea” is not green tea and not GF.
Home
Low
- Sealed tea; no special handling.
- Check genmaicha brand and flavored/dessert blends.
Green Tea Types — GF Status
- Sencha, gunpowder, dragonwell, jasmine green — gluten-free (plain green tea)
- Matcha (pure ceremonial/culinary) — gluten-free
- Genmaicha (green tea + roasted rice) — generally gluten-free; verify the brand
- Flavored / dessert green-tea or matcha-latte mixes — verify for barley/malt
- Roasted barley tea / mugicha — NOT gluten-free (made from barley)
What to Look For — Or Avoid
- Single ingredient: green tea (Camellia sinensis)
- Pure matcha — just ground green tea leaf
- Brand gluten-free tea category or statement
- Barley tea / roasted barley tea / mugicha (made from barley)
- Matcha-LATTE mixes with barley malt or wheat bulking agents
- Flavored/dessert green-tea blends not checked for malt
Frequently Asked Questions
Is green tea gluten-free?
Yes. Plain green tea is a single ingredient — minimally oxidized Camellia sinensis leaves — with no wheat, barley, rye, or oats. It is naturally gluten-free. The Republic of Tea maintains a dedicated gluten-free tea category for its pure teas.
Is matcha gluten-free?
Yes. Pure matcha is simply finely ground green tea leaf and is naturally gluten-free. The caution is matcha-latte mixes and flavored powders, which can add barley malt or a wheat-based bulking agent — read the label on those.
Is genmaicha gluten-free?
Generally yes. Genmaicha is green tea blended with roasted or popped rice, and rice is gluten-free. Still verify the specific brand’s ingredient list, since roasted-grain blends can vary; pure green-tea-and-rice genmaicha is gluten-free.
Is barley tea the same as green tea?
No. Barley tea (roasted barley tea, mugicha) is made from barley, a gluten-containing grain, and is not gluten-free. It is a completely different product from green tea, which is made from tea leaves.
Is flavored green tea gluten-free?
Usually, but verify. Flavored and dessert-style green teas can add barley malt or grain-derived flavorings. The green tea base is gluten-free; the risk is the added ingredients, so check the ingredient list.
Can people with celiac disease drink green tea?
Yes. Plain green tea and pure matcha are naturally gluten-free and safe for celiac disease. Avoid barley-based “teas” and check flavored blends and latte mixes, where added barley or malt — not the tea — would be the gluten source.