Oolong tea is naturally gluten-free — it’s Camellia sinensis tea leaves, not a grain.
Yes. Oolong tea is made from partially oxidized leaves of Camellia sinensis (the same plant as black, green, and white tea). Plain oolong is a single ingredient — tea leaves — with no wheat, barley, rye, or oats. Republic of Tea (GFCO-certified) and major brands treat plain tea as gluten-free. Flavored oolong blends are typically GF; the things to verify separately are bubble tea / milk tea add-ins (syrups, powders, creamers) which can contain gluten.
Oolong tea is naturally gluten-free — it’s true tea from the Camellia sinensis plant, partially oxidized to sit between green and black tea. Plain oolong is a single-ingredient product with no grain. The only things to check are flavored blends (almost always fine) and bubble-tea/milk-tea preparations, where the add-ins are the variable, not the tea.
Why Oolong Tea Is Gluten-Free
Per Republic of Tea’s gluten-free tea information: tea is made from the Camellia sinensis plant, which contains no gluten. Oolong is the partially-oxidized form (green tea is unoxidized, black tea fully oxidized). Plain oolong has a single ingredient — tea leaves. Republic of Tea is GFCO-certified. Per FDA labeling rules, none of the gluten-containing grains (wheat, barley, rye, oats) is involved in tea.
Cross-Contamination Risk
Manufacturing
Low
- Single-ingredient tea (plain oolong).
- Republic of Tea is GFCO-certified.
- Flavored blends: verify added flavors.
Bubble Tea / Cafe
Medium
- Oolong base and tapioca pearls are GF.
- Flavor syrups, powders, “creamer”/foam toppings vary — verify each shop.
- Powdered milk-tea mixes may contain wheat-derived creamer.
Home
Low
- Sealed box, standard pantry storage.
- Loose-leaf oolong eliminates any tea-bag adhesive question.
Oolong Forms — All GF (Plain)
- Plain oolong tea bags (Republic of Tea, Twinings, Numi) — gluten-free
- Loose-leaf oolong — gluten-free, no bag question
- Milk oolong (jin xuan) — naturally creamy-tasting variety; NO actual milk or grain, GF
- Flavored oolong (peach, osmanthus, ginseng) — typically GF; verify label
- Oolong bubble tea base — GF; verify the syrups/toppings
- Powdered oolong milk-tea mixes — verify; may contain wheat-derived creamer
Bubble Tea & “Milk Oolong” Clarified
What to Look For — Or Avoid
- Plain oolong — single ingredient (tea leaves), GF
- Republic of Tea (GFCO-certified), Twinings, Numi
- Loose-leaf oolong — avoids any tea-bag adhesive concern
- Milk oolong / jin xuan — flavor name only, GF
- Powdered oolong milk-tea mixes — may contain wheat-derived creamer
- Bubble tea syrups/foam toppings — verify per shop
Frequently Asked Questions
Is oolong tea gluten-free?
Yes. Oolong tea is made from partially oxidized Camellia sinensis leaves — the same plant as black, green, and white tea. Plain oolong has a single ingredient (tea leaves) with no wheat, barley, rye, or oats. Major brands treat plain tea as gluten-free, and Republic of Tea is GFCO-certified.
Is milk oolong gluten-free?
Yes. “Milk oolong” (jin xuan) is a naturally creamy-tasting oolong cultivar — the name describes its buttery flavor, not added dairy or grain. There’s no actual milk and no gluten. Plain milk oolong is gluten-free.
Is oolong bubble tea gluten-free?
The oolong base and tapioca pearls are gluten-free, but bubble tea add-ins vary. Flavor syrups, powdered mixes, and foam/creamer toppings differ by shop — some powdered milk-tea bases use wheat-derived non-dairy creamer. Ask the specific shop about the syrups and powders used.
Is flavored oolong gluten-free?
Almost always. Flavored oolong (peach, osmanthus, ginseng, citrus) uses gluten-free natural flavors and botanicals. The only theoretical concern is a rare “malt” or “caramel”-flavored blend with barley-malt flavoring — verify those specific varieties’ ingredient lists.
Can oolong tea bags contain gluten?
Very low-quality tea bags could theoretically use a wheat-based seam adhesive, but major brands (Republic of Tea — GFCO-certified, Twinings, Numi) use food-safe materials. To eliminate the question entirely, use loose-leaf oolong.
Is oolong different from green or black tea for gluten?
No difference for gluten purposes. Green, oolong, black, and white tea all come from Camellia sinensis — only the oxidation level differs. All pure, plain forms are gluten-free. The same caveats (flavored blends, bubble-tea add-ins, low-quality bag adhesive) apply equally to all of them.