Plain rice is naturally gluten-free — white, brown, jasmine, basmati, even sticky rice.
Yes. Rice is a naturally gluten-free grain — it is not on the FDA’s gluten-grain list (wheat, barley, rye). All plain rice, including white, brown, jasmine, basmati, arborio, wild, and glutinous/”sticky”/sweet rice, is gluten-free. The risks are never plain rice: seasoned rice mixes can contain wheat pasta or wheat seasoning, and restaurant rice can be cross-contaminated by soy sauce or shared steamers. “Glutinous rice” contains no gluten.
Plain rice is naturally gluten-free. It’s one of the foundational safe grains on a gluten-free diet. The only things that introduce gluten are what gets added to rice — seasoned box mixes, soy sauce, a shared restaurant steamer — never the rice itself. And “glutinous rice,” despite the name, has no gluten.
What’s in Plain Rice
Rice (Oryza sativa) is a single-ingredient grain. Per FDA labeling rules, the gluten-containing grains are wheat, barley, rye, and their hybrids — rice is not one of them. White, brown, jasmine, basmati, arborio, wild, and glutinous/sticky/sweet rice are all naturally gluten-free.
Cross-Contamination Risk
Manufacturing
Low
- Plain rice is single-ingredient and gluten-free.
- Rice is not a gluten grain.
- Choose certified GF if highly sensitive to bulk handling.
Restaurant
Medium
- Rice cooked with soy sauce (most contains wheat).
- Shared steamer/pot/utensils with couscous or barley.
- Ask how the rice is seasoned and prepared.
Home
Low
- Plain rice in clean water and pot is gluten-free.
- Verify seasoned rice mixes’ ingredient lists.
Rice Types & Products — GF Status
- White, brown, jasmine, basmati, arborio rice — gluten-free
- Wild rice (a grass seed) — gluten-free; check blends with barley
- Glutinous / sticky / sweet rice — gluten-free (name ≠ gluten)
- Seasoned rice mixes / pilaf / “rice-a-roni”-style boxes — often NOT GF (wheat pasta/seasoning)
- Rice cooked with soy sauce or in a shared steamer — cross-contact risk
What to Look For — Or Avoid
- Plain, single-ingredient rice of any variety
- Understand “glutinous/sticky/sweet rice” is gluten-free
- Seasoned mixes labeled gluten-free with no wheat in “Contains:”
- Pilaf / “rice-a-roni”-style boxes with wheat pasta
- Rice cooked with regular (wheat) soy sauce
- Shared steamer/pot also used for couscous or barley
Frequently Asked Questions
Is rice gluten-free?
Yes. Plain rice is a naturally gluten-free grain and is not on the FDA’s gluten-grain list (wheat, barley, rye, hybrids). All common varieties — white, brown, jasmine, basmati, arborio, wild, and glutinous/sticky rice — are gluten-free.
Is glutinous or sticky rice gluten-free?
Yes. “Glutinous rice,” “sticky rice,” and “sweet rice” are gluten-free. The word “glutinous” refers to the rice’s sticky, glue-like cooked texture — it does not mean the rice contains gluten.
Why are flavored rice mixes not gluten-free?
Seasoned rice mixes, pilafs, and “rice-a-roni”-style boxes often include wheat-based pasta, hydrolyzed wheat protein, or wheat in the seasoning packet. The rice is gluten-free; the added ingredients are the gluten. Always read the ingredient list and “Contains:” statement.
Is restaurant rice gluten-free?
Plain steamed rice usually is, but it can be cross-contaminated — for example rice cooked with regular soy sauce (most contains wheat), or made in a steamer or pot also used for couscous or barley. Ask how the rice is seasoned and prepared.
Is wild rice gluten-free?
Yes. Wild rice is technically a grass seed, not true rice, and it is gluten-free. It is often sold in blends, so check the package in case it is mixed with barley or a seasoned, wheat-containing product.
Can people with celiac disease eat rice?
Yes. Plain rice is naturally gluten-free and is a staple grain on the gluten-free diet. The only cautions are seasoned rice mixes that add wheat and restaurant cross-contact from soy sauce or shared cooking equipment.