Are Oreos Vegan?

Oreos packaging
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It Depends

Classic Oreos contain no animal-derived ingredients and are widely considered accidentally vegan, but several varieties contain milk, egg, or whey, and Mondelez does not certify any Oreos as vegan due to milk cross-contamination in shared facilities.

The catch: Mondelez explicitly warns of "milk as cross contact" across all Oreo products, and a number of specific varieties, including Cakesters, fudge-coated, and ice cream sandwich formats, actually contain dairy or egg as listed ingredients.

Category

Snacks

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Verdict

It Depends

Brand

Mondelez

Classic, Double Stuf, Golden, Thins, Mint, Birthday Cake, and most standard flavors contain no animal-derived ingredients and are broadly accepted by major vegan organizations as suitable for vegans. However, Oreo Cakesters contain milk and eggs; fudge-coated/chocolate-coated varieties (White Fudge-Covered, Cadbury Chocolate Coated) contain whey and milk solids; and Oreo Vanilla Ice Cream Sandwiches contain dairy.

Regional variation matters: Japanese Oreos contain milk powder, and some UK Peanut Butter Oreo varieties list milk. In the US, cane sugar is sometimes filtered with bone char during processing, this is a processing aid that does not appear in the final product, and The Vegan Society and most mainstream vegan organizations do not consider bone-char-processed sugar to make a product non-vegan.

Strict vegans who avoid bone-char sugar should note that Mondelez sources sugar from multiple suppliers without guaranteeing bone-char-free supply chains.

What makes it non-vegan

  • milk
  • milk solids
  • whey
  • egg (Oreo Cakesters)

Vegan alternatives

  • Newman's Own Newman-O's
  • Back to Nature Classic Creme Cookies
  • 365 Everyday Value Chocolate Sandwich Cremes (Whole Foods)
  • GATO Cookie 'n' Cream (UK, Vegan Society certified)

Looking to make your own? Browse our vegan swaps.

Other snacks

Read the full deep-dive guide →

Sources

Last checked June 19, 2026. Always confirm on the current product label, since recipes change. Product photo via Open Food Facts.

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