1. Ezekiel 4:9 / 2. Butterfly Bakery of Vermont / 3. Cascadian Farms Purely O’s / 4. Arrowhead Mills / 5. Barbara’s Brown Rice Crisps
Overall Best Healthy Cereal
Food for Life Ezekiel 4:9 Sprouted Grain Crunchy Cereal packs the most nutritional bang per spoonful. (Read more about this brand under Good Stuff below.)
As a child of the 50’s, I ate cold cereal for breakfast on most mornings. We could help ourselves and my mom was free to do other chores.
My father thought boxed cereal was great because as a child of the Depression era, he had to eat porridge or oatmeal every day. He often commented how fortunate we were to have tasty cereal!
When we ran out of cold cereal, we took white bread, sprinkled sugar on it, and poured milk over it. (It’s amazing we all survived, although I did seriously clean up my diet in my twenties).
Sugar was introduced to cold cereal in the 1950’s, and pretty soon every brand was named “Sugar This” and “Sugar That.”
Sugar Smacks had the distinction of having the most sugar by weight of any cereal on the market when it debuted in the early 1950s. Fifty-six percent of the cereal was sugar (this shows you how far things have come!). The Eisenhower Era also gave us iconic cereals like Frosted Flakes, Cocoa Puffs, and Alpha-Bits.
When I had my children in the 1980’s, I had just rejected eating any sugar (the Sugar Blues book was popular back then) so I switched breakfast cereal to healthy porridge. Rice, millet, oats, and other whole grains were cooked into a hot whole grain breakfast with soy milk.
My son would visit his cousins and ask for something “cold and crunchy with cow’s milk.” There were a few cereal brands that didn’t have added sugar but they were hard to find–Erewhon’s Crispy Brown Rice, Oatios, and Kellogg’s Nutri Grain cereal were our three favorites, but the they all have since been discontinued. Today, sugar has crept back into cold cereals even the organic, “healthy” ones.
Healthiest Granola
Butterfly Bakery of Vermont Granola
This organic granola from Butterfly Bakery is handmade in Vermont, and sweetened with just pure maple syrup. It packs other nutritional powerhouses, too, like quinoa and coconut oil. $11.99 — or subscribe and save up to 5%Buy Now
We set out to find the healthiest cold cereals to write this guide, because we know our readers want the convenience without compromising their health.
Ultimately, when you go for convenience, you are often compromising your health, but I think the key is to keep those compromises to a minimum and make sure that at least 80% of your food fresh, whole, and organic.
Healthiest O Cereal
With just three ingredients, and only one gram of sugar, this is our favorite brand of O.
Our Healthy Baby Puffs Guide offers details on what’s wrong with pretty much all boxed cold cereals, which is the process of extrusion. The bottom line is this: extrusion–mixing grains with water and processing that paste through a special device (plus high heat) to produce a desired shape–compromises the integrity of the grains’ nutrients, breaks the bonds of fatty acids, inactivates enzymes, and increases the glycemic index of the food.
This is one reason that really no cold cereal can be considered truly Good Stuff when compared to, say, a bowl of oatmeal.
Healthiest Gluten-Free Cereal
Arrowhead Mills Organic Maple Buckwheat Flakes have five grams of sugar, but still have a short list of ingredients.
Just like everything else, label-reading is important when shopping for healthy cereal. When categorizing popular brands for this guide, we considered:
Of course, some of this can be subjective; I know that some people aren’t comfortable with any extruded grains at all. This guide is obviously not for them.
Healthiest Crispy Rice Cereal
Just one gram of sugar per serving.
You’ve probably heard that rice, and particularly brown rice, is often contaminated with arsenic. This is unfortunately true, and so we gave extra points to those cereals that don’t contain rice.
Of course, many of our Good and Okay cereals do contain rice, so just consider eating these in moderation, especially if there is a lot of rice in your diet otherwise.
Best Healthy Cereal for Paleo Diets
Thrive Market Brand Coconut Flakes are a favorite among paleolites.
This Whole Foods private label cereal contains just organic whole grain oat flour, organic rice flour, organic cane sugar (one gram per serving), sea salt, calcium carbonate, and vitamin E.
This flake earned its spot in the Good Stuff ranks because it is sweetened with fruit juice rather than sugar (3 grams per serving), and doesn’t contain any rice products.
Like mana other puffed cereals, this one contains nothing but organic kamut. (Of course, this means it contains zero grams of sugar!).
These sprouted corn flakes have only one gram of sugar per serving, but it comes from pear juice.
These only contain one gram of sugar per serving, but of course all rice crisps should be eaten in moderation because of arsenic concerns.
$11.99 — or subscribe and save up to 5%Buy Now
These contain just oats, barley, and malted barley extract, which lends only one 1 gram of sugar per serving.
This version of crispy brown rice does contain a little cane sugar–in addition to brown rice syrup and maple syrup–but each serving contains less than two grams of sugar. Erewhon has sadly discontinued their line of cereals.
The only ingredients in these corn flakes are organic milled corn and sea salt. This is a staple in Maia’s home. Erewhon has sadly discontinued their line of cereals.
This one has a nice short ingredient list–it’s made of just organic brown rice, organic brown rice syrup, and sea salt, and each serving has less than one gram of sugar.
Erewhon has sadly discontinued their line of cereals.
This multi-grain cereal contains organic sorghum, organic brown rice, and organic quinoa, and is sweetened with brown rice syrup. Each serving contains under a gram of sugar.
Erewhon has sadly discontinued their line of cereals.
This one is 100% organic, with zero grams of sugar, and contains just sprouted wheat, malted barley, sprouted barley, sprouted millet, sprouted lentils, sprouted soybeans, sprouted spelt, and water.
I’m not actually into sweet “junky” cereals—probably because I grew up in a home where Grape Nuts were a treat. BUT, if you love Froot Loops, you’re gonna be excited about Magic Spoon, which is somehow grain-free, very low sugar, 100% natural, Keto-friendly, high protein, low carb, etc. I have no idea how they’ve pulled this off, but if you visit their site and use code GIMMEMAGICSPOON, they will ship your cereal to you for free.
This one is great for the Paleo crowd, has no gross oils, and is sweetened with just maple syrup.
My grandkids aren’t huge fans of this one, but I am because it only has one gram of sugar.
Organic spelt kernels, organic, and in a bag not a box. 0 grams of sugar.
Organic Oats, organic garbanzos beans, they source the organic farm, organic cane sugar, tapioca 2 grams per serving.
We love that this brand has only ingredients and are organic, and they still come in at 5 grams of sugar per serving. This brand is popular with Paleo crowd.
This gluten-free option has only a few ingredients and 5 grams of sugar.
This isn’t Good Stuff only because it uses cane sugar, but there are only 4 grams per serving.
We like that this one doesn’t contain any sugar, but with eight grams of sugar per serving (from honey and brown rice syrup), it’s too high to be considered Good Stuff.
Erewhon has sadly discontinued their line of cereals.
Organic maize and amaranth are great, cane sugar (four grams per serving) isn’t so great.
We like that this brand contains a beans blend and only 2 grams of sugar. It’s not organic (but it is non-GMO).
These organic flakes are made of mostly various forms of coconut, and come in at 5 grams of sugar per serving.
Whole quinoa is a great ingredient, but these aren’t organic and contain 4 grams of cane sugar per serving.
My grandson, Wolfie, says loves this brand because: “When I leave the room and come back, they aren’t mushy like most cereal.” This brand claims 16 grams of whole grains, but this is rather misleading because the grains (wheat, barley, oat, quinoa, and millet) are all made from flour. We gave this brand extra points for the Eco-Pac bag, which means that it is using 66% less packaging than a cardboard cereal box.
All organic and sprouted, wheat, barley, millet, lentils, soybeans, spelt, malted barley, and agave. Contains 7 grams of sugar.
Any “frosted” cereals are Bad Stuff; for example, Kellogg’s Frosted Mini Wheats have have 11 grams of sugar (plus toxic BHT).
Although these have a simple ingredient list of whole grain oats, corn starch, sugar, salt, and vitamins, Cheerio’s are not Organic and contains tri-potassium phosphate.
These contain everything you’ll find in regular Cheerios plus rice bran oil, canola oil, and brown sugar syrup. They also pack 9 grams sugar per serving.
There’s so much Bad Stuff here–modified food starch, corn syrup, hydrogenated vegetable oil, and artificial flavors to start.
These aren’t organic, but they low in sugars with just 3 grams per serving. Unfortunately, these flakes contain the toxic preservative BHT.
These pack 13 grams of sugar, although to be fair some of this comes from the raisins.
These do just contain rice, sugar, salt, and malt flavor, but still too much sugar.
Best of the Worst
If you’re in a pinch–at a hotel buffet or similar situation–and have no organic, healthy cereal options, choose plain Corn Flakes or Cheerios.
These all contain too much sugar to be considered Good Stuff.
It’s organic, but only has 6 grams of sugar.
This cereal says whole grains, but what is has is oat flour and wheat flour mixed with sugar. There are 10 grams of sugar per serving and it’s not organic
Again, this cereal says whole grain and it’s mostly made of flour with corn bran and oat fiber added in. None of the ingredients is organic.
These varieties contain sunflower oil and 13, 7, and 8 grams of sugar per serving, respectively.
These squares contain 7 grams of white sugar, over our threshold for Good Stuff!
Now owned by Kellogg, Kashi makes 25 types of cereal, but they all have too much sugar or other questionable ingredients.
A lot of you asked about this because you love getting it at Costco. The ingredients are all organic, and include rolled oats, cane sugar, soy oil, kamut wheat, rolled spelt, almonds, inulin, rice starch, rolled quinoa, rolled amaranth, sea salt, molasses, cinnamon, and natural vanilla flavor. While none of these is terrible (soy oil isn’t so great), the nine grams of sugar it contains per serving knocks this out of Good Stuff territory.
This flavor includes a bean blend, brown rice, cane sugar, cocoa, sunflower oil, sunflower lecithin. It packs 9 grams of sugar per serving and is not organic. (FYI: the strawberry and honey flavors from this brand aren’t any better.)
This brand has a number of questionable ingredients–including wheat starch as well as white and brown sugars–none of which is organic. Each servings contain 9 grams of sugar.
These contain soy oil and have 7 grams of sugar per serving.
I like that this is organic, but it contains 13 grams of sugar per serving.
I know that Maia buys this ones for her kids, but it’s not organic, and contains modified corn starch and white sugar (although only 1 gram per serving). Trader Joe’s Honey Nut O’s are also Sneaky with 9 grams of sugar per serving.
Above, you’ll see one brand of truly healthful granola, listed as Good Stuff. Unfortunately, most brands of granola you find in health food stores contain a lot of either cane sugar or cane syrup. This includes:
To your health,
P.S. You’ll notice in this post that I’ve linked a variety of a lot of these cereals to be purchased at Thrive Market. If you aren’t familiar with Thrive, I encourage you to give it a try. It’s a Costco-meets-Whole Foods-meets-Amazon model, with hard-to-find healthful foods delivered–for free–at steeply discounted prices.
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On the Cascadian Farm website, the list of ingredients is as follows.
Whole Grain Oats*, Whole Grain Barley*, Wheat Starch*, Malted Barley Extract*, Sea Salt, Calcium Carbonate, Oats*, Malted Barley*, Vitamin E (mixed tocopherols) Added to Preserve Freshness
Is it still okay?
yes:)
I saw that too and was wondering about the calcium carbonate.
Yes, there is nothing concerning about calcium carbonate, fortunately:).
I was wondering about the Trader Joe’s Shredded Bite Sized Wheat Square cereal? The only 2 I gredie at are whole wheat and Vitamin E to preserve freshness? No sugar, no sodium. I get these for my son all the time so I am crossing my fingers!
Thank you so much for this! I didn't see any mention of some of the Whole Foods options such as Cascadian Farms or Nature's Path. What do you think of these:
-Cascadian Farm Organic Hearty Morning Fiber
-Nature's Path Organic Smart Bran
-Nature's Path Organic Heritage Flakes
Thank you so much for all you and your family do!
I’ve stayed away from oat containing cereals and cereal bars because of the weed killer contamination that we’ve heard a lot about. I have not seen any updates about this. Is it safe to feed my babies oat cereal now?
Hi Kim,
We appreciate your concern over weed killers in oats. It is one we share, but there is some pretty troubling news on that subject. Even farms that are fully certified organic or biodynamic or operate in a responsible way can end up with products with those toxins in them. This is because those weed killers are so widely used...and because they drift easily, that there are very few places they cannot reach. This is true not only of oats but just about every crop, every where. So until we find a way to verify the absence of those toxins in products, or until we make those substances illegal, it is a problem it seems that we all just have to live with. :( :( :(
Vitamin E (mixed tocopherols) are fine?
Finally I am on the right track. Been giving my LO the CF O's since he was a baby. Would like to know what you think of Kashi's new kid's line. Is it OK in small amounts? I mix the O's with them. the cinnamon, cocoa, or berry combo sometimes cause his taste buds are changing.
We didn't look into that line, but we will!
Hi, I'm always skeptical about anything that has "natural flavors" but since it's now being included even in organic products, I'm wondering about how safe those are. Do you have any input?
I think you're right to be skeptical. There's some good evidence that "natural flavors" are Sneaky Stuff.
Thank you for your ongoing great work. However, I was disappointed that you did not specify how much sugar is in your best-rated Butterfly Bakery Granola from Vermont, perhaps because it's "just pure maple syrup." With minor differences, sugar is sugar when it comes to calories and tooth decay. ( "Natural" sugars are also not a realistic source of minerals--nor is sea salt--as some insist. )
You mentioned a preference for palm sugar. I am not familiar with this sugar, but assume it comes from the same source as palm and palm kernel oil----palm plantations created by clearing rain forests. Our use of these products comes at the cost of destruction of habitat for endangered species like the orangutan, destruction of the homelands of native peoples, and increased global warming.
I also disagree with your characterization of coconut oil as a "nutritional powerhouse." Just because it's a "natural" saturated fat doesn't mean it's great. For most Americans, the problem is not lack of coconut fat, it's too much fat of all types.
What are your thoughts on living intentions cereal brand. My four year older loves the cacao crunch!