Is Kraft Dressing Vegan?

Kraft Dressing packaging
!

It Depends

Not certified

Kraft makes a large line of salad dressings and the vegan status swings hard by flavor. Creamy styles like Ranch, Buttermilk Ranch, Caesar, Blue Cheese, and Thousand Island contain egg yolks, buttermilk, or whey and are not vegan. Oil-based Italian styles (Zesty Italian, Golden Italian) and Catalina (Classic and Zesty) have no obvious animal ingredients in their current formulations and are widely considered accidentally vegan. "Creamy" or "Caesar" in the name is almost always a red flag.

The catch: The brand name alone tells you nothing. Ranch and Caesar variants contain both milk (buttermilk, whey) and egg yolks, while the Italian and Catalina variants skip animal ingredients entirely. You have to read the label for every specific SKU.

Category

Condiments

!

Verdict

It Depends

Brand

Kraft

Kraft Ranch (Classic and Buttermilk) lists egg yolks, buttermilk, and whey from milk as core ingredients. Kraft Caesar contains egg and typically anchovies or anchovy-derived flavor.

Kraft Blue Cheese contains milk and egg. Kraft Thousand Island contains egg yolks.

On the vegan-friendly side, Kraft Zesty Italian (16 oz standard version) is dairy and egg free. Kraft Golden Italian lists no animal-derived ingredients.

Kraft Classic Catalina and Zesty Catalina are tomato-based and contain no dairy or eggs, making them commonly cited as accidentally vegan. Fat-free Italian versions may use natural flavors or other ambiguous additives, so stricter vegans should contact Kraft directly about those.

Formulations can change, so always check the current label and allergen statement, especially for milk and egg callouts.

What makes it non-vegan

  • egg yolks
  • buttermilk
  • whey (from milk)
  • skim milk
  • Parmesan cheese

Vegan alternatives

As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

Looking to make your own? Browse our vegan swaps.

Other condiments

See all condiments we have checked →

Frequently asked

Is Kraft Dressing Vegan?

Kraft makes a large line of salad dressings and the vegan status swings hard by flavor. Creamy styles like Ranch, Buttermilk Ranch, Caesar, Blue Cheese, and Thousand Island contain egg yolks, buttermilk, or whey and are not vegan. Oil-based Italian styles (Zesty Italian, Golden Italian) and Catalina (Classic and Zesty) have no obvious animal ingredients in their current formulations and are widely considered accidentally vegan. "Creamy" or "Caesar" in the name is almost always a red flag.

What is the catch with Kraft Dressing?

The brand name alone tells you nothing. Ranch and Caesar variants contain both milk (buttermilk, whey) and egg yolks, while the Italian and Catalina variants skip animal ingredients entirely. You have to read the label for every specific SKU.

What can I use instead of Kraft Dressing?

Vegan options include Annie's Naturals Goddess Dressing (vegan, widely available), Primal Kitchen Caesar Dressing (avocado oil, no egg or dairy), Follow Your Heart Vegan Ranch (explicitly vegan), Newman's Own Olive Oil and Vinegar Dressing.

Is Kraft Dressing certified vegan?

Kraft Dressing does not carry a third-party vegan certification, so the verdict here is based on its current ingredient list and manufacturer information.

Sources

Last verified June 20, 2026. See how we verify. Always confirm on the current product label, since recipes change. Product photo via Open Food Facts.

Was this helpful?

Rate this guide

Be the first to rate this

Comments

Join the conversation