Oreo Cookies (US — current) vs Oreo Cookies (EU) (European Union)
The US and international formulas are not the same — here's exactly what changed and why.
Oreo Cookies (US — current)
Mondelēz International USA
Ingredients
Unbleached Enriched Flour, Sugar, Palm and/or Canola Oil, Cocoa (Processed with Alkali), High Fructose Corn Syrup, Leavening, Cornstarch, Salt, Soy Lecithin, Vanillin, Chocolate, TBHQ
⚠️ Preservatives
TBHQ
Oreo Cookies (EU) (European Union)
Ingredients
Wheat Flour, Sugar, Palm Oil, Cocoa Mass, Wheat Starch, Glucose-Fructose Syrup, Leavening Agents, Emulsifiers (Soya Lecithin), Salt, Flavourings
Banned ingredient comparison
| Ingredient | 🇺🇸 US Version | 🌍 International | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tbhq | 🚫 Present | ✅ Not present | Banned Overseas |
| Partially Hydrogenated Oils | ✅ Not present | ✅ Not present | Banned Overseas |
Why the difference?
The same company makes both versions — but they use different formulas depending on where the product is sold. In the EU, UK, and Canada, regulations require either banning certain additives outright or mandating warning labels (e.g., "may have an adverse effect on activity and attention in children" for certain synthetic dyes).
Rather than print warning labels, most manufacturers reformulate the product for international markets — using natural colorants like paprika extract, beetroot concentrate, or spirulina instead of petroleum-derived synthetic dyes.
The US FDA has a different standard: it deems additives "Generally Recognized as Safe" (GRAS) based on older safety data, while EFSA (the European Food Safety Authority) applies stricter precautionary principles and requires manufacturers to prove safety rather than assume it.
Ingredients banned overseas — deep dive
Key differences explained
EU trans fat regulations preceded the US ban by years; EU Oreos were never made with PHOs. TBHQ is permitted in EU at 100mg/kg in fats but is commonly absent from EU Oreo formulations. EU's stricter food additive philosophy results in a cleaner ingredient list.
Frequently asked questions
Why is Oreo Cookies (US — current) different from the Oreo Cookies (EU) (European Union)?+
Are the banned ingredients in the US version dangerous?+
Can I buy the international version in the US?+
Switch to safer alternatives
Find clean brands without these ingredients — organized by category.