Is Amaranth Gluten Free?

Gluten Free
Naturally gluten-free.
Amaranth is a seed with no gluten. It's a complete protein and ancient superfood.

Coeliac Disease

No restrictions. High nutrient density.

Gluten Sensitivity (NCGS)

No restrictions. Beneficial minerals for NCGS sufferers.

Why Does Amaranth Not Contain Gluten?

Amaranth seeds lack gluten-forming proteins and are rich in minerals and complete amino acids.

Australia vs United States

Australia (FSANZ)

FSANZ recognised as GF. Nutrient-rich option.

United States (FDA)

FDA recognises as naturally GF.

Nutrition Information

Nutrition Facts
Per 100g ยท Typical serve: 100 g (dry)
Energy1554 kJ / 371 kcal
Protein13.6g
Fat, total7.0g
Saturated fat1.5g
Carbohydrate65.3g
Sugars1.7g
Dietary fibre6.7g
Sodium4mg

Source: USDA FDC. Values are for the generic food in its standard form. Branded products may vary. Always check the product label for the most accurate nutrition information.

What to Watch For

None significant

Gluten Free Alternatives

If you need a gluten free substitute, consider: Quinoa, buckwheat, millet, teff.

Medical disclaimer: This is general information about gluten content, not medical advice. If you have coeliac disease, non-coeliac gluten sensitivity, or a wheat allergy, always consult your doctor or accredited practising dietitian before making dietary changes. Product formulations change. Always read the label.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Amaranth gluten free?

Amaranth is a seed with no gluten. It's a complete protein and ancient superfood.

Can coeliacs eat amaranth?

No restrictions. High nutrient density.

More from RefDat

Looking for kitchen gear that handles gluten-free cooking? See RefDat's Australian reviews of rice cookers for coeliac-friendly options. Explore more reference data at refdat.com.

How We Verify This

Every food in our database is reviewed against current FSANZ and FDA gluten-free standards. Brand data is verified against manufacturer labelling. We cross-reference with Coeliac Australia ingredient lists and the USDA FoodData Central database. When Australian and US standards differ, we apply the stricter standard.

Sources

FSANZ, WHO, Nutrition Australia

Last reviewed: May 2026