Kellogg's Raisin Bran Cereal: Labelgrade B (77/100)

B 77 / 100 — Very low saturated fat and substantial fiber.

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Protein
62/100
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Ingredients
75/100
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Sat fat
98/100
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Sodium
64/100
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Sugar
79/100
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Fiber
100/100

The short answer

Kellogg’s Raisin Bran Cereal delivers 2.76g of protein and 114 calories per 1 Container (USDA FDC 2682480). Per 100g that’s 7.9g of protein; per oz, 2.2g. The Labelgrade is B (77 / 100): Very low saturated fat and substantial fiber.

Why this Labelgrade

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityC62 / 1007.9g per 100g — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting
Ingredient qualityB75 / 1006 ingredients, recognizable, no significant additive flags
Saturated fat loadA+98 / 1000.14g per serving (0.4g per 100g) — very low
Sodium loadC64 / 100119mg per serving (96mg per oz) — meaningful per 100g
Sugar loadB79 / 10010g sugar (5.25g added) — moderate
FiberA+100 / 1004.3g per serving — excellent, particularly in this category
OverallB77 / 100Weighted blend: protein 25% · ingredients 22% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 12% · fiber 8%

The grade tells the real story of this cereal in two numbers: a perfect fiber score and a B on sugar. Most boxed cereal is dessert-adjacent, and the grade tracks added sugar against whole-grain fiber — Raisin Bran is one of the few that actually has the fiber to put on the other side of the scale. It out-grades the sugar-first kids’ cereals for exactly that reason. The ceiling is structural: it’s a grain cereal, so protein density stays low, and the raisins that supply the fiber and chew also supply sugar.

The bran-and-raisin trade-off

The two named ingredients pull in opposite directions, and understanding that is the whole point of this cereal. Wheat bran is the outer layer of the wheat kernel and one of the most fiber-dense foods in any grocery store — it’s why this cereal posts 4.3g of fiber per serving when a cornflake posts almost none. Fiber is the dimension that boxed cereal almost always fails, and it’s the single reason Raisin Bran sits at a B.

The raisins are the complication. They add real things — more fiber, potassium (167mg here), a bit of iron, and the chewy contrast that makes the cereal pleasant — but a raisin is a dried grape, which means it’s mostly concentrated sugar. So of the 10g of total sugar in a serving, only about half (5.25g) is “added” in the FDA sense; the rest rides in on the fruit. The practical read: this is a genuinely high-fiber cereal that happens to be moderately sweet, and the sweetness is at least attached to fruit and bran rather than a bare sugar coating. That’s a better deal than most of the aisle, but it’s still 10g of sugar, and anyone counting should know the raisins are the reason.

How it compares

ProductProtein per servingPer 100 gPer ozCalories
Kellogg’s Raisin Bran Cereal (this product)2.76g7.9g2.2g114
General Mills Rice Chex Cereal3g7.5g2.1g150
General Mills Honey Nut Cheerios Cereal2g7.1g2g110
Post Honey Roasted Bunches Of Oats Cereal, Honey Roasted4g7g2g220
Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark)31g8.8g~165

What the serving size hides — and what milk adds

Two things make the on-paper numbers easy to misread. First, the serving the USDA recorded is “1 Container” at 35g — a single-serve cup, the kind sold in variety packs and hotel breakfasts, not the ¾-cup (~59g) pour most people shake out of a family box. A standard bowl is closer to 1.7× everything on this page: roughly 7g of fiber but also ~17g of sugar. The grade doesn’t change — it’s calculated per 100g — but the absolute numbers you eat depend entirely on the pour.

Second, none of this counts the milk. Dry, a serving brings 2.76g of protein, which is modest. Half a cup of dairy milk adds about 4g of protein and ~100mg of calcium, nearly doubling the protein and turning a fiber-forward bowl into a more balanced breakfast — at the cost of ~60 calories and a few grams of natural milk sugar. If you eat Raisin Bran specifically for the fiber, that’s the bran doing the work; the milk is what makes it a meal rather than a snack.

Scope

This page covers Kellogg’s Raisin Bran Cereal (202.5 LBR), UPC 30038000008963, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 2682480. Kellogg’s sells multiple variants in this product line — other sizes, flavors, or fat levels may have different macros and Labelgrade scores. Manufacturers periodically reformulate; always cross-reference the actual package label, especially if you have allergies or dietary restrictions.

Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)

INGREDIENTS: WHOLE GRAIN WHEAT, RAISINS, WHEAT BRAN, SUGAR, BROWN SUGAR SYRUP. CONTAINS 2% OR LESS Of malt flavor, salt.

Where to buy

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 1 Container

Size 202.5 LBR
UPC 30038000008963
Verified 2026-06-05 · checked monthly
114
Calories
2.76g
Protein 6% DV
27.9g
Carbs 10% DV
0.665g
Fat 1% DV
per 100 g
7.9g protein · 326 cal ·29g sugar ·340mg sodium
per oz (1 oz)
2.2g protein · 92 cal ·8.1g sugar ·96mg sodium
Sugar 10g · 5.25g added
Fiber 4.3g · 15% DV
Saturated fat 0.14g
Trans fat 0g
Sodium 119mg · 5% DV
Cholesterol 0mg
Calcium 13mg · 1% DV
Iron 1.08mg · 6% DV
Potassium 167mg · 4% DV

See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator

Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (1 Container)
Calories114
Protein2.76g
Total Fat0.665g
Saturated Fat0.14g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates27.9g
Dietary Fiber4.3g
Total Sugars10g
Added Sugars5.25g
Sodium119mg
Cholesterol0mg
Calcium13mg
Iron1.08mg
Potassium167mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Raisin Bran Cereal (202.5 LBR) · UPC 30038000008963. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.

How this fits each diet

Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.

Vegan
A+ 100/100

contains no listed animal products

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
F 0/100

contains a gluten-bearing ingredient

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Kellogg's Raisin Bran a healthy cereal?

It's one of the better grocery-aisle cereals, and the reason is fiber: 4.3g per serving (about 15% of the 28g Daily Value) from the wheat bran, which is well above most boxed cereals. The honest catch is sugar — 10g total, because raisins are dried grapes and carry their own concentrated sugar on top of the 5.25g that's added. So it's a high-fiber cereal that is also moderately sweet, not a low-sugar one. As whole-grain breakfasts go it earns its B; just don't mistake 'raisins' for 'no sugar.'

Why does Raisin Bran score a B (77/100)?

Fiber carries it. The wheat bran delivers 4.3g per serving, which scores a perfect A+ and is rare in this category — that single dimension is what lifts it above the sugar-first kids' cereals. Saturated fat is negligible (A+) too. What holds it back from a higher grade is everything raisins bring: 10g of sugar (a B) and a protein density of only 7.9g per 100g (a C). Net result, a solid B for a cereal that is genuinely fiber-rich but not low-sugar.

Are the raisins the reason there's so much sugar?

Largely, yes. Of the 10g of total sugar, 5.25g is added (sugar and brown sugar syrup in the coating); the rest is the natural fruit sugar in the raisins, which are simply concentrated grapes. That's the central trade-off of this cereal: the raisins add real fiber, potassium, and chew, but they're also dense little packets of sugar. It's a more honest sweetness than a frosted flake — it comes with fruit and bran rather than just a sugar shell — but it still lands at 10g.

What's the serving size, and does it include milk?

The macros here are for dry cereal only — milk is not included. Note the serving the USDA logged is '1 Container' at 35g, which is a single-serve cup, not a standard ¾-cup (~59g) bowl from a big box; a full bowl would run roughly 1.7× these numbers. Adding ½ cup of dairy milk contributes about 4g of protein and 100mg of calcium, but also ~60 calories and natural milk sugar, so the bowl is more protein-balanced than the dry numbers suggest.

Is there a better-graded cereal to pick instead?

If you want a higher grade in the same aisle, [General Mills Rice Chex](/chex-rice-cereal-1-4-onz) is lower in sugar, and the engineered high-fiber bowls (Kashi GO, Catalina Crunch) beat it on both protein and fiber. But within the conventional fiber-cereal lane, Raisin Bran is already near the top — its 4.3g of fiber is the best of the everyday boxed cereals we've graded. The real upgrade is unsweetened bran flakes or plain oatmeal, where you keep the fiber and drop most of the sugar.

When was this data last verified?

2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2682480. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days when a manufacturer reformulates.