Special K Protein Plus: 15.4g Protein per 1 1/3 Cup, Labelgrade B (78/100)
B 78 / 100 — Strong protein density (26.1g per 100g), very low saturated fat, and substantial fiber.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Kellogg’s Special K Protein Plus delivers 15.4g of protein for 212 calories in a 1 1/3 cup (59g) serving, measured dry (USDA FDC 2518898) — that’s 26.1g per 100g, a genuinely high protein density for a breakfast cereal. The trick is that the wheat-and-rice base is reinforced with wheat gluten and soy protein isolate, the same lever most “protein” cereals pull. It earns a B (78/100): the protein and fiber numbers are strong, but it’s still a sweetened grain cereal, and the sodium load drags the grade down.
Why the B
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | A- | 89 / 100 | 26.1g per 100g — top-tier for cereal, on par with adding a scoop of protein |
| Ingredient quality | B- | 70 / 100 | A real grain base, but leans on isolated soy/gluten and carries BHT plus added flavors |
| Sugar load | C+ | 69 / 100 | 8.08g sugar, 7.85g added — moderate; sweetened, not a low-sugar product |
| Sodium load | D | 52 / 100 | 258mg per serving — high per 100g, the single biggest ding |
| Saturated fat | A+ | 98 / 100 | 0.295g per serving — naturally near-zero, as cereals tend to be |
| Fiber | A- | 86 / 100 | 4.72g per serving — excellent for the category, from whole wheat and bran |
The honest read: protein density and fiber are doing the heavy lifting, and they’re legitimately good. What holds it at a B rather than higher is the combination of moderate added sugar and a sodium level that’s high once you normalize per 100g. Nothing here is a disqualifier — it just isn’t a clean-label product, and the grade reflects that.
The milk asterisk worth knowing
Boxes in this category almost always advertise their protein “with 1/2 cup skim milk,” and Special K Protein Plus is no exception. The 15.4g above is the cereal alone, dry. Pour on half a cup of skim and you’re adding roughly another 4g of protein (plus ~40 calories), which is how the marketing reaches its headline number. That’s not deceptive — milk is the normal way people eat it — but if you’re tracking macros, log the cereal at 15.4g and add your milk separately. Eaten dry as a snack or made with water, the cereal number is what you get.
How it stacks up against the alternatives
The useful comparison runs in two directions. Against ordinary cereal, this is a clear step up: plain corn or rice flakes deliver 2-3g of protein per bowl, so 15.4g is five-to-seven times the protein for a familiar flake you already know how to eat.
Against the grain-free “keto” cereals, it loses on carbs and sugar:
| Product | Protein / serving | Added sugar | Total carbs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Special K Protein Plus (this product) | 15.4g | 7.85g | 38.6g |
| Magic Spoon (grain-free) | ~12-13g | 0g | ~13g (3g net) |
| Catalina Crunch (grain-free) | ~11g | 0g | ~14g (5g net) |
Magic Spoon and Catalina Crunch hit comparable protein with essentially no sugar and a quarter of the carbohydrate, because they replace grain with milk-protein and fiber blends. The trade is price and availability: those run roughly $8-10 a box and live online or in specialty aisles, while Special K Protein Plus is a standard supermarket SKU at a fraction of the cost per serving. If your goal is low-carb, the keto cereals win outright. If your goal is “more protein than my usual cereal without changing my routine or budget,” this is the pragmatic pick.
Who it’s for
This is a familiar, affordable protein bump for breakfast — the right call for someone who already eats cereal and wants to roughly triple the protein without buying anything exotic or learning a new habit. The 4.72g of fiber is a real bonus most cereals can’t match. Just go in clear-eyed: it’s still a grain cereal with about 8g of added sugar and a notable sodium load, so it’s a smart upgrade rather than a “health food.” If you’re managing carbs or sugar tightly, a grain-free cereal or a savory egg-based breakfast will serve you better.
Ingredients
Whole wheat, rice, wheat gluten, sugar, soy protein isolate, wheat bran, then 2% or less of cinnamon, malt flavor, salt, natural flavors, and BHT (a preservative). Fortified with calcium carbonate, reduced iron, and a B-vitamin and vitamin D3 blend. The protein boost comes specifically from the wheat gluten and soy protein isolate layered onto the whole-wheat-and-rice base. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2518898.)
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 1/3 Cup
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 1/3 Cup) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 212 |
| Protein | 15.4g |
| Total Fat | 1.42g |
| Saturated Fat | 0.295g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 38.6g |
| Dietary Fiber | 4.72g |
| Total Sugars | 8.08g |
| Added Sugars | 7.85g |
| Sodium | 258mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Calcium | 130mg |
| Iron | 18mg |
| Potassium | 165mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Kellogg'S Special K Cereal Protein Plus 19oz · UPC 00038000143670. 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.
contains no listed animal products
contains no listed meat or fish
contains a gluten-bearing ingredient
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein is in Special K Protein Plus, and does the box already count milk?
The cereal itself has 15.4g of protein per 1 1/3 cup (59g) measured dry, per USDA FDC 2518898 — that's 26.1g per 100g. Kellogg's markets a higher number on the front of the box because it adds the protein from a serving of milk. Half a cup of skim milk contributes roughly another 4g, which is how the package reaches the 'plus' figure. With water or eaten dry, you get the 15.4g.
Where does the protein actually come from?
Most of it is built into a whole-wheat-and-rice base, then topped up with wheat gluten and soy protein isolate (the 3rd and 5th ingredients). It's the soy isolate and added gluten that push this above an ordinary flake cereal — plain corn or rice flakes land around 2g per serving.
Is this better than a low-sugar keto cereal like Magic Spoon or Catalina Crunch?
It depends what you're optimizing. Grain-free cereals like Magic Spoon (~12-13g protein, ~3g net carbs) and Catalina Crunch (~11g protein, ~5g net carbs) deliver similar protein with a fraction of the sugar and total carbs. Special K Protein Plus is a grain cereal — 38.6g total carbs and 7.85g added sugar per serving — but it costs a third as much and sits on any grocery shelf.
How much added sugar does it have?
7.85g of added sugar per 1 1/3 cup — 16% of the FDA 50g Daily Value. That's moderate for a sweetened cereal (Frosted Flakes is ~12g), but well above a keto cereal's near-zero. Total sugars are 8.08g; the rest is naturally occurring.
How much fiber and sodium per serving?
4.72g of fiber (17% of the 28g Daily Value) — genuinely good for a cereal, thanks to the whole wheat and added wheat bran. Sodium is 258mg, about 11% of the 2,300mg daily limit, which is on the high side per 100g and the main reason the sodium dimension grades a D.
Does it qualify as 'high in protein' under FDA rules?
Yes. 15.4g per serving is 31% of the FDA 50g Daily Value, clearing the 20% threshold needed to make the 'high in protein' claim — and it does so before any milk is added.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-03, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2518898. We re-verify top pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.