Nabisco Premium Original Saltine Crackers: Labelgrade C+ (66/100)
C+ 66 / 100 — Very low saturated fat, effectively zero sugar, and high sodium per 100g.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Nabisco Premium Saltines are the plain middle of the cracker shelf — cleaner than a sweetened cracker like Keebler Club, but saltier and lower-protein than a whole-grain one. The label is reasonable (unbleached enriched flour, a little oil, salt, yeast, malted barley), so the grade isn’t dragged down by additives; it’s dragged down by sodium. At 1g of protein, 0g fiber, and 135mg of sodium per 5 crackers (70 calories), the salt that gives the saltine its name is also its limiting factor. The Labelgrade is C+ (66 / 100) — a serviceable, neutral cracker, not a nutritious one.
Why this Labelgrade
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C- | 59 / 100 | 6.3g per 100g — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting |
| Ingredient quality | B- | 72 / 100 | 13 ingredients, recognizable, no significant additive flags |
| Saturated fat load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0g saturated fat — perfect |
| Sodium load | F | 23 / 100 | 135mg per serving (239mg per oz) — high; structural for cured/preserved foods |
| Sugar load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0g of sugar — perfect |
| Fiber | F | 30 / 100 | 0g fiber, expected for animal-protein products |
| Overall | C+ | 66 / 100 | Weighted blend: protein 25% · ingredients 22% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 12% · fiber 8% |
How it compares
| Product | Protein per serving | Per 100 g | Per oz | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nabisco Premium Original Saltine Crackers (this product) | 1g | 6.3g | 1.8g | 70.1 |
| Wheat Thins Original | 2g | 6.5g | 1.8g | 140 |
| Keebler Club Original Crackers | 0.812g | 5.8g | 1.6g | 68.6 |
| Carr’s Table Water Crackers Original | 1g | 7.1g | 2g | 50 |
| Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark) | — | 31g | 8.8g | ~165 |
The “settle your stomach” cracker — what that reputation is really about
Saltines have a place in almost every medicine cabinet’s worth of folk wisdom — the cracker you reach for when you’re nauseous, hungover, or easing back onto solid food. That reputation is earned and reasonable: they’re bland, dry, low in fat, and gentle on a queasy stomach, which is exactly why they show up on the classic BRAT-style sick-day list. As a functional food for those moments, a saltine does its job well.
What the reputation quietly papers over is that “easy on the stomach” and “good for you” are different claims. A saltine brings 1g of protein, zero fiber, and a meaningful dose of sodium — it’s a blank refined-carb canvas, which is the whole point when you’re nauseous and a liability when you’re snacking out of habit. Treat the saltine as the specific tool it is: a settle-the-stomach, neutral-base cracker. For everyday eating where you want the food to actually nourish you, it’s the wrong tool, and a whole-grain cracker is the right one.
Salt is the name — and the limiting number
The grade story here is almost entirely about sodium. Ingredient quality is fine: unbleached enriched flour, canola and palm oil, salt, malted barley flour, baking soda, and yeast — no sweeteners, no high-fructose corn syrup, no phosphate or preservative flags. But at 135mg of sodium per 5 crackers (239mg per oz), the saltine carries more salt than either Carr’s Table Water (79.9mg) or Keebler Club (127mg), and that’s the dimension dragging the score to C+. The name isn’t decorative.
Portion makes it worse in practice. A sleeve holds around 40 crackers, and because they’re small, crisp, and salty, it’s genuinely easy to clear half a sleeve while doing something else — at which point both the calories and the sodium have stacked up well past the labeled serving. If you’re watching sodium, this is the cracker to portion deliberately, and the one where reaching for a lower-sodium option like Carr’s, or a whole-grain cracker, actually moves the needle.
Scope
This page covers Nabisco Premium Original Saltine Crackers (4 oz/113 g), UPC 044000003821, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 2500607. Nabisco 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)
UNBLEACHED ENRICHED FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE {VITAMIN B1), RIBOFLAVIN (VITAMIN B2), FOLIC ACID), CANOLA OIL, PALM OIL, SEA SALT, SALT, MALTED BARLEY FLOUR, BAKING SODA, YEAST.
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 5 crackers
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (5 crackers) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 70.1 |
| Protein | 1g |
| Total Fat | 1.5g |
| Saturated Fat | 0g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 12g |
| Dietary Fiber | 0g |
| Total Sugars | 0g |
| Sodium | 135mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Calcium | 0mg |
| Iron | 0.8mg |
| Potassium | 20mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Premium Original Saltine Crackers (4 oz/113 g) · UPC 044000003821. 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
Are saltine crackers healthy?
Saltines are a plain, refined white-flour cracker — neutral rather than nutritious. Per 5 crackers you get 1g of protein, no fiber, and 135mg of sodium for 70 calories. They're genuinely useful for a queasy stomach or as a bland base, and the ingredient label is reasonably clean (flour, a little oil, salt, yeast, malted barley). But 'low-calorie' isn't the same as 'healthy,' and the salt is the real ceiling here. If you want a cracker that actually contributes fiber and protein, a whole-grain option does the job; the saltine doesn't pretend to.
Why do Nabisco Saltines earn a C+ and not higher?
The label is clean enough — unbleached enriched flour, canola and palm oil, salt, malted barley flour, baking soda, yeast, with no sweeteners or phosphate additives — so ingredient quality isn't the problem. Sodium is. At 135mg per serving (239mg per oz), salt is literally in the name, and our model scores that as the weakest dimension. Add the structural zeros every refined cracker shares (1g protein, 0g fiber), and the math lands at C+ (66). It's the plain middle of the cracker shelf: cleaner than Keebler Club, but saltier and lower-protein than a whole-grain cracker.
Are saltines a good 'diet' cracker?
They're low in calories per cracker (about 14 each), which is why they get a diet reputation — but low-calorie isn't the same as nutritious. Saltines bring almost no protein and zero fiber, so they don't blunt hunger the way a higher-protein, higher-fiber snack would, and you'll likely want more of them. As a settle-your-stomach or light-base cracker they're fine; as a weight-loss snack, you'll get more staying power from something with fiber and protein.
What's a serving, and is it easy to overeat?
The labeled serving is 5 crackers (16g) for 70 calories and 135mg of sodium. A standard sleeve holds roughly 40 crackers, and because they're small and crisp it's very easy to clear a sleeve's worth without noticing — which is where both the calories and the sodium quietly stack up. Counting out 5 (or a single sleeve at most) keeps the portion honest.
Is there a better-graded cracker on the site?
Yes. Triscuit Original is made from just whole grain wheat, canola oil, and sea salt — it carries 3g of protein per serving with genuine whole-grain fiber and grades B- (73), above the saltine's C+ (66). For everyday snacking, the whole-grain cracker is the upgrade. Keep saltines for what they're actually best at: a bland, settle-the-stomach base.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2500607. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.