Tostitos Original Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips: Labelgrade B- (71/100)
B- 71 / 100 — Effectively zero sugar.
🛒 Buy on Amazon →The short answer
Tostitos Original Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips delivers 2g of protein and 140 calories per about 7 chips (28g) (USDA FDC 1457404). Per 100g that’s 7.1g of protein; per oz, 2g. The Labelgrade is B- (71 / 100): Effectively zero sugar.
Why this Labelgrade
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C | 61 / 100 | 7.1g per 100g — below the high-protein bar; not the right product for protein hunting |
| Ingredient quality | B+ | 80 / 100 | Short 5-ingredient list, no additive flags |
| Saturated fat load | B | 77 / 100 | 1g per serving (3.6g per 100g) — moderate |
| Sodium load | D | 54 / 100 | 115mg per serving (116mg per oz) — meaningful per 100g |
| Sugar load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0g of sugar — perfect |
| Fiber | C- | 55 / 100 | 1.01g per serving — modest fiber contribution |
| Overall | B- | 71 / 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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tostitos Original Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips (this product) | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 140 |
| Doritos Nacho Cheese Tortilla Chips | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 140 |
| Fritos Scoops! Corn Chips | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 160 |
| Lay’s Classic Potato Chips | 2g | 7.1g | 2g | 160 |
| Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark) | — | 31g | 8.8g | ~165 |
Three ingredients is the whole story
It’s worth saying plainly what’s on this label, because it’s the entire reason Tostitos Original lands where it does: corn, vegetable oil, and salt. That’s it. No cheese powder, no maltodextrin, no monosodium glutamate, no artificial color — none of the seasoning-blend machinery that pads out the ingredient list on a flavored chip. It is, functionally, fried masa with a little salt: the most stripped-down a national-brand chip gets.
That plainness is what earns the B+ ingredient-quality mark (80/100) and, with a perfect 0g sugar, is what pulls the overall up to a B- (71/100) instead of the C the cheese-dusted chips land at. But it’s important not to over-read it. Clean ingredients don’t make a chip nutritious — they just mean you’re eating the snack and nothing extra. A short, recognizable label is a real point in this product’s favor; it’s just not the same thing as a reason to eat more of it. The honest framing is “if you’re going to eat tortilla chips, these are an unusually plain set of them,” not “these are good for you.”
The bag is the trap, not the chip
Nothing on this label is alarming in a 1-oz serving — 140 calories, 115mg of sodium, 7 chips. The catch is that almost nobody eats 7 chips. These are large, sturdy, restaurant-style chips built for scooping salsa and queso, and a 13-ounce bag holds about thirteen of those servings. Two or three casual handfuls past a dip bowl is 400+ calories and a few hundred milligrams of sodium before you’ve registered eating anything, and the “restaurant style” size makes it feel like you’ve had fewer chips than you have.
So the single most useful move with this product isn’t picking a different brand — it’s controlling the portion. Count chips onto a plate or into a small bowl and put the bag away; don’t graze straight from the bag. Pairing them with a salsa or a bean dip (which adds the fiber and a little protein the chips lack) also slows you down and makes the serving feel like more food. The brand you buy is a minor lever here. The amount you pour is the major one, and it’s the difference between a B- snack eaten sensibly and a meal’s worth of refined carbs eaten by accident.
Scope
This page covers Tostitos Original Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips, UPC 00028400063999, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 1457404. Tostitos 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: Corn, Vegetable Oil (Corn, Canola, and/or Sunflower Oil), and Salt.
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · about 7 chips (28g)
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (about 7 chips (28g)) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 140 |
| Protein | 2g |
| Total Fat | 7g |
| Saturated Fat | 1g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 19g |
| Dietary Fiber | 1.01g |
| Total Sugars | 0g |
| Sodium | 115mg |
| Cholesterol | 0mg |
| Calcium | 30mg |
| Iron | 0.3mg |
| Potassium | 40mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Original Restaurant Style Tortilla Chips · UPC 00028400063999. 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
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Tostitos Original tortilla chips healthy?
Honestly, no — they're a treat, not health food. A tortilla chip is a refined-carb, salty, fried snack with only 2g of protein per serving, so it isn't doing much for you nutritionally no matter how clean the label is. What Tostitos Original gets right is that the label IS clean: the whole ingredient list is corn, vegetable oil and salt, with no cheese powder, no MSG, no artificial color. That makes it the least-bad chip in this comparison — but 'least-bad snack' is the right way to think about it, not 'good for you.'
Why does Tostitos Original score a B- (71/100)?
Two things hold the grade up and one drags it down. The ingredient quality is a B+ (80/100) — a three-line list of corn, oil and salt is about as plain as a packaged chip gets — and sugar is a perfect A+ at 0g. What caps it at a B- is that this is still a fried refined-carb snack: protein density is a C (7.1g per 100g, low), fiber is a C-, and even at a relatively gentle 115mg the sodium load is scored a D per 100g. Clean ingredients lift it above the cheese-dusted chips, but the underlying snack keeps it out of A territory.
Why do plain Tostitos out-grade Doritos when they're both corn chips?
Because the only real difference between chip grades in this aisle is what's added on top of the corn. Tostitos Original is corn, oil and salt — three ingredients. Doritos Nacho Cheese starts from the same fried corn base, then adds a cheese-and-seasoning powder that runs to ~35 ingredients (MSG, maltodextrin, artificial colors) and nearly doubles the sodium to 210mg. Same near-zero protein, same fried base — but the seasoning powder is what turns a B- into a C. Plain chips win by leaving things off.
How many chips is a serving, and is that realistic?
A serving is about 7 of these large restaurant-style chips (28g, 1 oz) — for 140 calories and 115mg sodium. The honest problem with all chips is portion: 'restaurant style' chips are big and easy to inhale, and a few handfuls out of the bag past a salsa bowl is easily two or three servings before you notice. If you're tracking, count out the chips onto a plate instead of eating from the bag — that single habit matters far more here than which brand you picked.
Is there a lower-sodium or cleaner chip to pick?
Among everyday chips, Tostitos Original is already near the front for sodium at 115mg per ounce, and its three-ingredient label is as clean as this category gets — so it's a reasonable pick on both counts. Fritos Scoops! are slightly lower at 105mg and also just corn, oil and salt. If sodium is your main concern, an unsalted or lightly-salted tortilla chip, or air-popped popcorn, will beat any of these. But within name-brand chips, plain corn chips like these are the cleaner lane; the cheese-dusted bags are where the sodium and additives spike.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 1457404. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days of a reformulation.