Dairy hides in more places than you'd expect. Milk powder, whey, and casein turn up in flavoured crisps, chocolate, and even some protein bars, which means going dairy free is rarely as simple as just avoiding the obvious things like cheese and yoghurt. Every product on this page has been checked to confirm there's no dairy in the ingredients, though it's always worth confirming on the pack itself, especially if a dairy allergy is involved.
What counts as dairy free
Dairy free means a product contains no milk or milk-derived ingredients at all, no milk, butter, cream, cheese, or the proteins and sugars that come from them. That last part is where it gets less obvious. Ingredients like whey, casein, and lactose are all milk-derived, and they appear in plenty of products you might not immediately think of as dairy, which is why label-reading matters more with dairy than with some other dietary needs. Going dairy free doesn't have to mean a smaller choice though, it just means shopping a little more carefully.
Dairy free vs lactose free
These two terms get used interchangeably, but they don't mean the same thing, and the difference genuinely matters. Lactose free means the lactose, a sugar found in milk, has been removed or broken down, but the product may still contain other dairy proteins like casein or whey. Dairy free means no dairy at all. For someone who's lactose intolerant, a lactose free product is usually fine. For someone with a dairy allergy, it isn't, because it's the proteins, not the lactose, that trigger an allergic reaction. Everything on this page is intended to be dairy free rather than just lactose free, but anyone with an allergy should always confirm on the individual product label.
Why some crisps contain dairy
It surprises people, but flavoured crisps are one of the most common places dairy turns up unexpectedly. Plain crisps are usually just potato, oil, and salt, which is naturally dairy free, but the moment you add flavour, ingredients like milk powder, whey, or cheese powder often come with it, even in flavours that don't sound remotely dairy-related. It's a good example of why a snack being dairy free can't be assumed from the type of product alone, and why the crisps on this page have been checked rather than just included by default.
Dairy free chocolate
Chocolate is another category that's changed enormously. Traditional milk chocolate is off the table for anyone avoiding dairy, but the alternatives have moved well beyond dark chocolate as the only option. A lot of the dairy free chocolate on this page is made with oat, rice, or coconut milk instead of dairy, which gives you the creaminess of milk chocolate without the milk. These aren't compromises in the way free-from chocolate once was, many of them stand up as good chocolate in their own right.
Are dairy free snacks healthy?
Not automatically. Dairy free describes what's been left out, not how nutritious a product is. Some dairy free snacks are made with wholefood ingredients and minimal processing, while others are treats in the same way any snack is, just without the dairy. As with any snack, the ingredients list and nutritional information tell you far more than the dairy free label alone does.
Dairy free and vegan
There's a lot of crossover between dairy free and vegan, but they aren't the same thing. Dairy free just means no dairy, whereas vegan means no animal products of any kind, so no eggs, honey, or gelatine either. A dairy free product isn't necessarily vegan, and it's worth checking individually if being fully plant-based matters to you rather than assuming one guarantees the other.
A note on allergies
The products here have been manually checked to confirm there's no dairy in the ingredients, but they're not all independently certified, and recipes can change. A dairy allergy can be serious, so anyone shopping for a genuine allergy rather than a preference or intolerance should always treat the individual product label as the final word, and check with the manufacturer directly if there's any doubt.
Buying dairy free snacks for offices
Dairy free options are a common request in workplace kitchens, where colleagues often have a mix of dietary needs to cater for. Many of the products on this page are individually wrapped, which makes them well suited to shared snack stations. If you're setting up a regular office order, the Snackfully office snacks page is worth a look alongside this range.