Froot Loops
Compare prices for Kellogg's Froot Loops across box sizes.
Retail Froot Loops: Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Froot Loops sold in Canada is produced by WK Kellogg Co, the cereal-focused entity created when the legacy Kellogg Company formally split into two independent public companies on October 2, 2023. The split divided the business into Kellanova, the global snacking company that retained Pringles, Cheez-It, Pop-Tarts, Eggo, and the international cereal business, and WK Kellogg Co, which took ownership of the breakfast cereal portfolio for the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean. Brands held by WK Kellogg in this North American territory include Froot Loops, Frosted Flakes, Frosted Mini-Wheats, Special K, Raisin Bran, Rice Krispies, Corn Flakes, Kashi, and Bear Naked.
In July 2025, Italian confectionery giant Ferrero - the parent company of Nutella, Kinder, and Ferrero Rocher - announced it would acquire WK Kellogg Co for USD $23.00 per share, an enterprise value of $3.1 billion. WK Kellogg shareholders approved the deal on September 19, 2025, and the acquisition closed on September 26, 2025, at which point WK Kellogg ceased trading on the New York Stock Exchange and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Ferrero. Froot Loops sold in Canada is therefore now ultimately a Ferrero product, with all manufacturing, marketing, and distribution for the U.S., Canadian, and Caribbean markets falling under Ferrero's North American operations.
WK Kellogg's North American manufacturing network spans three plants: Battle Creek, Michigan; Lancaster, Pennsylvania; and Belleville, Ontario. The Belleville facility is the company's only Canadian cereal plant and is the principal source of Froot Loops sold in Canada, although some packs sold in Canadian retailers are sourced from U.S. plants depending on production scheduling and SKU. The "Made in Canada" status of any individual box is identifiable from the package label.
In September 2021, Kellogg announced plans to move two production lines from Battle Creek to Belleville, citing roughly USD $20 million in projected annual cost savings, and the Belleville plant subsequently received a $67 million expansion supported in part by Canadian government incentives. By late 2023, however, WK Kellogg reversed the relocation following a $5 million Renaissance Zone grant from the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, and the company committed to retaining and growing Battle Creek production rather than consolidating in Ontario. WK Kellogg has since announced approximately $390 million in capital investment across the three North American plants, alongside a one-time $110 million restructuring charge and a net reduction of approximately 550 positions across the network. Belleville remains a strategic node servicing both Canadian and certain U.S. routes, but it is no longer being scaled up at the expense of Michigan.
Froot Loops is a multigrain extruded ring cereal. Its primary inputs are corn flour, wheat flour, and whole grain oat flour, plus sugar, vegetable oil, and a colour and flavour system. The grain inputs are sourced from North American milling operations, with Canadian wheat from the Prairies (predominantly Saskatchewan and Alberta) and U.S. or Ontario corn drawn from the Midwest and southwestern Ontario corn belt. Wheat farm-gate prices have been on a multi-year decline - down 23.1% in 2023, 22.3% in 2024, and a further 10.9% in 2025 - which has eased one of the major commodity inputs to cereal manufacturing, though grain is only a minority share of the box's landed cost.
Sugar is a more sensitive input. Canada has an open-market sugar policy and refines cane sugar primarily through Rogers Sugar and Redpath, with most refined sugar sold into the food industry. Cereal manufacturers in Canada therefore generally pay world cane prices plus refining margin, not the higher U.S. domestic sugar price set by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Sugar Program. This is a structural cost advantage for cereal manufactured in Belleville versus cereal manufactured in Battle Creek or Lancaster and shipped north - Canadian-made boxes carry a lower embedded sugar cost per kilogram of finished product. The Canadian Sugar Institute reports that over 85 percent of Canada's refined sugar is sold to the food industry, and roughly half of that is exported in finished food products, including cereal, into the United States under CUSMA tariff-rate quotas. The U.S. allocates Canada 10,300 metric tons raw value of refined sugar TRQ for fiscal year 2026, plus an additional 9,600 tonnes annually of beet sugar under CUSMA; volumes above quota face a U.S. duty of approximately USD $357 per tonne.
Froot Loops sold in Canada uses a colour system based on concentrated carrot juice, watermelon juice, and blueberry juice, rather than the synthetic dyes (Red 40, Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Blue 1) and BHT preservative still used in the U.S. formulation. This is a long-standing transatlantic divergence driven by differences in regulatory and consumer expectations between the markets, and it has implications for the supply chain: Belleville-bound product runs require natural colour concentrates rather than synthetic dyes, with separate sourcing, storage, and quality control. Concentrated fruit and vegetable juices are typically more expensive per unit of colour delivered than synthetic dyes and have shorter shelf life, which contributes to a structural cost gap between the Canadian and U.S. formulations.
WK Kellogg announced in 2025 that it will remove artificial colours from its U.S. cereals, including U.S.-market Froot Loops, by the end of 2027, with school-served cereals reformulated for the 2026-27 school year. As that timeline progresses, the Canadian and U.S. formulations will converge, and the natural-colour cost premium currently embedded only in Canadian boxes will be borne across the full North American volume - a change that may modestly compress the Canadian-U.S. price differential at the wholesale level but is unlikely to reduce Canadian shelf prices.
The cross-border movement of Froot Loops and its inputs sits squarely inside CUSMA. Effective March 4, 2025, Canada imposed 25 percent counter-tariffs on approximately CAD $30 billion of U.S. goods in response to U.S. tariff actions, with the list explicitly including sugar products, chocolate, pasta, and a wide range of food categories. Effective September 1, 2025, Canada removed most of those counter-tariffs in recognition of the U.S. permitting most CUSMA-compliant Canadian goods to enter tariff-free; counter-tariffs were retained only on steel, aluminum, and automobiles. For finished breakfast cereal moving in either direction, this means the period from March through August 2025 carried meaningful incremental cost on U.S.-origin SKUs imported into Canada, and that pressure has since eased. Importers and retailers nonetheless continue to favour CUSMA-compliant Canadian-origin product where available, and Belleville's domestic production reduces tariff exposure on the highest-volume Canadian SKUs.
For sugar specifically, exposure runs in both directions. Canadian-refined sugar shipped into U.S. cereal plants is constrained by the TRQ structure noted above. Canadian cereal shipped into the U.S. enters under CUSMA at preferential rates provided rules-of-origin thresholds (including sugar content) are met, which is one reason Canadian cereal production stays attractive even where Canadian and U.S. wage and energy costs differ.
Canada's breakfast cereal market was estimated at approximately USD $7.5 billion in 2024, with WK Kellogg, General Mills (Cheerios, Lucky Charms, Chex), and Post (Honey Bunches of Oats, Shreddies in Canada) as the three dominant branded players, alongside private label programs from Loblaw (No Name, President's Choice), Sobeys (Compliments), and Costco (Kirkland Signature). WK Kellogg is generally credited with the leading aggregate cereal share in Canada, and Froot Loops is one of the brand's high-recognition kids' SKUs alongside Frosted Flakes and Rice Krispies.
Pack sizes in the Canadian market are smaller than the U.S. equivalents - the standard Canadian Froot Loops box is 320g, with a larger 480g family-size box at most major banners - reflecting smaller average pantry storage and household sizes than U.S. norms. The per-100g cost gap between the two box sizes is the most direct lever consumers have on Froot Loops pricing, since the brand is rarely offered as a deep promotional loss leader; it is more commonly a moderate flyer feature SKU at $4.99 to $5.99 for the 320g and $6.99 to $7.99 for the 480g, with seasonal back-to-school discounting in August and September. The Marshmallow variant is sold at a premium to the standard SKU.
Edmonton retail pricing also reflects inland distribution costs from Belleville, which is approximately 3,400 km by road from Edmonton. Cereal moves on dry truckload at ambient temperature with no cold-chain requirement, but inland freight, fuel surcharges, and the multi-stop distribution to individual stores in Alberta still represent a measurable per-box cost relative to Ontario or Quebec markets. Western Canadian distribution is typically routed through regional grocery distribution centres in Calgary or Edmonton operated by Loblaw, Sobeys (Empire), and Walmart Canada, with Costco operating its own depot network.
- WK Kellogg Co - Froot Loops Canada product page: https://www.wkkellogg.ca/en/our-foods/our-brands/froot-loops
- FoodNavigator-USA - Kellogg Co officially spins off cereal business as Kellanova: https://www.foodnavigator-usa.com/Article/2023/10/02/kellogg-co-officially-spins-off-cereal-business-as-kellanova-with-celebratory-ringing-of-nyse/
- BakeryAndSnacks - Kellogg Company splits into Kellanova and WK Kellogg Co: https://www.bakeryandsnacks.com/Article/2023/03/16/Kellogg-Company-splits-into-Kellanova-and-WK-Kellogg-Co/
- Ferrero - Ferrero to acquire WK Kellogg Co: https://www.ferrero.com/int/en/news-stories/news/ferrero-to-acquire-wk-kellogg-co
- Ferrero - Ferrero completes acquisition of WK Kellogg Co: https://www.ferrero.com/int/en/news-stories/news/ferrero-completes-acquisition-of-wk-kellogg-co
- FoodNavigator - Kellogg shareholders back Ferrero deal: https://www.foodnavigator.com/Article/2025/09/22/kellogg-shareholders-back-ferrero-deal/
- BakeryAndSnacks - $5m state grant saves 170 Battle Creek layoffs at WK Kellogg Co: https://www.bakeryandsnacks.com/Article/2023/12/14/5m-state-grant-saves-170-Battle-Creek-layoffs-at-WK-Kellogg-Co/
- Just-Food - WK Kellogg makes U-turn on US facility closure: https://www.just-food.com/news/wk-kellogg-makes-u-turn-on-us-facility-closure/
- WWMT - WK Kellogg receives approval for renaissance zone, keeping jobs in Battle Creek: https://wwmt.com/news/local/wk-kellogg-company-battle-creek-plant-investment-future-growth-belleville-ontario-canada-cereal-city-volume-reconsideration-grant-medc-government-funding-5-million-calhoun-county-west-michigan
- Trends Newsline - US vs Canadian Froot Loops: The Truth About Color Additives: https://trendsnewsline.com/2025/04/23/us-vs-canadian-froot-loops-the-truth-about-color-additives/
- Food Dive - Froot Loops maker WK Kellogg to remove artificial colors: https://www.fooddive.com/news/froot-loops-maker-wk-kellogg-to-remove-artificial-colors/753559/
- Washington Post - RFK Jr. talks Canada's Froot Loops, food dyes in American version of cereal: https://www.washingtonpost.com/food/2024/11/12/rfk-froot-fruit-loop-canada/
- Government of Canada - List of products from the United States subject to 25 per cent tariffs effective February 4, 2025: https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/news/2025/02/list-of-products-from-the-united-states-subject-to-25-per-cent-tariffs-effective-february-4-2025.html
- Government of Canada - Canada's Response to U.S. Tariffs: https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs.html
- Canadian Sugar Institute - North American Trade: https://sugar.ca/international-trade/north-american-trade
- Canadian Sugar Institute - Canada's Open Market Sugar Policy: https://sugar.ca/international-trade/canadas-open-market-sugar-policy
- USTR - Fiscal Year 2026 WTO Tariff-Rate Quota Allocations for Raw Cane Sugar, Refined and Specialty Sugar, and Sugar-Containing Products: https://ustr.gov/about/policy-offices/press-office/press-releases/2025/august/ustr-announces-fiscal-year-2026-wto-tariff-rate-quota-allocations-raw-cane-sugar-refined-and
- USDA Economic Research Service - Food Price Outlook: https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-price-outlook/summary-findings
- Market Research Future - Canada Breakfast Cereals Market: https://www.marketresearchfuture.com/reports/canada-breakfast-cereals-market-46694
- BakeryAndSnacks - General Mills, WK Kellogg & Ferrero spark a fresh fight for the breakfast bowl: https://www.bakeryandsnacks.com/Article/2025/11/18/general-mills-wk-kellogg-ferrero-battle-for-breakfast/