What does the source say about Coffee-Mate Original Powder and Dairy?
Coffee mate calls the product non-dairy, but its official ingredients list sodium caseinate as a milk derivative. Do not treat 'non-dairy' as meaning milk-protein-free.
Ingredient label review: Coffee-Mate Original Powder
Coffee mate calls the product non-dairy, but its official ingredients list sodium caseinate as a milk derivative. Do not treat 'non-dairy' as meaning milk-protein-free.
Risk Score
63%
Parsed
7
Flagged
1
Risk level
Source and safety limits
This page screens the listed ingredient text for Dairy signals. Product formulas, labels, factories, and cross-contact warnings can change, so always verify the package in your hand before eating.
Article updated: July 14, 2026
Do not rely on this page as medical advice or as a guarantee that a food is safe. If you have a diagnosed allergy, celiac disease, or a history of severe reactions, confirm with the brand, your clinician, or the product manufacturer.
Corn syrup solids, hydrogenated vegetable oil, dipotassium phosphate, and less than 2% sodium caseinate (a milk derivative), sodium aluminosilicate, mono- and diglycerides, and annatto color.
Coffee mate calls the product non-dairy, but its official ingredients list sodium caseinate as a milk derivative. Do not treat 'non-dairy' as meaning milk-protein-free.
This answer is limited to the exact manufacturer page or product record reviewed in July 2026. It does not apply automatically to every flavor, package size, country, restaurant location, or future recipe. The current package or menu information remains the final product-specific check.
| Evidence | Reviewed finding |
|---|---|
| Product or menu item | Coffee-Mate Original Powder |
| Target | Dairy |
| Published record | Corn syrup solids, hydrogenated vegetable oil, dipotassium phosphate, and less than 2% sodium caseinate (a milk derivative), sodium aluminosilicate, mono- and diglycerides, and annatto color. |
| Source | Coffee mate official Original Powdered Creamer page |
| Review date | July 2026 |
The wording above preserves the difference between a directly listed ingredient, a Contains declaration, advisory cross-contact wording, and missing public information. Those categories are not interchangeable. If a manufacturer does not publish a complete ingredient panel, this page reports that limitation rather than assuming the allergen is absent.
A listed ingredient is direct formulation evidence. A “may contain” statement is advisory evidence about possible unintended presence. The absence of either statement in an online record does not document cleaning procedures, shared equipment, supplier changes, or a person's reaction threshold. Front-label terms and product names also do not replace the ingredient and allergen panels.
For product families or assorted flavors, one flavor cannot establish the recipe for another. For restaurant items, preparation and cross-contact can vary by location and equipment. For highly refined oils, regulatory labeling treatment does not by itself decide whether a particular person should consume a restaurant item.
This article does not test a package, audit a facility, diagnose an allergy, or establish an individual threshold. It therefore does not promise that a food is appropriate for a particular person. A diagnosed allergy, celiac disease, or history of severe reactions requires the person's clinical plan and current manufacturer information.
For another label, use the ingredient allergen checker. You can also browse other Ryla label checks or see how the Ryla iPhone scanner flags available ingredient terms while shopping. These are screening tools, not substitutes for the package.
Coffee mate calls the product non-dairy, but its official ingredients list sodium caseinate as a milk derivative. Do not treat 'non-dairy' as meaning milk-protein-free. Recheck the exact item before each purchase because ingredients and handling information can change.
Last reviewed July 2026 using Coffee mate official Original Powdered Creamer page. Informational only; not medical advice.
Related Ryla pages
Coffee mate calls the product non-dairy, but its official ingredients list sodium caseinate as a milk derivative. Do not treat 'non-dairy' as meaning milk-protein-free.
No. Flavor, size, market, and recipe can change the ingredient and advisory statements.
No. It reports published Dairy label evidence but cannot determine an individual's reaction threshold or rule out cross-contact.
Match the exact product and read the current ingredient list, Contains statement, and advisory wording on the package.
Use the current package and contact the manufacturer. The package in hand is newer and more specific than this review.