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  • Jefferson Adams
    Jefferson Adams

    Best Gluten-Free Beers and Where to Buy Them

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Wondering where to order great gluten-free beers online? Here's a handy reference guide.

    Best Gluten-Free Beers and Where to Buy Them - Estrella Damm Beer. Image: CC BY 2.0--imcountingufoz
    Caption: Estrella Damm Beer. Image: CC BY 2.0--imcountingufoz

    Celiac.com 11/08/2022 - We get a lot of questions about gluten-free beer. We especially get a lot of questions about where to buy them.

    Here's a list of top gluten-free beers and where to buy them. Though some of these beers are associated with local brew pubs, the list covers commercially available retail gluten-free beers. For brew pubs, or specialty breweries, check your local listings. Many of these gluten-free breweries ship their beers directly to customers. Also, there are a number of online liquor sources that can help you locate gluten-free beer purveyors near you.

    Celiac.com Sponsor (A12):
    This list is not even remotely complete. These are just a few favorites for your enjoyment. Find a more comprehensive list of Gluten-Free and Gluten-Removed Beers, and find hundreds of other gluten-free beers in our article on Oktoberfest Gluten-free Beers.

    Let us know if you have some favorites we've missed!

    List of Gluten-Free Beers and Where to Find Them

    Anheuser-Busch

    • Redbridge Gluten-Free Sorghum Beer

    This gluten-free lager brewed by Anheuser-Busch is the most accessible gluten free beer in the United States, due to its wide distribution network. Hopped with imported Hallertau and domestic Cascade hops, this sorghum beer has characteristics of the popular macro brews, but the company calls it a lager.

    Total Wine & More is offering Redbridge

    Bard's
    Bard's is a gluten-free classic and much loved favorite. Find Bard's near you.

    Damm
    Daura Damm is a famous and award-winning gluten-removed beer from Spain.

    • Daura Damm Lager
    • Laura Märzen Double Malted

    Find Daura Damm near you or buy Daura Damm at Target.

    Ghostfish
    Maker of numerous award-winning gluten-free beers, Seattle's Ghostfish brewery is a brew pub, tap room that serves great gluten-free beers and food. They also happen to distribute their beers to select cities, and ship their beers nationwide. Find Ghostfish beers near you.

    • Ghostfish Shrouded Summit Witbier
      "Brewed with millet, buckwheat, and rice, this ale rivals the taste of any Belgian wheat beer."
      Availablity: WA, OR, ID, NH, CO
    • Grapefruit IPA
    • Watchstander Stout
    • Vanishing Point Pale Ale
    • Shrouded Summit Witbier
    • Peak Buster Imperial IPA
    • Meteor Shower Blonde Ale
    • Gosefish
    • Kai Dog Red IPA
    • Kai Dog Amber
    • Killer Ale IPA
    • Hull Breaker Imperial Porter
    • It Came From The Haze Hazy IPA
    • Lunar Harvest Pumpkin Ale
    • Kick Step IPA
    • 2018 Fresh Hop IPAs
    • Citra Fresh Hop IPA
    • Black Is Beautiful Imperial Stout

    Glutenberg

    • Glutenberg Blonde Ale

    Award-winning gluten-free Glutenberg is available in 41 U.S. states. "What began with a blonde ale has developed into a gluten-free paradise of well-crafted ales."

    Green's
    One of the first, and still one of the best, gluten-free brewers. From crisp, light lagers to rich, dark ales, Green's offers nearly a dozen premium gluten-free beers. Find Green's near you. Be careful! Green's makes some beers that are gluten-reduced.

    Holidaily Brewing Co.
    Holidaily is impressing beer drinkers, winning awards, and growing quickly in distribution.

    Omission
    Omission Lager
    "This is a crisp, refreshing, reduced-gluten lager that discloses the gluten content of every batch."

    New Planet
    New Planet, crafted in Boulder, Colorado, was created when the founder discovered he had Celiac Disease and went on a personal quest to drink delicious beer.

    Sprecher

    Made with millet and sorghum, Sprecher's African-style, gluten free Shakparo Ale is an unfiltered, light, crisp ale with a cider or fruit profile and a dry follow through. 

    Stone Brewing
    Stone Brewing Delicious IPA - "A citrusy, hop-heavy IPA, this reduced-gluten beer really is delicious."

    Two Brothers
    Two Brothers Prairie Path Golden Ale has a complex malt character paired with Saaz and Golding hops - "This is the gluten-reduced ale that you’ll want to invite to dinner."



    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Russ H

    Gluten-free beers can be risky. In the UK, any beverage with less than 20 ppm of gluten can be sold as 'gluten-free'. The 20 ppm level was chosen so that on a diverse diet, a person consuming a mixture of completely gluten-free food (such as meat, vegetables and dairy) and food containing gluten at less than 20 ppm will consume less than 10 mg of gluten a day - an amount considered safe for most people. However, it is possible to consume hazardous amounts of gluten by drinking 'gluten-free' beer. 1 UK pint of beer at 19 ppm contains 11 mg of gluten, which is above the daily limit. Most 'gluten-free' beer contains lower amounts than this but is still potentially hazardous if consumed in large quantities.

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    trents

    Excellent point, Russ H! Most people don't understand that the 20ppm was not intended be an end in itself but a means to an end. What really counts is the total amount of gluten consumed over 24 hr.

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    Guest FireFlee

    Posted

    Be careful that its 'Certified' gluten-free Vs "Brewed to remove gluten-free"  I know the Omission beers became an issue for me.

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    Russ H
    On 12/1/2022 at 6:48 PM, Guest FireFlee said:

    Be careful that its 'Certified' gluten-free Vs "Brewed to remove gluten-free"  I know the Omission beers became an issue for me.

    Yes, the US system of gluten-free and gluten-reduced seems better than the European one. I am avoiding beer for the moment as I have read research suggesting that some people might still react to fragments of degraded gluten proteins in supposedly safe beer.

    In this study, the blood sera of 31 people with coeliac disease and 30 matched controls without coeliac disease was tested for binding against barley flour, beer and gluten-removed beer. Cultivated barely is less immunogenic than wheat or wild barley, which may be why the sera of just 11 test subjects with coeliac disease reacted to barley flour. 4 of these also reacted to ordinary beer, and 3 also reacted to gluten-removed beer. This research was done in a test tube and may not reflect the actual bodily response to consuming gluten-removed beer, but it suggests that it is possible for some people to react to it.

    https://gfco.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Beer-Study-JAOAC-Vol.-100-No.-2-Allred-et-al.pdf

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    Russ H

    Sorry, that should read 'Cultivated barley'.

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    Scott Adams

    We did summarize this study years ago, which indicates that a majority of the blood of those with celiac disease show no reaction at all to barley or even regular beer, and only 6.4% of blood from celiacs reacted to the gluten-removed beer. Of course, testing the blood of people for various reactions in a test tube is quite different than what actually happens when something is eaten and goes into your stomach, which is demonstrated by IgG allergy testing on blood samples, which usually shows positive reactions for dozens of "food allergies" in people, even if 90% or more of those foods produce ZERO symptoms in those people when they are eaten.

    Our summary:

    This article is also interesting:

     

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    Russ H

    There seems to be uncertainty in whether peptide sequences from hydrolysed or fermented products can elicit an immune reaction. There is an FDA review of testing in the link below.

    Quote

    Currently, FDA knows of no scientifically valid analytical method effective in detecting and quantifying with precision the gluten protein content in fermented or hydrolyzed foods in terms of equivalent amounts of intact gluten proteins

    https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/08/13/2020-17088/food-labeling-gluten-free-labeling-of-fermented-or-hydrolyzed-foods

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    Scott Adams

    Yes, and they are allowed to be labelled gluten-free now, including foods made from Codex quality wheat-starch which has gluten removed to below 20ppm, as the scientific evidence shows that they are not harmful to a vast majority of celiacs. In Europe Codex wheat starch has been used in gluten-free foods for decades, as the quality of the products have been generally superior to those that don't use it. Gluten removed been would contain far less than Codex wheat starch.

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    LovintheGFlife

    @Jefferson Adamsthank you for this helpful article. My favorite, among the many that I have tried, is Daura Damm and I have been drinking it (never in excess of one bottle a day) without any issues.

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  • About Me

    Jefferson Adams

    Jefferson Adams is Celiac.com's senior writer and Digital Content Director. He earned his B.A. and M.F.A. at Arizona State University. His articles, essays, poems, stories and book reviews have appeared in numerous magazines, journals, and websites, including North American Project, Antioch Review, Caliban, Mississippi Review, Slate, and more. He is the author of more than 2,500 articles on celiac disease. His university coursework includes studies in science, scientific methodology, biology, anatomy, physiology, medicine, logic, and advanced research. He previously devised health and medical content for Colgate, Dove, Pfizer, Sharecare, Walgreens, and more. Jefferson has spoken about celiac disease to the media, including an appearance on the KQED radio show Forum, and is the editor of numerous books, including "Cereal Killers" by Scott Adams and Ron Hoggan, Ed.D.

    >VIEW ALL ARTICLES BY JEFFERSON ADAMS

     


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