
Breakfast cereal sales declined for decades before Kellogg's sale to Italian company
U.S. sales of the colorfully packaged morning staple have been in
a decades-long decline
, a trend back in the spotlight with news that Italian confectioner Ferrero Group
plans to purchase
WK Kellogg, maker of Corn Flakes, Froot Loops, Rice Krispies and other familiar brands.
Except for a brief period during the coronavirus pandemic, when many workers were home and had time to sit down with a bowl of cereal and milk, sales of cold cereal have steadily fallen for at least 25 years, experts say.
In the 52 weeks ending July 3, 2021, Americans bought nearly 2.5 billion boxes of cereal, according to market research company Nielsen IQ. In the same period this year, the number was down more than 13% to 2.1 billion.
Cereal has been struggling for multiple reasons. The rise of more portable options like Nutri-Grain bars and Clif Bars – which both went on sale in the early 1990s – made it easier for consumers to grab breakfast on the go.
Concerns about food processing and
sugar intake
have also dimmed some consumers' enthusiasm for cereals. One cup of
Lucky Charms
contains 24% of a consumer's daily recommended intake of sugar, for example.
'Cereal finds it really hard to get out from underneath that,' said Tom Rees, global insight manager for staple foods at the consulting company Euromonitor. 'It can't escape the fact that it doesn't look like a natural food. You have to create it and form it.'
Rees noted that for decades, cereal manufacturers focused on
adding vitamins and minerals
to build cereal's health credentials. But consumers now are looking for simplified ingredient lists.
Artificial dyes
— like the petroleum-based colors that brighten Froot Loops — have also come under fire. Last fall,
dozens of people rallied
outside WK Kellogg's Battle Creek, Michigan, headquarters demanding that it remove artificial dyes from its cereals. Kellogg and General Mills — another major U.S. cereal maker — have since pledged to
phase out artificial dyes
.
Add to that, consumers are expanding their idea of what breakfast can be. Yogurt and shakes have replaced the traditional bacon and eggs. Kenton Barello, a vice president at the market research firm YouGov, said his polling shows that Generation Z consumers, who were born between 1997 and 2007, eat more vegetables for breakfast than other generations.
Barello said YouGov's polling also shows that members of Gen Z are less likely to eat breakfast but still buy ready-to-eat cereal, suggesting they're eating it as a snack or for other meals.
'With younger generations, there are differences in their relationship with food and these eating moments,' Barello said. 'They are going about breakfast in a different way than Millennials, Gen X and Baby Boomers.'
Cereal's struggles are part of what led to the
breakup of the Kellogg Company
. In 2023, the century-old company that put Battle Creek, Michigan, on the map split into two companies. Kellanova took popular snack brands like Cheez-Its, Pringles and Pop-Tarts as well as international cereals, and
WK Kellogg
made cereals for the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean.
In 2024, M&M's maker Mars Inc. announced a plan to buy Kellanova for more than $30 billion. That plan has cleared U.S. regulators but is still awaiting regulatory approval in Europe. WK Kellogg was left to try to rejuvenate the cereal business.
The sale of WK Kellogg to Ferrero doesn't mean supermarket cereal aisles are at risk of extinction. Packaged food companies have options for turning around their soggy cereal sales, Rees said. He thinks Kellogg's Mashups line, which mixed brands like Frosted Flakes and Froot Loops into one box, appeal to younger consumers, who tend to like interesting flavor combinations.
The market may also have a fragmented future, according to Rees. Companies may have to accept that younger buyers want a sweet-and-spicy cereal while older buyers might want a Keto-friendly option.
'The future might be realizing that the era of 'This brand will serve everybody' isn't going to happen,' Rees said.
Julia Mills, a food analyst with the consulting company Mintel, thinks the shrinking population of children in the U.S. gives cereal makers the opportunity to shift to more sophisticated flavors and packaging. Cereal could be positioned as a fancy topping for yogurt, for example, or a fiber-rich food that can improve gut health.
Some niche cereal brands, like high-fiber Poop Like a Champion cereal and high-protein, zero-sugar Magic Spoon, are already doing that. But legacy brands say they shouldn't be counted out.
Jeffrey Harmening, the chairman and chief executive officer of Cheerios maker General Mills, said his company considered trying to acquire Magic Spoon. Instead, it made high-protein versions of Cheerios, which now outsells Magic Spoon.
'The key to longer term is, honestly, is giving consumers more of what they want,' Harmening said during a conference call with investors in March.
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Cody Kline: So I'm going to get real passionate about this because I have just completed a real life test over I don't know how many years. I would say literally about 10 years ago I bought three pairs of black Lululemon Align leggings. I love them. I still wear them to this day. They are barely showing wear and tear and they, I can put them on and they're nice and they fit me well. They hug me right. And they're great. A couple of years ago, I my friend told me about this dupe on Amazon and there's a few now there's a few brands but I was like, all right, I'm going to try this dupe. So I bought these leggings. And this was at the time when the Align leggings didn't come with pockets. They do now they have pockets but this brand had leggings with pockets. And I was like, oh, I'm going to try these. So at first I tried them on. They put, I was like, wow, like these are awesome. Like I'm never buying Lululemon again. 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And this same version of a shirt if I buy like the JCPenney like air wicking shirt it looks pilly and bad in like six months. And it's not like I'm doing anything. I'm hosting shows and typing most of my day. And then the other thing I would argue for is spending money on bathing suits. If you're a man, it's women spend money on bathing suits because they have to because there's sizes, there's choice. There's a lot. As a man, you're just wearing shorts, but if you buy the shorts at Target versus buying like Fair Harbor or a nice brand, the amount of uncomfortable chafing is gigantic. So spending, not to mention the elastic lasts longer. You know, so spending that $64 versus that $18 is really a good buy. There is one exception and Alicia as a parent I'll let you weigh in on this as well. Anything I know I'm going to lose I buy the cheapest version possible. More Retail: Supermarket inflation: Beef prices soar as egg prices fallLevi's shares plan to beat tariffs, keep holiday prices downAmazon's quiet pricing twist on tariffs stuns shoppers Like when it comes to like travel bags and things like that it's either like something I got from a cruise line for free. Sunglasses, I always have one good pair that I keep for like on-air stuff. The rest are just like sunglasses that came in a box of cereal or that a cruise line handed me because I know I'm going to lose them. Alisha, with young kids, do you buy them name brands or are you buying, you know, question jeans instead of Guess jeans? I don't think they make Question Jeans anymore. There used to be jeans that were like knockoffs of Guess. I don't even know if Guess is a big brand. I don't think that was the name, but it was fairly. Cody Kline: That's funny though. It should have been the name. Alisha Dos Santos: I don't buy my kids name brand stuff barely at all. Only actually Costco is actually where we get a lot of things because they do actually offer better brands than you can get on Amazon that maybe are going to hold up well but they're offered at an affordable price. So we do a lot of Costco shopping. We also thrift with the kids clothes. I kind of teach my daughter that she doesn't have to have the name brand. She doesn't have to have the brand new that she can find more unique items maybe at the thrift store. Daniel Kline: My son loves the thrift store because he'll find those big-name brands. I can't get past the idea. Maybe a jacket or something. I don't want something touching my skin that someone else owned like that. Cody, do you thrift at all? Cody Kline: So it's actually, I actually just started kind of recently because I really like these jeans that they're a bit more expensive. And for me, I'm short. I have to get things shortened and blah, blah, blah. I have been buying a few things on Poshmark and it's been actually been great. So it's a way to get name brands for way less. But like Alicia, I will say if I had a kid, they're gonna grow. Like there's no point in buying it for life. There's a whole Reddit, by the way, a whole Reddit thread on buying things for life. Great rabbit hole to go down, but don't do it right now. But yeah, if I had kids, I'm not gonna be buying them stuff that they're gonna grow out in. Like, unless I know I'm planning to have like six kids, I'll buy it for the first one and then the six kids will have that for the, but other than that, I agree, go to Costco. I mean, this is for adults that are, they're grown, not changing. Daniel Kline: I buy myself Costco too. Dos Santos: I will have, go ahead, go ahead, Dan. Daniel Kline: Well, I'll speak to the virtues of Costco. I don't live near Costco, but I'm a huge fan of them. 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