Determining Creditable Grain Products in the CACFP
Overview
Grain is a required component at breakfast, lunch, and supper meals, and is an optional component at snack in the CACFP. All grain products served in the CACFP must be made with enriched or whole grain meal or flour, bran, or germ.
This web page provides guidance on crediting grain products in the CACFP. Additional guidance is available in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Policy Memorandum CACFP 09-2018, Grain Requirements in the CACFP; Questions and Answers.
Determining Creditable Grain Products in the CACFP
The criteria to determine whether a grain product is creditable in the CACFP depends on whether the product is an infant cereal, breakfast cereal, or other grain product (for example, bread, tortilla, cracker, pasta, rice).
Grain-based desserts, noted with the superscripts 3 and 4 in the USDA Exhibit A: Grain Requirements for Child Nutrition Programs (CNP) chart (accessible on the USDA Food Buying Guide for CNPs–Grains web page) are not creditable toward the grains component in meals and snacks served in the CACFP.
Infant and Breakfast Cereals
Infant Cereals are cereals designed for babies that are usually prepared by adding water, breastmilk, or infant formula. Examples include infant wheat cereals, infant oat cereals, infant rice cereals, and infant mixed grain cereals.
Breakfast Cereals include instant cereals (e.g., instant oatmeal and cream of wheat), hot cereals (e.g., rolled oats), and ready-to-eat (RTE) cereals (e.g., puffed, rounds, flakes, and granola). The California Department of Social Services RTE Breakfast Cereal Categories: Flakes, Rounds, Puffed, and Granolas web page provides category and serving size information for RTE cereals.
Below are the criteria to determine whether cereals served to infants, children, and adults are creditable:
Infant Cereals and RTE Cereals Served to Infants
- Only dry, iron-fortified infant cereal (mixed with water, iron-fortified infant formula, or breastmilk) is creditable toward the grains component at breakfast, lunch, and supper. Infant cereal may also be served at snack, but there are other creditable grain options at snack.
Tip!: There is no minimum standard of iron required for an infant cereal to be creditable. If one of the ingredients listed is iron, ferric fumarate, electrolytic iron, or iron (electrolytic), then the infant cereal is iron-fortified.
- RTE cereals are only creditable toward the grains component for infants at snack.
- RTE cereals must meet the sugar standard of no more than 6 grams (g) of total sugars per dry ounce (oz) and either have a whole grain or enriched grain as the first grain ingredient, or be fortified.
Note: Effective October 1, 2025, the sugar standard for RTE cereals is no more than 6 g of added sugars per dry oz.
- Instant and hot cereals are never creditable toward the grains component for infants.
Breakfast Cereals Served to Children and Adults
- Breakfast cereals (includes RTE, instant, and regular hot cereals) must meet the sugar standard of no more than 6 g of total sugars per dry oz of cereal.
Note: Effective October 1, 2025, the sugar standard for RTE cereals is no more than 6 g of added sugars per dry oz.
- Breakfast cereals must either have a whole grain, enriched grain, bran, or germ as the first ingredient or be fortified.
Tip!: Fortified cereals either include the word fortified on the product label, or the product’s Ingredients list includes the names of the added vitamins and minerals.
Other Grain Products
Grain products (other than infant and breakfast cereals) must meet one of the following criteria:
- The product’s first grain ingredient (or second after water) is a creditable grain. Creditable grains include whole grains, enriched grains, bran, and germ. For a list of creditable grains, see the list of whole grains, enriched grains, brans, and germs on the California Department of Social Services Determining Whole Grain-rich (WGR) Products in the CACFP web page.
- The following five enrichment nutrients immediately follow the first grain ingredient: thiamin (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), folic acid (B9), and iron (Fe).
- The CACFP Operator has documentation (for example, a product formulation statement) from the manufacturer stating that the first grain ingredient is the one that is enriched with the five enrichment nutrients: thiamin (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), folic acid (B9), and iron (Fe).
- The product package is labeled as enriched, whole grain, or whole wheat.
- The product meets one of the WGR criteria listed in the USDA Policy Memorandum CACFP 09-2018, Grain Requirements in the CACFP; Questions and Answers.
Tip!: All grain products, including infant and breakfast cereals, listed in any state agency’s Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Authorized Food List Shopping Guide are creditable in the CACFP. The California Department of Public Health WIC web page includes links to the California WIC Authorized Food List Shopping Guide. Access the USDA FNS Contacts for links to all state agencies’ WIC shopping lists.
For additional guidance on serving grains to CACFP participants, access the USDA Policy Memoranda CACFP 09-2018, Grain Requirements in the CACFP; Questions and Answers, and CACFP 11-2023, Feeding Infants and Meal Pattern Requirements in the Child and Adult Care Food Program: Questions and Answers.
This institution is an equal opportunity provider.
Esta institución es un proveedor que ofrece igualdad de oportunidades.