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Kerrygold is marketed as grass-fed and all-natural, but the tub butter has concerning ingredients, dangers and marketing ploys to consider before buying.

Kerrygold, without question, is probably one of the best store butters you can buy. I myself have been using it for years for cooking.
The milk is from grass-fed cows and even though the cream used to make Kerrygold Butter is pasteurized, it is the best choice available to most folks who do not have access to raw butter from a small farm or who simply don’t want to use their precious raw butter for cooking.
I also know that many of you out there use Kerrygold too. When I conducted a Butter Poll on this blog awhile back, by far the most used butter (out of 1,500 or so total votes) was Kerrygold which received way more votes than even Organic Valley butter.
So what’s the problem?
My husband brought home the “new” Kerrygold butter the other day. On the surface, it looked fine. Nowhere on the outside of the package was there any indication that there was a problem with this butter. Here’s what it looks like.

I got suspicious with the “new” label, however. There’s nothing “new” about butter. That’s what I like about it after all!
Another tip-off that there was a problem lurking was the proclamation on the label that this “New Kerrygold” was “naturally softer”.
When I first saw the “naturally softer” words, I thought that meant that the butter was whipped and hence more spreadable. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want air whipped into my butter. This is a surefire way to get less product and get charged the same price for the privilege if you know what I mean.
I made a mental note to tell my husband not to buy this butter again because it was whipped and not as good a value.
But then, it got way worse…
Is Kerrygold Butter Grass-fed?
I took off the lid to the new Kerrygold package and saw the following words:

I had become a victim of the Big Fast One!
Kerrygold is stealthily selling LOWFAT butter and guess what? You get to pay the same price for the cheaper quality!
NOWHERE on the outside of the label did it say that the butter was low-fat. The ingredients said simply: pasteurized cream and salt the same as the commercialized Amish butter at the supermarket.
I daresay that this marketing ploy will be fooling a lot of folks who desire to buy full-fat grass-fed butter.
It seems that some butter brands have adopted what companies making substitutes for butter have been doing for years.
I have become very tuned in to these labeling tricks and manufacturer games over the years. When it comes to packaging, I double-check the ingredients along with the manufacturing processes every few months. This is even for products that I’ve been buying for years.
But how many people really do this?
Ingredient Bait and Switch
You NEED to be doing this!
Manufacturers are changing ingredients and packaging all the time! The primary intent of these “improvements” is to increase product sales and profitability. Your health is, sadly, of little to no concern in the grand scheme of things.
Reducing the fat content in its butter will skyrocket profits for Kerrygold as they will make the same per unit for the butter and yet be able to sell the skimmed cream to other companies to make ice cream or whatnot thereby increasing revenue substantially.
If you buy Kerrygold, I’m not telling you to stop buying it. I’m only telling you to beware of this new packaging nonsense and be sure what you buy is what you intend: full-fat butter!
By the way, if you are wondering why I love full-fat butter, you might want to educate yourself on the low-fat scam by learning about the history of butter vs margarine in the United States.
As for me, I will be returning this product to the store for a full refund. It is falsely advertised after all. I had no way of knowing it was a low-fat product until I opened it.
Manufacturer Response
I received this email from Kerrygold following the widespread sharing of this article. I find it very hard to believe that my blog suddenly brought this packaging error to their attention.
Do they have NO ONE on the production line in charge of quality control? This was not a difficult problem to identify. Could we have a bit of spin going on here? Perhaps so.
Dear Sarah,
Your blog has brought to our attention a packaging error of which we were unaware. While Kerrygold does sell a Reduced Fat & Sodium Butter the pack you show on your blog is 100% full fat butter which has been packed with the incorrect inner seal. There is no deliberate intent on our part to mislead our valued consumers or to misrepresent our product although we regret the confusion this is clearly creating.
We are working to identify how much product has been released into the market with the incorrect packaging so that we can replace it as soon as possible. In the meantime we would appreciate your assistance in clarifying the misunderstanding to your readers. We would love to provide further clarity — our email is [email protected] — and we are happy to answer any specific questions you and your readers may have in relation to the product.
With thanks & regards,
The Kerrygold Team
Why I No Longer Buy Kerrygold
I wanted to let all of you know that I no longer buy even the traditional Kerrygold brick butter in foil packaging. Why? A good friend visited Ireland and traveled extensively to a number of grass-based dairy farms.
This credible source told me that while the cows that provide cream for the Kerrygold butter are definitely on pasture and hence “grass-fed”, they receive supplemental GMO animal feed as well especially during the winter months. The local community and citizenry in Ireland concur and will tell you as much if you are in the area.
So, the word on the street is that Kerrygold is not legitimately pastured either.
Butter from cows that get GMO feed introduces the very real possibility of Roundup residue in the butter.
Thanks but no thanks!
While I have not been able to confirm this story 100%, I trusted the credibility of the information enough to permanently switch to another brand (I currently use this one).
I use this butter for cooking in addition to the homemade pastured raw butter I make for non-cooking purposes.
I also no longer recommend Kerry Gold in my Shopping Guide.
What about Organic Valley butter as an alternative to Kerry Gold? While I am not happy about Organic Valley’s policy that disallows member farmers to sell raw milk on the side to their community (treating them more like medieval serfs than the independent business owners that they are), I find this less onerous than deceptively feeding animals GMO feed without clearly informing the end consumer.

I just went on their website and told them what I thought … taking fat out of butter is just wrong! Fat is the point of butter! I told them they had a great product in their regular butter (salt or unsalted) and PLEASE don’t change it. I also told them the only way I saw to make it better was to make it RAW! Just my two cents worth… I’ve learned that many companies DO listen to the consumer. If enough people complain, they’ll listen. Just sayin’…
Go to the kerrygold site and find their email and email them about this.
i had a concern last year about something and emailed them.
they promptly answered my question.
I went to purchase more Kerry Gold this weekend and the bars had been replaced with the spreadable butter.. I wanted my bars, so I did not purchase the spreadable.. I wondered what was different. Now, I know.. Thanks for sharing your information.
i’m curious – when you discover things like this – do you get in touch with the manufacturer? in other words, do you take any action in additon to returning the product and not buying it again?
Unfortunately, I have not been encouraged with the responses from corporations when I have contacted them about cheapening of their products in the past.
I should also say that I do my best to buy as little as possible from stores. I buy my raw butter from a small local farm. Buying food without labels as much as possible is the best way to go as obsessing over packaging is not the way I prefer to spend my time.
I purchase 8 bricks of foil wrapped Kerrygold, unsalted butter every 3 – 4 weeks at Trader Joe’s. We LOVE this butter, and I hope that TJ’s will continue to carry this product!!!
Kerrygold representatives, if you read this, DO NOT sacrifice the original, normal, real butter in favor of low-fat, low sodium crap. It does a great disservice to everything else you do right (cows on pasture, summer milk, etc.)!
Thank you for the heads up! Returning the package based on false advertising is a good way to alert the grocer to this ploy and to let them know what we really want to buy (full fat butter).
I saw this in the grocery store too and immediately thought that they had to have changed something and it couldnt be healthy. You dont need to add air to have spreadable butter you just need to remember to set your butter out to soften before dinner.
Exactly.
We just keep it on the table most of the year, though it’s a bit touchy in August. We eat butter fast enough that it’s got no chance of going off.
Though ours is local, not imported. I’ve never quite understood why Kerrygold was so big as opposed to buying local as for raw milk, yogurt, cheese, etc.
I just checked my KerryGold butter. The unsalted says 12 grams of fat/tablespoon and the garlic and herb butter one says 10 grams of fat/tablespoon — 7 grams saturated and the other 3 grams, who the heck knows.
Is this what they should say? There’s no marking of low fat on the product. I’ll finish what I have but from now on I’ll buy it from my farmer.
Thanks to the person who mentioned the new Stonyfield. I won’t buy it anymore and I’ll be writing to the company. I’ll stick to buying Seven Stars because my farmer doesn’t make yogurt.
I haven’t seen this style of package. I just bought some foil wrapped type to make ghee and it was wonderful! It yielded so much more clarified volume than when I tried it with an organic brand. It was a gorgeous golden color too! I’m glad eh haven’t tried anything new with the foil bricks 🙂
I absolutely will not be buying this crap, I hate being lied to especially when it is so prevalent with a ton of other products. Im better off buying the raw milk cream from the farm and skimming it off to make it myself. Yes its expensive but so is a pair of shoes.
-Kerri