Finding kosher vegan brands on Amazon used to mean squinting at ingredient lists and cross-checking hechsher symbols one product at a time. The good news is that plant-based eating and kosher certification overlap more than most people expect — pareve products are, by definition, free of meat and dairy, which puts a huge slice of the kosher aisle within reach of a vegan pantry. We've spent months testing and researching brands that check both boxes: genuinely plant-based and reliably certified kosher, so you don't have to cross-reference labels every time you shop. From chocolate that skips the dairy without skipping the flavor, to protein powders built entirely on plants, to the plant-based milks that make your morning coffee routine easier, this guide rounds up the kosher vegan brands worth adding to your Amazon cart. Every product here is certified kosher and widely available, and we've noted the relevant kosher classification (pareve, KFP, etc.) wherever it matters.
🍫 No Whey Foods — Vegan Chocolate & Candy
Allergy-friendly, dairy-free chocolate made for sharing.

No Whey Foods Chocolate Cherries (2 Pack)
Dairy-free, nut-free, vegan chocolate-covered cherries
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No Whey Foods Vegan Allergy-Friendly Chocolate Candy
Free of dairy, nuts, and top allergens
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Allsorted Gourmet Chocolate Truffle Gift Box
A vegan truffle assortment that still feels like a splurge
View ProductNo Whey Foods built its whole line around skipping the top allergens without skipping flavor, which happens to make everything here pareve and fully plant-based. The chocolate-covered cherries and allergy-friendly candy are dairy-free by design, not as an afterthought, so there's no risk of a "may contain milk" surprise. The Allsorted Gourmet Truffle Gift Box is our pick for gifting — it looks and tastes like a premium chocolatier box, which makes it a good option when you want to bring something vegan to a kosher table without anyone noticing the substitution. All three are certified kosher and pareve.
🌱 Vegan Chocolate Favorites
Bean-to-bar and baking chocolate made without dairy.



We chose these three because they cover the three ways people actually eat vegan chocolate: as a gift, as an everyday bar, and as a baking ingredient. U Chocolate's organic gift box is a genuinely nice present that happens to be plant-based, Taza's stone-ground bars are for chocolate lovers who want texture and depth over sweetness, and the vegan chocolate chips are the pantry staple that makes a whole cookie recipe dairy-free in one swap. All three are certified kosher and pareve, so they work equally well in a meat or dairy meal.
💪 Vegan Protein Powders
Plant-based protein without whey or casein.



Protein powder is one of the trickiest categories for a kosher-vegan shopper, since so many popular brands rely on whey or casein by default. Koia, OWYN, and 365's hemp powder solve that from the ground up — each one is built entirely on pea, hemp, or other plant proteins, with no dairy-derived ingredients anywhere on the label. That also means all three are pareve, so they can go into a smoothie after a meat meal without a second thought. OWYN is worth calling out for anyone managing multiple allergies, since it skips soy and gluten on top of dairy.

Koia
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🍫 Vegan Protein Bars
On-the-go protein with a fully plant-based ingredient list.



These three bars and shakes solve the "I need protein and I'm out the door" problem without reaching for whey. Aloha and GoMacro both build their bars around pea and brown rice protein rather than dairy, and both brands lean into short, recognizable ingredient lists, which matters if you're also avoiding processed fillers. Premier's non-dairy almond milk line is a newer addition that gives shake drinkers a plant-based option without switching brands entirely. Check the label on each package for the pareve designation, since formulations can shift between flavors.

Aloha
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🍭 Yum Earth — Vegan Candy
Organic candy without gelatin, dairy, or artificial dyes.



Candy is where "vegan" and "kosher" trip each other up most often, since traditional gummies and gelatin-based candy are neither. Yum Earth builds its entire lineup around pectin instead of gelatin, which makes every product here plant-based and pareve at the same time — a rare combination in the candy aisle. The organic lollipops and Duopops are naturally colored and flavored, and the Party Pack is the practical choice for anyone stocking a classroom, shul kiddush, or holiday goody bag where you need a treat that works for every dietary need at the table.
🥛 Plant-Based Milk
Dairy-free milk for coffee, cereal, and baking.



Plant-based milk is the easiest swap on this whole list, and Califia Farms has become a go-to because it covers oat and soy in shelf-stable formats that don't need refrigeration until opened — handy for stocking a pantry rather than making a special grocery run. Gefen's almond milk earns its spot for a more specific reason: it's certified Kosher for Passover, which is genuinely hard to find in a plant-based milk. All three are pareve, so they're fair game in a coffee after a meat dinner, which is one of the more common reasons people reach for a dairy-free milk in the first place.

Califia Farms
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🍇 Blue Stripes — Cacao Fruit Gummies
Fruit-forward gummies made without gelatin.



Blue Stripes built its gummy line around real cacao fruit and other whole-fruit purees instead of the gelatin base most gummy candy relies on, which is what makes the whole lineup both vegan and pareve. The Variety Pack is the easiest starting point if you want to try a few flavors at once, while the single-flavor Mango Cacao and Pineapple options are worth keeping around once you know what you like. It's a good pick for anyone who wants a fruit-snack texture without falling back on traditional gelatin gummies.

Blue Stripes
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🍡 Good Mallow — Vegan Marshmallows
Plant-based marshmallows, no gelatin required.



Traditional marshmallows almost always rely on gelatin, which rules them out for both vegan and, in most cases, kosher use unless the gelatin itself is certified from a kosher source. Good Mallow sidesteps the issue entirely with a plant-based formula, and Dandies' minis are a long-running vegan staple that's easy to find and bake with. Together they cover both the everyday snacking marshmallow and the recipe-ready mini, so s'mores, hot cocoa, and holiday baking don't need a substitution.

Good Mallow
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What to Look For in Kosher Vegan Products
"Vegan" and "kosher" are two separate certifications, and one doesn't guarantee the other. A product can be entirely plant-based and still lack kosher certification if it was processed on shared equipment without rabbinical supervision, and a product can be certified kosher pareve while still containing non-vegan ingredients like honey or certain food dyes derived from insects. The safest approach is to look for both a recognized kosher symbol (such as OU, OK, Star-K, or Kof-K) and a pareve designation, which confirms the product contains no meat or dairy derivatives.
Pay close attention to gelatin, which shows up constantly in candy, marshmallows, and some supplement capsules — it's typically derived from animal collagen and is neither vegan nor, in most cases, kosher unless specifically certified from a kosher source. Pectin-based candy, like Yum Earth's lollipops, sidesteps this issue entirely. For protein powders and bars, check whether the sweetener or flavoring system uses whey protein isolate or casein, both common dairy derivatives that would disqualify a product from being pareve or vegan even if the base protein is plant-derived.
Kosher for Passover (KFP) certification is a separate layer again, and very few plant-based milks or protein products carry it, since many rely on legumes or grains that fall under kitniyot restrictions observed by some communities during Passover. If you need a product for the holiday specifically, look for the KFP symbol rather than assuming a standard kosher-vegan product will qualify.

Yum Earth
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is all pareve food automatically vegan?
Not necessarily. Pareve means a food contains no meat or dairy, but it can still include honey, eggs, or fish, none of which are vegan even though they're pareve under kosher law.
Are Yum Earth candies actually kosher?
Yes. Yum Earth's lollipops and candy are certified kosher and use pectin rather than gelatin, which keeps them both vegan and pareve.
Can I use plant-based milk after a meat meal?
Yes. Because plant-based milks like oat, soy, and almond milk are pareve, they can be used freely after a meat meal, which is one of the main reasons people keep them on hand for coffee.
Why do some vegan protein bars still have a dairy warning?
Shared manufacturing equipment can introduce trace dairy even into a fully plant-based recipe, which is why some labels include a "may contain milk" allergen warning despite having no dairy ingredients listed.
Is vegan chocolate always kosher?
No. Vegan and kosher are independent certifications, so a vegan chocolate bar still needs a kosher symbol on the packaging to confirm it was produced under rabbinical supervision.
What does Kosher for Passover mean for vegan products?
Kosher for Passover certification confirms a product avoids chametz and, depending on the community's custom, kitniyot as well — a stricter standard than year-round kosher certification, which is why fewer vegan products carry it.
Are protein powders with pea or hemp protein automatically kosher?
Not automatically. The base ingredient being plant-derived helps, but the final product still needs kosher certification from a recognized agency to confirm the manufacturing process meets kosher standards.
The Kosher Hub is not a Kosher Authority. For any advice please refer to your local Kashrut Authority.
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