Uncrustables is an American brand of sealed crustless sandwich. Owned and manufactured by The J. M. Smucker Company since 1998, the brand originally included only frozen and crimped peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. It now also has a honey and peanut butter variety, a chocolate hazelnut spread variety, and a raspberry variety launched recently. Distributed in the United States and Canada, fiscal year 2024 sales were approximately $800 million.
TheÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ sandwich was developed in 1995 in Fargo, North Dakota by Len Kretchman and David Geske. Before creating the product, Geske ran a packaged ice business, while Kretchman was a former wide receiver for North Dakota State University, and had worked with schools in the food service industry. Geske and Kretchman were having lunch with their families, when Kristen Geske and Emily Kretchman commented to their husbands that they should "create a mass-produced peanut butter and jelly sandwich without the crust." After doing taste tests at schools, Kretchman and Geske began selling the sandwiches as the IncredibleÃÂ Uncrustables. A trademark was secured for the name, and after a year and a half, a patent was also secured for the sandwich. By the end of 1998, 50 employees working out of Fargo were making 35,000 sandwiches a day. The product was sold to schools in eight Midwestern states.
Smucker's bought the brand in 1998 for $1 million, changing the name toÃÂ Uncrustables. The original flavors included grape and peanut butter, and strawberry and peanut butter.ÃÂ TheÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ brand had $10 million in annual sales in 2000, and $27.5 million in annual sales in 2004.
In October 2012, several shipments ofÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ sandwiches were recalled for containing peanut butter by Sunland Inc., a Smucker's supplier. Sunland had recently closed a plant after other companies using its products reported salmonella outbreaks. Smucker's tests its own products, and no illnesses were attributed toÃÂ Uncrustables. In 2017, theÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ recipe was reformulated to useÃÂ sugar instead of high fructose corn syrup, and NSF International certified the reformulated recipe as non-GMO. Citing difficulties meeting demand, Smucker's did little marketing for theÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ brand in its early years. Its first national marketing campaign was in 2019, and coincided with the opening of a dedicated plant in Longmont, Colorado. Built for $340 million, the newÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ facility doubled production capacity.
Smucker'sÃÂ expanded distribution ofÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ sandwiches into Canada in 2022, and began building an R&D center at the Smucker's headquarters in Ohio. Sales for theÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ brand in 2022 came to $511 million. Smucker's continued to have difficulty keeping up with demand, and was working on expanding itsÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ plant in Denver. Kansas City Chiefs football player Travis Kelce "fueled a sales boom" in November 2023, after he mentioned in a podcast that he likely ate moreÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ sandwiches than "anything else in the world." Sales forÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ that year were $685 million. The Athletic reported in October 2024 that the NFL consumed over 80,000ÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ sandwiches in a year. The Denver Broncos ate the most, consuming 700 sandwiches a week.
In November 2024, Smucker's opened anÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ manufacturing facility in McCalla, Alabama. Around $1.1 billion was invested in the plant. A raspberry variety ofÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ was released in 2024.
UncrustablesÃÂ are "pre-made peanut butter and jelly, pocket-like, circular sandwiches" made by The J. M. Smucker Company, according to the Associated Press. The sandwiches are sold frozen and are meant to be defrosted and eaten at room temperature. In 2023, Smucker's launched a variety that lasts for five days in the fridge after thawing, allowing them to appear in convenience-store refrigerators.
According to the Wall Street Journal, they are popular with children but also with adults at work or away from home. Flavors include raspberry, grape, strawberry, and honey, all combined with peanut butter. A variety with only chocolate-flavored hazelnut is also sold. Larger versions ofÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ sandwiches are sold in certain markets and contain around 590 calories instead of around 200. The original flavors, grape and strawberry jam, are sold in reduced sugar versions on whole wheat bread.
Patent number 6,004,596 was issued to Smucker's on December 21, 1999, for a "sealed crustless sandwich". Since then, theÃÂ UncrustablesÃÂ brand has been involved in several high-profile patent and trademark disputes.
Smucker's began an effort in 2001 to expand its patent to also include manufacturing methods. After the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office denied the request, Smucker's appealed several times. Its bid was rejected in 2005, with patent number 6,004,596 deemed not "novel or non-obvious enough."
Smucker's sent a cease and desist letter to Chubby Snacks for trademark infringement in 2020; Chubby Snacks changed the shape of its crimped sandwiches to clouds as a result. In 2022, Smucker's sent a cease and desist letter to Gallant Tiger's PB&J over its advertising of a round peanut butter and jelly sandwich with a bite out of it. The claim was later dropped. Uncrustables in 2025 sued Trader Joe's for alleged trademark infringement.