National Cereal Day

United States
United States

National Cereal Day Quick Facts

HashtagsCompiled on#NationalCerealDay
2026 DateMarch 7, 2026
2027 DateMarch 7, 2027

National Cereal Day

National Cereal Day in

Top X Posts (formerly Tweets) for National Cereal Day


National Cereal Day History

National Cereal Day commemorates the crucial place that breakfast cereal has in dietary culture. Its purpose is to honor the extensive variety and convenience of cereals and their nutritional contribution to daily health.

While the origins of National Cereal Day are not well-documented, it is generally considered to be inspired by the advent of breakfast cereal, a concept developed in 19th century America. In 1863, Dr. James Caleb Jackson, a nutritionist and reformer, conceived a breakfast dish, later recognized as the earliest form of cold breakfast cereal - a novelty in an era accustomed to heavy breakfast meats.

The day is typically observed with fervor by cereal manufacturers, retailers, nutritionists, culinary enthusiasts, and consumers. It encourages celebration through social media sharing, cereal-themed events, innovative recipe creations and nutritional discussions promoting the importance of breakfast as the first meal of the day. Mark your calendar, because National Cereal Day is celebrated every year on the 7th of March.

Top 10 Facts for National Cereal Day in 2026

  • The word cereal finds its linguistic roots in Ceres, the Roman goddess of harvest and agriculture, whose name was historically synonymous with the essential grains of life.
  • The very first ready-to-eat breakfast cereal was Granula, a heavy bran-based product created in 1863 by James Caleb Jackson that was so dense it required an overnight soak in milk before it became edible.
  • Dr. John Harvey Kellogg accidentally discovered the process for flaked cereal in 1894 while leaving a batch of cooked wheat to go stale, a discovery that eventually led to the global success of Corn Flakes.
  • Battle Creek, Michigan, is widely known as the Cereal Capital of the World because it served as the birthplace of both the Kellogg Company and the Post Consumer Brands empire.
  • The first promotional prize ever offered by a cereal brand was The Funny Jungleland Moving Pictures Book, which was given to customers who purchased two packages of corn flakes in 1909.
  • During the historic Apollo 11 mission, astronauts consumed Kellogg's Corn Flakes as part of their diet during the first lunar landing.
  • The satirical 2024 film Unfrosted portrays a highly fictionalized version of the 1960s "space race" for breakfast pastries, specifically the rivalry between Kellogg and Post to invent the Pop-Tart.
  • In early 2026, cereal fans are anticipating the release of cosmic-themed Strawberry Lucky Charms and Blue Raspberry Trix to promote the upcoming Super Mario Galaxy Movie.
  • The literary work The Road to Wellville by T.C. Boyle explores the bizarre and fanatical health-food culture of the late 19th century that laid the foundation for the modern cereal industry.
  • Cult classic status was cemented for the discontinued Monster Cereal known as Fruit Brute after it made notable background appearances in the films Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs.

Top things to do for National Cereal Day

  • Enjoy your favorite cereal. Cereal is a snack that can be enjoyed at any time of the day.
  • Cut up some fruits or grab some nuts and add it into your cereal. We find bananas to be a great addition to cereal.
  • Box Tops for Education is a charity organization that donates to schools based on products bought in stores. They first appeared in 1996 on cereal boxes such as Cheerios, Lucky Charms, and Total. By clipping off the label, families and students could earn money for their schools. The practice still continues today though the process is digital. Continue the tradition by donating to an organization that has gone strong for over 2 decades and that has helped raise $934 million for schools.

Copyright 2002-2026 © Sapro Systems LLC • About Privacy Policy License Terms Corrections & Suggestions