Olive Garden offers several gluten-free options, making it more accessible than many Italian restaurants for guests with gluten sensitivities. The headline offering is their gluten-free rotini pasta, which can be substituted in most pasta dishes at no extra charge. This means you can enjoy dishes like Chicken Alfredo, Shrimp Scampi, and even Five Cheese Ziti al Forno with gluten-free pasta instead of regular wheat pasta.
However, it’s critically important to understand that Olive Garden’s kitchen is not a gluten-free environment. They prepare wheat-based pasta, breaded items, and breadsticks extensively throughout the day. Cross-contamination is possible and even likely. This guide covers what’s available and what to know before you go.
Olive Garden’s gluten-free pasta is made from rice and corn flour, producing a rotini (spiral-shaped) pasta that has a slightly different texture from traditional wheat pasta but holds sauces well. It’s available as a free substitution in any pasta dish, including:
Note that while the pasta itself is gluten-free, the sauces may have varying levels of gluten exposure depending on preparation. Alfredo sauce and marinara are generally the safest options. Meat sauce may contain trace amounts depending on preparation methods.
If you want to avoid pasta entirely, Olive Garden offers several protein-focused entrees:
The house salad (without croutons) is a good gluten-free option — the Italian dressing is generally safe, but ask your server to confirm. Request croutons be left off explicitly.
For soups, the situation is more nuanced. Minestrone and Pasta e Fagioli contain pasta (not gluten-free). Zuppa Toscana and Chicken & Gnocchi may be thickened with flour. None of the soups are certified gluten-free, so proceed with caution based on your sensitivity level.
This cannot be stressed enough: Olive Garden’s kitchen is not a gluten-free environment. Here’s what that means in practice:
For guests with mild to moderate gluten sensitivity, the gluten-free pasta substitution and protein entrees can work well. For guests with celiac disease or severe gluten allergies, the risk of cross-contamination is real. Discuss your needs with the restaurant manager before ordering. They can take extra precautions, but they cannot guarantee a completely gluten-free meal.
If you’re exploring dietary-specific dining at Olive Garden, also check out our guides to vegetarian options (including the Eggplant Parmigiana and Five Cheese Ziti) and our soup and salad guide for lighter dining.
Available at all Olive Garden locations. Find your nearest restaurant using our location finder tool and call ahead to discuss your dietary needs. For the full menu, see our complete 2026 price list.