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Oreo maker Mondelēz sues Aldi, alleging grocery chain copies its packaging to confuse customers

The chain has faced lawsuits over its packaging before
5/30/2025
aldi
Outside an Aldi in Delano, California.

Snack food maker Mondelēz International is suing the Aldi supermarket chain, alleging the packaging for Aldi's store-brand cookies and crackers “blatantly copies” Mondelēz products like Chips Ahoy, Wheat Thins and Oreos.

In a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday (May 27) in Illinois, Chicago-based Mondelēz said Aldi’s packaging was “likely to deceive and confuse customers” and threatened to irreparably harm Mondelēz and its brands. The company is seeking monetary damages and a court order that would stop Aldi from selling products that infringe on its trademarks.

A message seeking comment was left Thursday with Aldi.

In the lawsuit, Mondelēz displayed side-by-side photos of multiple products. Aldi’s Thin Wheat crackers, for example, come in a gold box very similar to Mondelēz's Wheat Thins. Aldi’s chocolate sandwich cookies and Oreos both have blue packaging. The supermarket's Golden Round crackers and Mondelēz’s Ritz crackers are packaged in red boxes.

Aldi, a German discount chain with U.S. headquarters in Batavia, Illinois, keeps prices low by primarily selling products under its own labels.

The chain has faced lawsuits over its packaging before. Last year, an Australian court found that Aldi infringed on the copyright of Baby Bellies snack puffs for young children. In that case, Aldi's packaging featured a cartoon owl and similar colors to the name-brand packaging.

Earlier this year, a U.K. appeals court ruled in favor of Thatchers, a cider company, which sued Aldi over design similarities in the packaging of its lemon cider.

Mondelēz said in its lawsuit that the company had contacted Aldi on numerous occasions about “confusingly similar packaging.” Mondelēz said Aldi discontinued or changed the packaging on some items but continued to sell others.

The lawsuit also alleges that Aldi infringed on Mondelēz's trade dress rights for the packaging of Nutter Butter and Nilla Wafers cookies, and its Premium cracker brand.

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