Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte: Ingredients, Taste, Calories & How to Order (2026)
Available now at participating Dunkin’ locations nationwide. Launched April 29, 2026.
Every year Dunkin’ drops a seasonal drink that makes the internet stop scrolling. In 2026, it’s not one drink — it’s a whole OREO takeover. But out of the 22 items that hit menus on April 29, one is generating more search traffic than anything else on the list: the OREO Cloud Latte.
This one goes further — real ingredients, honest calorie math, a breakdown of what makes the Marshmallow Cold Foam different from every other foam Dunkin’ has ever served, and the exact order words to get this drink right the first time.
What Is the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte?
Dunkin’ debuted the OREO Cloud Latte on April 29, 2026, as an exclusive iced coffee in its summer lineup.. It features shots of espresso, whole milk, a chocolate cookie swirl, Marshmallow Cold Foam and OREO cookie crumbles.
It’s not a frozen beverage or milkshake, but a true iced latte. Instead, this drink combines coffee and espresso—like a regular iced latte—but adds cookie flavors and fluffy cloud foam for a transformed taste
The beverage is part of Dunkin’s OREO menu for the summer of 2026, which also includes the OREO Matcha, OREO Coffee Chiller, and the OREO Coolatta, which is back from 2019 and 2020. The Cloud Latte is the only one with espresso – and the best one for coffee drinkers who still want dessert.
The Full Ingredient Breakdown — Layer by Layer
This is what’s actually in the cup, in order from bottom to top:

| Layer | What It Is | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Espresso | Dunkin’ standard espresso shots (medium = 2 shots) | Coffee backbone, caffeine, bitterness |
| Whole Milk | Dunkin’ standard whole milk base | Creaminess, fat that softens the espresso |
| Chocolate Cookie Swirl | A sweetened chocolate syrup with cookie flavor | Adds depth, ties the OREO theme to the espresso |
| Marshmallow Cold Foam | Whipped cold foam with marshmallow flavoring | The cloud texture, sweet top layer, the reason this drink sells |
| OREO Cookie Crumbles | Real crushed OREO pieces | Crunch, visual appeal, and the third hit of cookie flavor |
The chocolate cookie swirl blends throughout the drink, delivering flavor from the first sip at the bottom to the foam at the top. That’s the physical reason why this drink is better than an OREO syrup latte – the sweetness has structure.
The Marshmallow Cold Foam: Why It Matters More Than the OREO
Here’s what every other article on this drink misses: the OREO is not the real headline.

The Marshmallow Cold Foam is. April 29 marked the end of about two years off menus for this Dunkin’ fan favourite, and its return is one of the most requested in recent Dunkin’ history. A fan of @snackolator’s April preview post wrote: “Make the marshmallow foam stay forever. They had it like 2 years ago, it is the BEST. It’s so thick, and the flavor is sooo good”.
That’s not cookie love. That’s devotion to a texture.
Cold foam is created with skim milk and cream, which is whipped up to form a pourable layer. But Marshmallow Cold Foam goes beyond that – the marshmallow taste alters the texture. It stays on the top of the beverage instead of sinking. This means you get to enjoy it with every sip instead of just the first few.
And now the foam is the common denominator in the 2026 summer Cloud Latte lineup: there’s now the OREO Cloud Latte, Rocky Road Cloud Latte, Marshmallow Cloud Latte, and Nutty Marshmallow Cloud Latte. But it’s on the OREO version that the foam makes the most sense – it’s a bridge between the chocolate, the coffee and the cookie crumble, without the drink being over-anything.
If you’ve ever found Dunkin’s cold foam drinks too “watery”, Marshmallow Cold Foam fixes that.
Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte Calories — Honest Estimate
Dunkin’ has not released official nutrition facts for the OREO Cloud Latte at time of publication. The April 29 items launched without pre-published calorie data; Dunkin’ typically posts confirmed nutrition in the app within the first few days of a seasonal launch. Check the Dunkin’ app or DunkinDonuts.com for the verified numbers.
Based on comparable Dunkin’ Cloud Lattes that do have confirmed nutrition data, here is a realistic estimate for a medium (24 oz) OREO Cloud Latte:
| Component | Estimated Calories |
|---|---|
| Espresso (2 shots) | ~10 cal |
| Whole milk base | ~150 cal |
| Chocolate cookie swirl (1–2 pumps) | ~60–80 cal |
| Marshmallow Cold Foam | ~80–100 cal |
| OREO crumbles (standard topping) | ~60–80 cal |
| Medium total (estimated) | 360–420 calories |
The Cookie Butter Cloud Latte from Dunkin’s 2025 holiday lineup — a similarly structured espresso + cold foam + topping drink — came in at 370 calories for a medium. That’s the closest comparable, and it sits inside the estimated range above.
How to reduce calories without ruining the drink:
- Ask for light Marshmallow Cold Foam (saves ~40–50 cal)
- Request one pump of chocolate cookie swirl instead of two (saves ~30–40 cal)
- Swap whole milk for oat milk (saves ~30–50 cal, changes mouthfeel slightly)
- Skip the OREO crumble topping (saves ~60–80 cal, but removes the texture contrast)
The smart compromise: keep the OREO crumbles, reduce the foam, swap to oat milk. That trims roughly 100 calories while preserving the parts of the drink that make it visually worth ordering.
OREO Cloud Latte vs. OREO Coffee Chiller — Which One to Order?
Both drinks use OREO crumbles and the chocolate cookie swirl. They split based on one decision: do you want espresso or frozen coffee?

| OREO Cloud Latte | OREO Coffee Chiller | |
|---|---|---|
| Coffee base | Espresso (hot brewed, poured over ice) | Frozen coffee + cream (blended) |
| Texture | Iced latte with foam topping | Thick, milkshake-adjacent frozen drink |
| Foam type | Marshmallow Cold Foam | Whipped cream + mocha drizzle |
| Caffeine | ~195 mg (2 espresso shots, medium) | Lower — frozen coffee is less concentrated |
| Best for | Coffee drinkers who want a dessert layer | Non-coffee or warm-weather snack crowd |
| Closest comparison | Fancy iced latte | Cookie blizzard |
If you drink coffee daily and already order lattes, the Cloud Latte is the right call — the espresso backbone keeps it from tipping into milkshake territory. If you’re ordering for a teenager or someone who doesn’t usually drink coffee, the Coffee Chiller is the friendlier pick.
OREO Cloud Latte vs. OREO Matcha — For the Health-Adjacent Crowd
The OREO Matcha is the other drink in the lineup people are weighing. It uses matcha powder, whole milk, and a vanilla flavor shot, finished with Marshmallow Cold Foam and OREO crumbles.
The OREO and matcha combination sounds wrong. It isn’t. Matcha’s earthiness actively balances the sweetness of the cookie — the same reason salted chocolate works. But if someone orders the OREO Matcha expecting it to taste like a coffee drink, they’ll be surprised. Matcha is lighter in flavor intensity and lower in caffeine (~70 mg vs. ~195 mg for the latte).
Order the OREO Matcha if: you want the Marshmallow Cold Foam and OREO experience but prefer a lighter, less coffee-forward drink. Order the OREO Cloud Latte if: you want espresso with a dessert layer on top.
How to Order the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte — The Exact Way

Via the Dunkin’ app (recommended on launch week): Open the app → Beverages → Espresso Drinks → OREO Cloud Latte. The app shows the drink with customization options before you commit. Dunkin’ Rewards members earn points on every order including new seasonal items.
At the counter or drive-through: Say: “Medium OREO Cloud Latte, iced.” If you want any modifications, add them here — the crew will be trained on the item from day one.
Customizations worth requesting:
- “Extra OREO crumbles” — free at most locations, adds more texture
- “Light marshmallow foam” — if you want the coffee flavor to come forward more
- “Oat milk instead of whole milk” — for a dairy-lighter version that keeps the espresso sharp
- “Add an extra shot” — if you’re using this as your actual morning coffee rather than a treat
What not to do: Don’t ask for the OREO Cloud Latte without the chocolate cookie swirl. It removes the thing that makes the drink taste like OREO rather than just marshmallow foam over espresso. The swirl is the bridge.
Is the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte Worth It?
Yes — with context.
This is not a low-calorie, daily-driver coffee drink. It is a limited-time seasonal drink priced at roughly $5.49–$6.49 for a medium, depending on location. At that price point, it competes with Starbucks’ specialty cold foam lattes but arrives faster (drive-through advantage) and at a slightly lower price in most markets.
The OREO partnership gives Dunkin’ something it rarely has in the iced latte category: a flavor that is genuinely difficult to replicate at home. Marshmallow Cold Foam cannot be made from standard whipped cream. Real OREO crumbles add a texture that syrups can’t replace. The chocolate cookie swirl is a proprietary blend, not available in retail stores.
That combination — three components you cannot easily DIY — is why this drink is generating the traffic it is on day one. It has genuine novelty. It delivers on the concept. And the Marshmallow Cold Foam makes good on two years of fan requests.
Order it in the first two weeks if it sounds like something you’d enjoy. Limited-time items at Dunkin’ typically run through late August or early September, but high-demand items can sell through faster at individual locations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is in the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte? Espresso, whole milk, a chocolate cookie swirl, Marshmallow Cold Foam, and OREO cookie crumbles on top.
How many calories are in the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte? Official data is pending from Dunkin’. Based on comparable Cloud Lattes, a medium is estimated at 360–420 calories. Check the Dunkin’ app for confirmed nutrition once published.
Does the OREO Cloud Latte have coffee in it? Yes — it is espresso-based, making it a real coffee drink, not a frozen or non-coffee option like the OREO Coolatta.
Is the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte available hot? No — it is an iced drink. If you want a hot espresso drink with OREO flavoring, ask about the OREO-flavored syrup pump options on a standard hot latte.
Can you get the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte dairy-free? You can substitute oat milk for whole milk. The Marshmallow Cold Foam contains skim milk and cream; a fully dairy-free version would require skipping or substituting the foam, which changes the drink significantly.
When does the Dunkin OREO Cloud Latte end? It launched April 29, 2026, as part of the summer menu. Dunkin’ summer items typically run through late August, but availability varies by location.
Is the OREO Cloud Latte available on the Dunkin’ app? Yes — it appears in the app under espresso drinks. Dunkin’ Rewards members can earn points on the order.
For the full April 29 summer lineup, check the Dunkin Summer Menu 2026 guide. If you’re interested in a frozen OREO drink, the Dunkin OREO Coolatta guide has the details. To explore current drink pricing, visit the Dunkin Menu with Prices 2026. Allergen information can be found on DunkinDonuts.com or by calling Guest Support at 800-859-5339.
