Vegan options at Buffalo Wild Wings: the sauce roster decoded
Buffalo Wild Wings is a wing-chain that runs on butter and ranch, but the cauliflower wings, the salad, and a small set of vegan sauces make a workable vegan order. Here is the full sports-bar playbook.
Buffalo Wild Wings is the sports-bar stop that the omnivore in your group always picks. The brand name is wings; the kitchen is built around chicken; the dipping sauces are mostly cream-based; and yet a careful vegan order is possible if you know which two or three sauces actually work, how the cauliflower wings batter problem plays out at your specific location, and which sides clear the shared-fryer cross-contact bar. This guide is the full sauce-roster decoder, the cauliflower wings checkpoint, and the exact server script for the sports-bar happy hour where you have to order something while everyone else is eating wings. The honest answer at most US Buffalo Wild Wings: the vegan playbook works, it is small, and it is more about the sauces than about the protein.
Is there anything vegan at Buffalo Wild Wings?
Yes, but the safe core is small and depends heavily on which sauces and sides your specific location stocks. The reliably vegan items at virtually every US Buffalo Wild Wings: the Garden Salad (no cheese, no croutons, no chicken, oil and vinegar dressing or a vegan vinaigrette where stocked), french fries (shared-fryer caveat applies), tater tots (shared-fryer caveat), a side of carrots and celery (the dippers that come with wings, vegan as raw vegetables but the ranch and blue-cheese sauces that come with them are not), and most fountain drinks plus most beers.
The plant-based item that varies the most by location: the Cauliflower Wings (sometimes called Plant-Based Wings or Veggie Wings on the local menu). Some markets carry a vegan-batter version; most US markets carry a dairy-and-egg-batter version that is plant-protein but not vegan. Confirm at your specific location before ordering, and treat this as the load-bearing variable for whether your BWW visit can include a wing-style entree at all.
What looks vegan but is not: most of the chicken-style menu items obviously, the Beer-Battered Onion Rings (egg-and-dairy batter), the Mozzarella Sticks (cheese is the dish), the Loaded Tots (cheese and bacon and ranch), the Buffalo Mac (cheese), the Chili Con Queso (cheese and ranch), the Pretzel Knots with Beer Cheese (the cheese and the dipping sauce), the Burger lineup (no Beyond or Impossible at most US BWW franchises as of 2026 - some Northeast markets piloted a Beyond Burger LTO but it is not a national menu permanent).
The cauliflower wings checkpoint
The Cauliflower Wings at Buffalo Wild Wings sound like the headline vegan order and are the single most-asked-about item by vegan diners. The complication: the standard cauliflower wings batter contains milk and egg at most US franchises. Even though the cauliflower itself is vegan, the dish as plated is not. This catches a lot of new-vegan diners who order it on the assumption that 'cauliflower wings' is a vegan item by default.
How to confirm at your specific location: ask the server to check the batter ingredient list on the kitchen's prep card. If the batter is the standard milk-and-egg recipe, the dish is not vegan. If the batter is the alternative vegan recipe (some Northeast and West Coast markets adopted this in 2023-2024), the dish IS vegan when paired with a vegan sauce (see next section). The question to ask: 'Are the cauliflower wings made with the dairy-and-egg batter or the vegan batter today?' Most servers will check without comment.
If the cauliflower wings are vegan-batter at your location, the strongest order is cauliflower wings tossed in a confirmed-vegan sauce (Asian Zing, Thai Curry, Mango Habanero at most locations) with a side of carrots and celery and a side of fries. Lands around $14 to $16 depending on region.
If the cauliflower wings are dairy-batter at your location, skip them. The shared fryer adds a second layer of cross-contact, but the batter alone is the disqualifying factor. A side-and-salad build is the next-best play.
Sauces and dressings: which are actually vegan
Buffalo Wild Wings carries 25-plus signature sauces and dry rubs. Most are not vegan. The chain's sauce roster historically uses butter, cream, honey, fish-sauce-derived umami components, and Worcestershire (anchovy-based) as flavor builders. The list of confirmed vegan sauces varies by year because BWW reformulates regularly, but the generally-vegan-as-of-2026 picks at most US locations: Asian Zing, Thai Curry, Mango Habanero, Sweet BBQ, Honey BBQ (NOT vegan, contains honey, despite the name confusion - skip), Spicy Garlic (varies, confirm), Hot BBQ, Caribbean Jerk (varies). The dry rubs to skip: Buffalo Seasoning (varies), Lemon Pepper (varies, some contain butter powder), Desert Heat (varies), Salt and Vinegar (often vegan).
The original Buffalo sauce is the load-bearing sauce of the brand and is NOT vegan at most US locations - it contains butter as a base. Some BWW markets carry a vegan-buffalo variant; most do not. If you want the buffalo flavor on your cauliflower wings or fries, ask whether the kitchen carries a butter-free buffalo today. The answer is usually no.
Dressings: Honey Mustard NOT vegan, Ranch NOT vegan, Blue Cheese NOT vegan, Caesar NOT vegan, Southwest NOT vegan (cream-based), Italian usually vegan, Balsamic Vinaigrette usually vegan, Oil and Vinegar always vegan. The Asian Sesame dressing varies by location.
The 25-plus sauces problem: BWW reformulates regularly so a sauce that was vegan last year may not be vegan today. The safest move is to ask the server to pull the printed allergen card at your specific location and verify the sauce of choice TODAY, rather than relying on online lists. The answer can change quarter-by-quarter.
The safe core build (when cauliflower wings are not an option)
If the cauliflower wings at your specific location are dairy-batter, the next-best vegan plate at Buffalo Wild Wings is built from three sides plus a salad. Start with the Garden Salad (no cheese, no croutons, no chicken, oil and vinegar dressing or balsamic). Add a side of tater tots or french fries (decide your shared-fryer cross-contact standard before ordering). Add a side of plain carrots and celery (the same vegetable-side that comes with wings, ordered a-la-carte, vegan as long as the ranch and blue-cheese dipping sauces are skipped).
The salad-plus-fries build lands around $12 to $14 depending on region. It is not satisfying as a sit-down dinner but it is a workable bar-stop meal that pairs well with a vegan beer (most of the BWW beer roster is vegan; the cream-based beers and the milk stouts are not).
The other path: a mid-week BWW visit during happy hour gets you small-portion versions of the same builds at lower prices. The happy hour menu often includes a Garden Salad option for $5 to $7 and a fries-or-tots side for $3 to $5. A vegan happy-hour stop at BWW lands around $10 plus a beer.
What does not work as a sit-down vegan main: any wing-style entree (the chicken wings obviously, the boneless wings obviously, the cauliflower wings if the batter is dairy at your location), any of the sandwich entrees (the buns at most BWW franchises contain dairy and the burger patties are not Beyond or Impossible at most national franchises), any of the wraps (the wrap fillings are mostly chicken and the dressings are mostly ranch).
Exact server script
Try this opener: 'Hi, I am vegan, which means no animal products including dairy, eggs, butter, or honey. Can you check with the kitchen on a few things?' BWW servers handle vegan requests less often than Cheesecake Factory or Chipotle servers because the demographic is sports-bar omnivore-heavy at most franchises, so explain rather than assume.
Then list the asks: 'I would like the Garden Salad with no cheese, no croutons, no chicken, and oil and vinegar dressing. A side of tater tots. And could you check whether the cauliflower wings today are made with the dairy-and-egg batter or the vegan batter? If they are vegan today, I will order them tossed in [Asian Zing / Thai Curry / Mango Habanero / your sauce of choice].'
The follow-up question to ask: 'Could you also confirm whether the [chosen sauce] is vegan today? I know the recipes change sometimes.' Most BWW servers will pull the printed allergen card without comment because the chain's training emphasizes allergen verification.
Drinks: 'And [a vegan beer / a vodka soda / a fountain Diet Coke].' Skip the milkshakes (dairy), the loaded shakes (dairy and cream), and the cream-based cocktails. Most beers on the BWW draft list are vegan; the rare exceptions are milk stouts, some Belgian whites that use casein for clarification, and a small handful of cream ales.
Drinks: beer, cocktails, and sports-bar happy hour
Beer is the strongest drink lane at Buffalo Wild Wings for vegans. The chain's draft list and bottled beer lineup include 30-plus options at most franchises and the vast majority are vegan. Major-brand domestics (Bud Light, Miller Lite, Coors Light, Yuengling, Budweiser) are vegan. Major IPAs (Lagunitas, Sierra Nevada, Stone, Dogfish) are vegan. The non-vegan exceptions are mostly milk stouts, oyster stouts, and a small set of cream ales; the BWW menu rarely highlights these so they are easy to avoid.
Cocktails: most BWW cocktails are vegan. The frozen drinks lineup leans on dairy-stabilizer mixes (margaritas, daiquiris, pina coladas often contain a dairy stabilizer in the prepackaged mix at high-volume sports-bar franchises). Confirm at the bar before ordering a frozen drink. Spirit-and-mixer drinks (vodka soda, gin and tonic, rum and Coke, whiskey ginger) are universally vegan. The cream-based cocktails (white russian, mudslide, baileys-anything) are obviously not vegan.
Happy hour: BWW happy hour is when the vegan playbook stretches the furthest because the small-portion versions of vegan-confirmable items (Garden Salad, fries, tots, cauliflower wings if vegan-batter) are cheaper and the vegan beer roster is the same. A happy-hour vegan stop is more affordable and more enjoyable than a peak-dinner-hour BWW visit.
Kid-friendly vegan orders at Buffalo Wild Wings
The BWW kids' menu is built around chicken tenders, mini cheeseburgers, mac and cheese, and pizza - none of which adapt to vegan at most franchises. The two paths that work for a vegan kids' meal at BWW. First: the kids' Carrots and Celery side plus a kids' Tater Tots side plus a kids' fountain drink or apple juice. The kids' menu typically includes a fruit option (apple slices or orange slices depending on franchise availability) which adds a third side. Second: a smaller portion of the adult Garden Salad (no cheese, no croutons, oil and vinegar) ordered as a kids' meal substitution; some BWW franchises will downsize for a kids' meal price.
If your kids' location stocks the vegan-batter cauliflower wings, the BWW kids' menu often includes a smaller portion of cauliflower wings as a sub for chicken wings. Confirm both the batter and the sauce are vegan at your specific location before ordering. The kids' Asian Zing or Mango Habanero portion is sometimes too spicy for younger kids; the Sweet BBQ is the milder kid-friendly vegan sauce.
What does not work as a kids' vegan meal: the kids' Mac and Cheese (cheese is the entire dish), the kids' Mini Cheeseburgers (cheese plus non-vegan bun plus non-Beyond patty), the kids' Personal Pizza (cheese is the entire dish at most franchises), the kids' Chicken Tenders (no swap), the kids' Pretzels (the dipping cheese is dairy and the pretzel itself often contains dairy too).
Cross-contamination at a wing-chain kitchen
BWW kitchens are higher cross-contamination risk than most casual-dining chains because the sauce-tossing step uses shared bowls and shared tongs across all 25-plus sauces and across both chicken wings and cauliflower wings (where stocked). The 'bowl' (the metal mixing bowl the wings are tossed in) is the loudest cross-contact point: a chicken-wing toss followed immediately by a cauliflower-wing toss in the same bowl with the same tongs is the default workflow at high-volume franchises.
How to address: ask the kitchen to use a dedicated clean bowl and clean tongs for your cauliflower wings. The kitchen will accommodate without comment because the request is reasonable and the workflow change is small. Phrasing: 'Could the kitchen toss my cauliflower wings in a clean bowl with fresh tongs, please? Thank you.'
The shared-fryer factor: BWW fries and tots typically share oil with breaded chicken and onion rings. If you avoid trace cross-contact, skip the fries and tots and rely on the salad-and-cauliflower-wings build. If your standard is more practical, the fries are a workable side at the same trace-cross-contact level as Applebees fries.
If you have a documented dairy or egg allergy, ask for the manager-led allergen protocol. The protocol pauses the line briefly for your dish, fresh utensils are used at every station, and the manager hand-delivers the plate. The flow takes about ten extra minutes. BWW's allergen protocol is well-documented internally because the chain handles a high volume of gluten-free customers, so the staff is trained to execute it cleanly.
When to skip BWW for a different sports-bar stop
Buffalo Wild Wings is a workable vegan stop if you arrive expecting the small-roster playbook and a sports-bar atmosphere. It is not the right pick if you are choosing the restaurant for a satisfying sit-down meal with vegan-friendly variety. Alternatives on the same sports-bar list include: Yard House (multiple Beyond Burger and Beyond Wing items as national menu permanents), TGI Fridays (Beyond Meat options), Chili's (limited but real vegan adaptations), and most local sports bars with a Beyond Burger or Impossible Burger on the menu. If the table is choosing where to eat, push for one of those four.
The right time to commit to a BWW stop: a sports-watching evening with a group that picked it specifically for the screens-and-wings atmosphere, an airport-adjacent food court when other choices are closed, a kids' birthday party, a happy-hour stop where the cheap-fries-plus-vegan-beer math makes sense. In those cases the salad-plus-tots playbook covers the food side and the beer roster covers the drink side, and you walk out under $20 with the night largely intact.
The third path: scan ahead. Vegan Recon can pull the current BWW menu for your specific location and flag the cauliflower-wings-batter status (vegan or dairy at your franchise this quarter), the current vegan-sauce roster, and any limited-time vegan items that are not on the standard menu. The scan takes under a minute and the cauliflower-wings batter status alone is worth the scan because it changes the order playbook from 'salad and tots' to 'wings and sides' or vice versa.
Wrap up
Buffalo Wild Wings is a wing-chain where the wings are mostly off-limits for vegans but the rest of the order can come together if you know the sauce roster, the cauliflower-wings batter checkpoint, and the salad-plus-tots fallback. The Garden Salad with oil and vinegar plus a side of tots plus a vegan beer is the always-works build at any BWW; the cauliflower wings tossed in Asian Zing or Mango Habanero is the upgrade when the batter is vegan-batter at your specific franchise. The 25-plus sauces are the chain's complexity, and the answer changes quarter-by-quarter as recipes get reformulated, so the printed allergen card at your location is more reliable than any online list. Paste any BWW menu URL into Vegan Recon for a current per-location pull that covers cauliflower-wings batter status, vegan-sauce list, and any seasonal or LTO vegan items not on the national menu.
★ About the author ★
Dorian started Vegan Recon after one too many evenings squinting at a chain restaurant menu, trying to work out which sauces were dairy-free. He runs True North Technology from Michigan and spends most of his time tightening the scan pipeline so the next vegan diner does not have to do that work twice.
★ Find Dorian elsewhere ★
FAQ
Are the cauliflower wings at Buffalo Wild Wings vegan?
It depends on the location. The standard cauliflower wings batter contains milk and egg at most US franchises. Some Northeast and West Coast markets adopted a vegan-batter version in 2023-2024. Ask the server to confirm the batter ingredients at your specific location before ordering.
Is Buffalo Wild Wings buffalo sauce vegan?
Not at most US locations. The original Buffalo sauce is butter-based at the standard franchise. Some BWW markets carry a vegan-buffalo variant; most do not. Ask whether the kitchen carries a butter-free buffalo today.
Which BWW sauces are vegan?
The generally-vegan-as-of-2026 picks at most US locations are Asian Zing, Thai Curry, Mango Habanero, Sweet BBQ, Hot BBQ, Caribbean Jerk, and Spicy Garlic (varies). Honey BBQ contains honey and is not vegan. The 25-plus sauce roster reformulates regularly so confirm at your specific location.
Does Buffalo Wild Wings have a Beyond Burger or Impossible Burger?
Not on the national menu as of 2026. Some Northeast markets piloted a Beyond Burger limited-time offering, but no Beyond or Impossible Burger is a national menu permanent. The salad-and-tots build covers the burger-less sit-down.
Are BWW dressings vegan?
Mostly not. Ranch, blue cheese, Caesar, Honey Mustard, and Southwest are not vegan. Italian and Balsamic Vinaigrette are usually vegan. Oil and Vinegar is always vegan.
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