Toblerone

Toblerone

Toblerone Chocolate: Switzerland's Triangular Icon

Some chocolate bars you have to read the label to identify. Toblerone isn't one of them — the tall gold box and that ridge of chocolate peaks give it away instantly. We stock the classic Toblerone lineup, from the original milk bar to dark, white, and crunchy salted almond, with orders leaving our New Jersey fulfillment center the next business day.

7 Results

7 Results

$
to
$

The highest price is $5.49

Toblerone

Toblerone Milk Chocolate Bar

$3.99

Unit price
per

$3.99

Unit price
per

In stock

Toblerone Fruit & Nuts Bar
New
Toblerone

Toblerone Fruit & Nuts Bar

$3.99

Unit price
per

$3.99

Unit price
per

In stock

white chocolate bar from toblerone
Sold out
Toblerone

Toblerone White Chocolate Bar

$3.69

Unit price
per

$3.69

Unit price
per

Out of stock

Toblerone Dark Chocolate Bar
Sold out
Toblerone

Toblerone Dark Chocolate Bar

$3.99

Unit price
per

$3.99

Unit price
per

Out of stock

swiss toblerone milk chocolate
Sold out
Toblerone

Toblerone Milk Chocolate Bar (50g)

Regular price $2.59 $1.99 -23%

Unit price
per

Regular price $2.59 $1.99 -23%

Unit price
per

Out of stock

Toblerone Crunchy Salted Almond Bar
Sold out
Toblerone

Toblerone Crunchy Salted Almond Bar

5.0

$5.49

Unit price
per

$5.49

Unit price
per

Out of stock

Toblerone Milk Chocolate Bar 50g
Sold out
Toblerone

Toblerone Milk Chocolate Bar 50g

$1.99

Unit price
per

$1.99

Unit price
per

Out of stock

From a Bern chocolate shop to a worldwide shelf

Toblerone was created in 1908 by Theodor Tobler and Emil Baumann at the Tobler family's factory in Bern, Switzerland. The name stitches together "Tobler" and torrone, the Italian word for nougat. Tobler moved fast to protect the idea — Toblerone was among the first chocolate products ever patented, shape and all — and the core recipe has stayed remarkably consistent for more than a century.

Why the peaks?

The row of triangular peaks is usually tied to the Matterhorn, the pyramid-shaped mountain on the Swiss–Italian border. There's a competing family legend that Tobler's real inspiration was a pyramid of dancers at the Folies Bergère in Paris — the brand prefers the mountain. Whichever you believe, the silhouette became a trademark as famous as the chocolate itself.

The bars we carry

Our Toblerone selection covers the essentials: the original milk chocolate, a darker bar for people who want more cocoa, a smooth white, and the crunchy salted almond. They travel well as a gift — the shape does half the wrapping for you — and a single bar is an easy add-on to any order. Toblerone sits within our wider Swiss candy range, alongside Lindt, Ricola, and Kambly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a hidden bear in the Toblerone logo?
Yes. Look inside the Matterhorn on the packaging and you'll spot a bear standing upright, tucked into the mountain. It's a tribute to Bern, the Swiss city where Toblerone was born — the bear is Bern's heraldic symbol. Most people go years without noticing it.
What's inside each Toblerone triangle?
A nougat made from honey and almonds, set into Swiss chocolate. That combination of chewy nougat and crisp almond is what gives Toblerone a texture no plain chocolate bar has.
What's the correct way to break a Toblerone?
Push the end peak inward, toward the rest of the bar, rather than snapping it outward. It separates cleanly along the join instead of crumbling — a small trick that surprises most people the first time they try it.
Does Toblerone contain nuts or milk?
Yes to both — the nougat is made with almonds, and the range includes a dedicated crunchy almond bar, so it isn't suitable if you're avoiding nuts. It's made with milk and honey, which makes it vegetarian but not vegan.

Ingredients & nutritional facts

Information about ingredients and nutritional values are displayed here to reflect our current products. We recommend you to compare this information with the information on the packaging of the orders that you receive. Any variations will be due to potential transition periods, as a result of new information by the manufacturers.