
The Cheesy Gordita Crunch is a signature Taco Bell item featuring a warm, folded flour flatbread (the “gordita”) with melted cheese wrapped around a crunchy taco shell filled with a seasoned protein, lettuce, shredded cheese, and spicy ranch sauce.
This article examines the caloric and nutritional content of the standard version (with seasoned beef) as well as the grilled chicken, grilled steak, and vegetarian (black bean) variations. We compare calories, fats, carbs, and protein for each option and explain how the ingredients contribute to the total calorie count.
Standard (Beef) Cheesy Gordita Crunch
The standard Cheesy Gordita Crunch contains around 490–500 calories per serving. Nutrition databases report about 500 calories, 28 g fat, 41 g carbohydrates, and 20 g protein for the beef version.
Roughly half of those calories come from fat (about 250 of 500 Cal) and one-third from carbs. The high fat content is due to the melted cheese layers, the creamy Spicy Ranch sauce, and the seasoned beef itself. For example, the beef filling and cheese in the gordita contribute most of the saturated fat (about 10 g).
Taco Bell’s own ingredient lists confirm the components: the gordita flatbread is made from enriched wheat flour and oil, and the taco shell is ground corn with vegetable oil. These starches add most of the carbs, while the cheeses (a three-cheese blend and shredded cheddar) and ranch sauce add fat and some protein.
Chicken and Steak Variations
Swapping in a different protein changes the calorie count modestly. The grilled chicken version is slightly leaner – it contains about 470 calories, with roughly 25 g fat, 39 g carbs, and 23 g protein.
The fat content is lower than beef (25 g vs. 28 g) because grilled chicken has less fat than seasoned beef. The grilled steak (marinated) variant falls in between: about 480 calories, 26 g fat, 39 g carbs, and 23 g protein. (Steak adds slightly fewer calories than beef but a bit more saturated fat.)
In both cases, the flatbread, cheeses, and shell are the same as the beef version – only the protein changes. In practice, these swaps only change the total by a few dozen calories (beef ~500, chicken ~470, steak ~480) because the tortilla, cheese, and sauce make up the bulk of the calories.
Vegetarian (Black Bean) Version
Taco Bell also offers a Black Bean Cheesy Gordita Crunch or the option to “Make It Vegetarian” by substituting beans for the meat. This meatless version has a similar calorie range – on the order of 480–490 calories. In nutrition data, the black bean version is about 480–490 Cal, with roughly 25 g fat, 43–44 g carbs, and 19–20 g protein.
The bean filling adds fiber and plant protein in place of meat, but the overall macronutrient profile remains similar. In fact, one report lists the “without meat” gordita at 500 calories (the same as beef), while another source for the black bean gordita shows ~490 Cal.
In general, swapping beans for beef cuts cholesterol (no animal fat) and adds some fiber, but the cheeses and bread still contribute most of the calories.
Calorie and Nutrition Comparison
The table below summarizes the calories and key macronutrients for each Cheesy Gordita Crunch variation. Data are drawn from Taco Bell’s nutrition resources and independent databases:
| Variation | Calories | Total Fat | Carbohydrates | Protein |
| Beef (Seasoned) | 500 Cal | 28 g | 41 g | 20 g |
| Grilled Chicken | 470 Cal | 25 g | 39 g | 23 g |
| Marinated Grilled Steak | 480 Cal | 26 g | 39 g | 23 g |
| Black Bean (Vegetarian) | 480 Cal | 25 g | 44 g | 19 g |
From the comparison, the chicken option saves ~30 calories versus beef, while steak and beans are in the same 480–490 Cal range. Total fat is highest in the beef version (28 g) and lowest in chicken (25 g), reflecting lean meat swaps.
Carbohydrates are similar across all variations (mostly from the breads and sauces), and protein ranges from ~19 g (beans) up to ~23 g (chicken/steak).
Ingredient Breakdown and Calorie Contributions
The Cheesy Gordita Crunch’s components each contribute to the total calories:
- Gordita Flatbread (with melted cheese): The outer fold is a flour tortilla brushed with vegetable oil and topped with a melted three-cheese blend. According to Taco Bell’s ingredients, the flatbread is made from enriched wheat flour, oil, sugar, and a bit of fiber.
This provides a large portion of the carbohydrates and some fat. A typical gordita flatbread + melted cheese is on the order of 200–250 calories by itself (mostly from the tortilla’s carbs and the added cheese fat). - Crunchy Taco Shell: Inside the flatbread is a crisp corn taco shell (ground corn and oil). A standard crunchy taco shell is roughly 60–70 calories (mostly carbs and a little fat).
- Protein Filling (Seasoned Beef/Chicken/Beans): The choice of filling adds protein and fat. For example, Taco Bell’s seasoned beef (per serving) contains significantly more fat than grilled chicken, which explains the higher calories in the beef version.
The beef-based gordita had about 17 g of fat per ~172g serving (from the meat, seasonings, and cheese mix inside), whereas the grilled chicken version had only ~12 g fat. Marinated steak falls in between. The protein also contributes ~10–20 g of protein. Beans (in the vegetarian version) contribute protein and extra carbohydrates/fiber instead of meat fat. - Cheeses: The item actually has two cheese elements. First, the gordita shell itself has a melted “three-cheese blend” (mozzarella, pepperjack, cheddar) baked on top. Then inside is shredded cheddar. Together, these cheeses add saturated fat and calcium. In total they contribute roughly 10–12 g of saturated fat (out of ~28 g total fat).
- Sauce (Spicy Ranch): Taco Bell’s creamy Spicy Ranch dressing (soy oil, buttermilk, egg yolk, habanero) adds both flavor and fat. One serving of the gordita includes about 2 tablespoons of ranch. This sauce alone is on the order of 70–80 calories, mostly from fat (the dressing ingredients are similar to a full-fat ranch dressing).
- Lettuce and Other Fillings: Crisp iceberg lettuce is included for crunch, but it contributes negligible calories (mostly water and fiber). Pico de gallo or jalapeños may be added on request, but standard recipe only has lettuce (zero added calories).
Overall, the major calorie sources are the breads and cheeses (fat + carbs) and the protein filling. Fat provides over half the calories of the full sandwich. For example, the beef gordita’s 500 calories break down to ~250 from fat and ~165 from carbs.
The remaining calories come from protein. Any variation (chicken, steak, beans) shifts those proportions slightly but the flatbread/shell/cheese foundation dominates the total.