Buster Bar Treat
Nutrition Facts
| Calories | 490 |
|---|---|
| Total fat | 30.0 g |
| Saturated fat | 18.0 g |
| Trans fat | — |
| Cholesterol | — |
| Sodium | 180 mg |
| Total carbohydrates | 47.0 g |
| Dietary fiber | 3.0 g |
| Total sugars | 39.0 g |
| Protein | 10.0 g |
| Calcium | — |
| Iron | — |
| Potassium | — |
About this item
A single 1 bar (150 g) portion of Dairy Queen's Buster Bar Treat delivers approximately 490 calories, placing it in the moderate meal range for items typically found on the Dairy Queen menu. Nutrition information on this page is sourced from the USDA Branded Foods dataset, which catalogs label data submitted by manufacturers for the US market. Use it as a starting point for tracking macros, comparing menu options, or building meals around your daily calorie target — and confirm at the restaurant if your portion or preparation differs.
Per serving, Buster Bar Treat contains 30.0 g of total fat (55% of calories), 18.0 g of saturated fat, 47.0 g of total carbohydrates, 39.0 g of sugars, 3.0 g of dietary fiber, and 10.0 g of protein (8% of calories). That macronutrient mix is fat-dominant, which is typical for breaded, fried, or cheese-heavy menu items. For a 2,000 calorie reference diet, this single item supplies roughly 25% of the daily energy budget — worth noting if you plan to combine it with sides, drinks, or a dessert from the rest of the Dairy Queen menu.
On the micronutrient side, the same serving carries 180 mg of sodium (8% of the FDA 2,300 mg daily limit). Sodium is the number most diners under-estimate at quick-service restaurants — many entrées clear a third of the daily cap before any side or sauce is added. If you are watching blood pressure or following a DASH-style eating pattern, balance Buster Bar Treat with low-sodium choices for the rest of the day, drink water, and consider skipping salted sides.
Ingredient analysis flagged the following common allergens in this product: Milk, Soy, Peanut. Cross-contact with additional allergens — including peanuts, tree nuts, sesame, and shellfish — is possible in any restaurant kitchen even when those ingredients are not listed in the recipe. If you have a serious allergy, ask the location for their official allergen guide before ordering and let staff know about your sensitivity.
Ingredients (as published with the USDA submission): reduced fat ice cream (milk fat and nonfat milk, sugar, whey, corn syrup, carob bean gum, guar gum, carrageenan, mono , diglycerides, artificial flavor, caramel color, vitamin a palmitate), chocolate flavored cold fudge (high fructose corn syrup, sweetened condensed skim milk (skim milk, sugar, corn syrup), hydrogenated coconut oil, water, fructose, cocoa processed with alkali, cocoa, sodium alginate (algin, dextrin, sodium phosphate), salt, mono ,diglycerides (vegetable), soy lecithin (emulsifi - er), disodium phosphate, natural and artificial flavors), peanuts (peanuts, peanut oil, salt), co…
Buster Bar Treat sits within the broader Dairy Queen menu alongside other menu staples. If you are tracking calories on a cutting phase, consider pairing it with a zero-calorie beverage and a side that prioritizes protein or fiber over refined carbs. If you are bulking or fueling a hard training day, the 490 calories and 10g protein per serving can be combined with a second item to round the meal out. Either way, the numbers above are per serving as listed — doubling up on portions, sauces, or extras will scale the calories and macros proportionally.