The
2026 Sweets & Snacks Expo in Las Vegas once again proved that snacks are no
longer “just snacks.” They are increasingly meal companions, impulse purchases,
emotional rewards, portable fuel, and in many cases, substitutes for
traditional meals according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA
based Foodservice Solutions®. Credit to the National
Confectioners Association (NCA) for spotlighting the evolving role of
confectionery and snack innovation as it intersects with consumer behavior,
inflation, convenience, and sensory-driven eating.
With
17,500 industry professionals, 1,000 exhibitors, and 275,000 square feet of
innovation, the 2026 Sweets & Snacks Expo showcased how the line
between indulgence, nutrition, convenience, and foodservice continues to blur.
The
biggest lesson?
The future of snacking is not simply about taste—it is about strategic
placement, portability, value engineering, and cross-channel relevance.
1. Functional Indulgence Is Becoming Mainstream
NCA
highlighted the growth of functional indulgence, including
protein-packed chips, fiber-fortified gummies, and snack innovations that
deliver added benefits beyond taste.
Consumers
increasingly want “permission to indulge.” If a snack offers protein, fiber,
energy, satiety, or a better-for-you halo, it moves faster.
Real-World Example: C-Stores
At
7-Eleven, high-protein bars, meat sticks, trail mixes, and functional beverages
are often merchandised near checkout and beverage coolers because customers
increasingly build micro-meals around convenience.
Shoppers
now pair:
·
Protein chips + bottled water
·
Jerky + nuts + sparkling beverage
·
Gummies + electrolyte drink
·
Candy + coffee
This
creates meal-like basket building, especially among commuters and
gig-economy workers.
What it means:
C-stores
are evolving into small-format foodservice destinations, not just
gas-and-go outlets.
2. Flavor-Forward Innovation Is Reshaping Trial Purchases
NCA
rightly emphasized hot/spicy, fruit-forward, and globally inspired flavors.
Consumers
want novelty without risk.
Examples
from the Expo:
·
Cholula Hot Sauce flavored tortilla
chips
·
Cinnabon-inspired bacon jerky
·
Dark chocolate cherry mochi gummies
·
Strawberry milkshake cookies
·
Sour hybrid candies
This
tells retailers one thing:
Flavor
is now a traffic driver.
3. Service Deli’s Must Think Like Snack Curators
Historically,
service deli’s sold:
·
Fried chicken
·
Sliced meats
·
Salads
·
Prepared sides
Now,
snack behavior is influencing deli merchandising.
Real-World Example: Grocery Service Deli
At
Kroger and Albertsons, deli adjacencies increasingly feature:
·
Premium pretzels
·
Cheese snack packs
·
Dips
·
Sweet-and-savory trail mixes
·
Dessert bites
·
Grab-and-go protein packs
Why?
Consumers
no longer always buy a full meal. They assemble:
Snack + side + protein + beverage = lunch.
That
changes the role of the deli from meal prep to meal architecture.
4. Inflation Is Forcing Price-Point Engineering
NCA
highlighted inflation and value concerns as major purchase drivers.
That
matters because food inflation has changed behavior across all retail channels.
Today
shoppers ask:
·
Can I split it?
·
Can I share it?
·
Can I store it?
·
Can I stretch it?
Brands
are responding with:
·
Larger package sizes
·
Single-serve value packs
·
Multipacks
·
Bundled snack promotions
·
Family-share formats
Real-Time C-Store Example
At
Circle K and Casey's, bundled promotions like:
·
2-for snack pricing
·
Fountain drink + candy bundles
·
Coffee + pastry deals
·
Pizza slice + beverage combos
These
promotions protect traffic while lifting average ticket size.
5. Drive-Thru Restaurants Are Quietly Becoming Snack
Platforms
The
biggest overlooked opportunity from the Expo is what snack innovation means for
restaurant drive-thru systems.
Drive-thru
operators increasingly monetize between-meal traffic.
Real-World Example: Restaurant Drive-Thru
At
McDonald's:
·
Cookies
·
McFlurry products
·
Apple pies
·
Coffee add-ons
·
Limited-time sweets
At
Starbucks drive-thru locations:
·
Cake pops
·
Protein boxes
·
Baked snacks
·
Portable sweets
At
Taco Bell:
·
Cinnamon Twists
·
Freeze beverages
·
Late-night snack traffic
The
drive-thru is no longer just lunch or dinner.
It is increasingly:
snack traffic + beverage traffic + dessert traffic + impulse traffic.
6. Texture and Multisensory Eating Matter More Than Ever
NCA
also pointed to multisensory snacking—texture mashups, flavor
collisions, and sensory surprise.
This
explains why products such as:
·
Freeze-dried strawberries in chocolate
·
Crunchy-chewy jelly beans
·
Gummy gum hybrids
·
Sweet-spicy snack blends
·
Soft-crisp combinations
are
accelerating.
Texture
now creates:
·
Trial
·
Social sharing
·
TikTok virality
·
Repeat purchase
·
Premium pricing justification
Consumers
increasingly “eat for experience.”
7. Award Winners Reflect Where the Market Is Headed
The
NCA’s updated innovation structure—adding
the Trailblazer Award and Powerhouse Award—signals a smart
recognition that both disruptive startups and scaled brands are shaping growth.
Notable
examples included:
·
Dot’s Snack Mix
·
WARHEADS Loud Mouth Bites
·
Nutella Ice Cream Cones
·
Mochi Gummies
·
Cholula Hot Sauce Tortilla Chips
These
products blend:
·
Brand familiarity
·
Bold flavor
·
Texture differentiation
·
Impulse appeal
·
Cross-channel adaptability
That
is why they fit equally well in:
·
Grocery front ends
·
C-store coolers and checkout
·
Drive-thru dessert extensions
·
Meal-combo attachments
Why This Matters for the Grocerant Economy
The
Grocerant Guru® has long said that consumers
don’t shop channels—they solve food problems.
If
the need is:
·
Fast energy → C-store
·
Portable lunch → Service deli
·
Sweet reward → Drive-thru
·
Family sharing → Grocery
·
Emotional indulgence → Snack aisle
The
winning brands will be where convenience and craving intersect.
Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®
1. Snacks Are Replacing Traditional Meal Occasions
Consumers
increasingly build breakfast, lunch, and late-night eating occasions from
portable snack combinations.
2. Cross-Merchandising Will Drive Higher Tickets
Retailers
that combine sweets, salty snacks, beverages, deli foods, and functional
products in one path-to-purchase will outperform.
3. Drive-Thru’s Are Becoming Dessert and Snack Competitors
Restaurants
with strong snackable attachments will increasingly compete with convenience
stores and grocery grab-and-go.
4. The Future Is “Fresh, Functional, Flavorful, and Fast”
Winning
brands must deliver indulgence, health cues, convenience, and value in one
offer—because today’s consumer wants all four.
Are you ready for some fresh ideations?
Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested
in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while
creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participation, differentiation
and individualization? Email us
at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the
following links: Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter









.jpg)
