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The best chocolates

A table covered in a variety of assorted chocolate boxes, bonbons, and candy bars.
I used my experience as a professional chocolatier to test over 100 truffles, bonbons, and caramels. These are my picks for the best chocolate. Bon Bon Bon; Christopher Elbow; Dandelion Chocolate Factory; EHChocolatier; Fran's Chocolates; See's Candies; Gilbert Espinoza/Business Insider
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Gifting chocolate is the quickest way to sweeten anyone's day, whether you're sending a box of bonbons to a loved one or indulging in a single-origin bar yourself. It's more than just a gift, though — chocolate brings joy, conveys love, heals heartache, and forges connection. As a chocolatier myself, I believe the best chocolate is rich in flavor and almost too beautiful to eat.

To select the best boxed chocolates, I used my experience as a professional chocolatier and tested options from over 40 brands for texture, flavor, and appearance. My career revolves around chocolate: from training at the Culinary Institute of America and the Chocolate Academy to working at EHChocolatier, a Massachusetts-based artisanal chocolate producer. I'm confident that these are the best boxed chocolates money can buy, delivered right to your door (or the lucky recipient's). Trust me, I'm a chocolatier.

The best chocolate brands

Best candy bars: Compartés

Best for gifts: La Maison du Chocolat

Best for gourmands: Dandelion Chocolate

Best bean-to-bar: Goodnow Farms

Best budget: Chocolove

Best for nut lovers: See's Candies

Most kid-friendly: Tony's Chocolonely

Best bonbons: Cacao and Cardamom

Best caramels: Fran's Chocolates

Best subscription: Chocolate of the Month Club

Best vegan: Neuhaus

Best candy bars: Compartés

Four candy bars from Compartes on a gradient peach background.
Compartés makes the best candy bars, with unique flavors like cereal milk, croissant, and strawberry shortcake. Compartés

Shop all chocolate at Compartés.

Compartés seamlessly draws upon familiar flavors and tailors them to fun, stylish candy bars. Take, for example, The Donuts & Coffee bar, which is adorned with bits of real glazed buttermilk donuts, crispy coffee donut crumble, and finely ground coffee. That's just one of the nearly 70 flavors to choose from, and all come in beautiful packaging that makes for great gifting. 

I loved the Strawberry Shortcake bar, which whimsically mixes jammy, tart, bite-sized strawberries and crumbles of buttery shortcake into a strawberry-flavored, rosy-hued white chocolate. I'm also intrigued by the new Tomato Chocolate bar, which pairs fresh California tomatoes with white chocolate. There's even a plethora of vegan options. 

Our picks:

Best for gifts: La Maison du Chocolat

The Paris Hatbox from La Maison du Chocolat on a peach gradient background.
La Maison du Chocolat is my pick for gifting, from indulgent assortments stuffed in Parisian hat boxes to beautiful boxes filled with Cognac truffles. La Maison du Chocolat

Shop all chocolate at La Maison du Chocolat.

La Maison du Chocolat's understated luxury, meticulous French elegance, and unparalleled quality, make it a great fit for any fortunate recipient on any occasion. There is an undeniable wow factor to all of La Maison du Chocolat's products, and it comes down to impressive craftsmanship — no glitter necessary. A deep burgundy box, tied closed with a chocolate-brown ribbon, sets the stage for the refined, clean lines of the bonbons carefully arranged inside. The minimalist packaging, free of glassine cups or plastic trays, feels surprisingly lavish and robust. The focus is on the chocolate itself, and it's utter perfection.

To make a strong impression with future in-laws and new neighbors, I'd reach for one of the brand's Gesture Gift Boxes, an assortment of delicate rectangles filled with flavored ganaches like juicy raspberry and rich Ethiopian coffee. To express sincere gratitude to a mentor or lifeline coworker, a box of rustic, cocoa-dusted, Cognac-scented truffles will do the trick. And for a host gift, I recommend a box of assorted pralines, filled with smooth hazelnut gianduja and crispy, toasty rochers.

For a more modest treat, La Maison du Chocolat offers a Snacks & Treats collection, with hearty candy bars, rustic barks, chocolate-covered nuts, and candied orange peels. If you're looking to really make a grand gesture, the brand's Parisian Hatboxes — curated gift baskets filled with carefully selected boxes — will make a memorable statement.

Our picks:

Best for gourmands: Dandelion Chocolate

A box of truffles and individual bonbons from Dandelion Chocolate on a gradient peach background.
Sure to impress any chocolate nerd, Dandelion's creations combine single-origin chocolate with inventive flavors. Dandelion Chocolate

Shop all chocolate at Dandelion Chocolate.

Food nerds rejoice: San Francisco-based Dandelion Chocolate, most known for its single-origin chocolate bars, has expanded into bean-to-bonbon confections. Much like a wine, beer, or spirit flight, the brand offers curated collections of bars, truffles, caramels, and pralinés for an immersive, experiential tasting. These flights showcase how terroir and added ingredients shape flavor and texture, pairing remarkable artistry with thoughtful storytelling. Each set feels deluxe, with gold-accented packaging and thoughtfully compiled tasting notes.

The 85% Three-Bar Gift Set reveals bold contrasts and subtle nuances between origins. Whether you're just discovering your inner gourmand or a seasoned gastronome, you'll appreciate the detailed tasting tips and origin maps guiding your chocophile adventure. The truffle flight transforms each single-origin chocolate into ganache, enrobed in its matching couverture. The addition of cream to each chocolate draws out the existing flavors for the curious connoisseur to savor. Tumaco, Colombia's bar, is fudgy with hints of caramel and sweet almond. Its truffle counterpart is softer, with silky dulce de leche taking center stage.

For the ingredient geeks, the caramel flight pairs Tumaco chocolate with caramels crafted from five different sugars from around the world: Brazilian cane, Southeast Asian palm, Indian jaggery, Japanese Okinawa black sugar, and Caribbean muscovado. Each sugar lends its own striking aroma, flavor, and texture to the rich caramel filling, harmonizing with the fudgy cacao in distinct ways.

The Single-Origin Praliné Collection pairs five different cacao origins with complementary nut and seed pâtes. Espelette-spiced quicos-almond praline stands up to vibrant Tanzanian chocolate, without steamrolling its cherished flavors. Candied hazelnut and coffee praline deepens the Colombian chocolate's caramel richness.

Our picks:

Best bean-to-bar: Goodnow Farms

An assortment of Goodnow Farms chocolate bars displayed against a peach gradient background, featuring unique flavors like Black Urfa Chili, Herbaceous Green Sichuan Pepper, Brown Butter, Putnam Rye Whiskey, and Caramelized Onion.
Goodnow Farms ethically sources its cacao from regions around the world, then roasts and processes the beans in-house. Goodnow Farms/Business Insider

Shop all chocolate at Goodnow Farms.

Bean-to-bar chocolate refers to when a single producer controls the entire chocolate-making process, from harvest to finished product. Think of chocolate like wine, and cacao beans like grapes. A bean-to-bar maker is like a winemaker who, rather than buying grapes from numerous vineyards or purchasing pressed must, oversees the cultivation, harvest, fermentation, aging, and bottling themselves to shape every aspect of flavor. Goodnow Farms is the chocolate equivalent of a gold-standard, estate-driven wine producer.

As with grapes, the flavor of chocolate made from a regional strain of cacao is molded by the terroir where it's grown and the details of its production. Goodnow builds direct-trade relationships with farmers around the world, ensuring 100% traceability and ethical labor practices. The brand roasts and processes the beans in its Massachusetts facility. Where most producers blend neutral, deodorized cocoa butter of anonymous origins into their chocolate, Goodnow presses its own cocoa butter from the same beans. This preserves the integrity and character of each origin's flavor for a truly authentic single-origin product.

The result: superb chocolate. When tasting a bean-to-bar, I look for complexity, balanced acidity, and a melt-in-your-mouth texture, all of which Goodnow consistently delivers. Thanks to its house-pressed cocoa butter, all of its bars are silky, approachable, and deeply satisfying.

While most bean-to-bar producers stop there, Goodnow Farms goes a step further. It pairs each cacao's flavors with complementary ingredients through collaborations with like-minded producers. Highlights include an astounding Caramelized Onion bar, created with Burlap & Barrel, using caramel-forward Nicaraguan 77% chocolate. The jammy, fruity Ecuadorian 70% chocolate, blended with Boston Harbor Distillery's Putnam Rye Whiskey, evoked the finish of a cocktail garnished with a Luxardo cherry.

Our picks:

Best budget: Chocolove

A gift box of six chocolate bars from Chocolove on a peach gradient background.
Chocolove's chocolate boasts delicious flavor, quality ingredients, and an affordable price point. Chocolove

Shop all Chocolove chocolate.

Chocolove, a Boulder-based company, prides itself on providing "affordable luxury." At budget-friendly prices, Chocolove somehow offers high-quality flavor and texture, sustainability, and even ethical sourcing. It uses non-GMO ingredients, including cacao beans traceable down to the farmer, to ensure premium chocolate bars at a fair price. 

I felt like the elegant Cherries & Almonds in Dark Chocolate bar was a decadent dessert worthy of its own plate and white tablecloth. With Belgian-trained Master Chocolatier Patrick Peeters at the helm, Chocolove continues to provide exquisite chocolate bars of the highest caliber — at the lowest prices.

Our picks:

Best for nut lovers: See's Candies

A box of chocolate covered nuts and bonbons from See's Candies.
From pralines to chocolate covered almonds, a box from See's Candies is a nut lover's dream. Amazon

Shop all chocolate at See's Candies.

The sweet and savory flavors developed from roasting cacao beans make chocolate the ideal "plus one" to any toasted nut. See's Candies has perfected the craft. A coating of good chocolate draws out the natural sweetness of almonds, pistachios, and pecans; coaxes the fatty richness of cashews, macadamia nuts, and hazelnuts; and embraces the slight bitterness of walnuts and pine nuts.

See's Candies, founded in 1921, has a vintage, old-timey feel with black and white checkered packaging and classic confections included in its arrangements, such as Dark Scotchmallows. It has an entire collection of "Nuts & Chews" for those devoted to nut-bejeweled chocolates. Toffee-ettes are small nuggets of Danish butter toffee and roasted almonds coated in milk chocolate and rolled in more crunchy almonds. 

See's also offers less conventional options for the more daring nut enthusiasts that you can put together in your own custom arrangement. Consider the California Crunch, a flakey brittle center with peanuts and peanut butter enrobed in white chocolate and covered with chopped English walnuts.

Our picks:

Most kid-friendly: Tony's Chocolonely

A collection of six bars from Tony's Chocolonely on a peach gradient background.
The bright packaging and classic flavor combinations from Tony's Chocolonely are perfect for any kid (or kid-at-heart). Tony's Chocolonely

Shop all Tony's Chocolonely Chocolate.

When choosing chocolate fit for kids, I want a quality brand with approachable flavors, whimsical packaging, and easy-to-portion treats. Tony's Chocolonely offers all of that, and much more. Founded in protest against child exploitation and slave labor (which remains disturbingly common in the chocolate industry), Tony's Chocolonely is an ethics-first company. What better way to introduce kids to ethical consumerism than with the most delightful incentive imaginable: chocolate. Tony's leads by example with its 5 Sourcing Principles: traceable beans, high prices paid to farmers, partner cooperatives, long-term partnerships, and investment for sustainable growth.

Ethics lessons aside, the bright wrappers, playful font, and Fairtrade-certified chocolates are an instant hit with all ages. Irregularly sized, cattywampus pieces to portion off chocolate bars give an intentionally imperfect, lighthearted aesthetic. Creamy, dreamy milk chocolate will win over even the fussiest of the bunch, while inventive flavors like the Raspberry Popping Candy act as playful gateways, subtly encouraging young (and not-so-young) eaters to explore new textures and flavors.

Tiny Tony's, individually wrapped mini bars, are perfect for lunch boxes (or purse snacks, ahem). Lil' Bits are chocolate-coated candy bites with fillings like crunchy caramel, buttery cookie, graham cracker, and fluffy marshmallow. The options are endless, so you are sure to find something for even the pickiest of palates.

Our picks:

Best bonbons: Cacao & Cardamom

Cacao & Cardamom
Each box from Cacao and Cardamom is filled with vibrant, jewel-toned bonbons. Cacao & Cardamom

Shop all chocolate at Cacao and Cardamom.

A bonbon is a small chocolate-coated confection filled with fruits, nuts, or luscious ganache. A good bonbon should have a thin, flawless shell free of blemishes or chalky white "bloom." It must be visually enticing, hinting at the flavor journey within. Most importantly, it should deliver balanced, thoughtfully textured, and flavorful fillings with no air pockets or leaks. It's a tall order to ask for a single bite of candy, but our favorite maker, Cacao & Cardamom, steps up with style, intrigue, and worldly sophistication.

Each brilliant chocolate is meticulously lacquered with vivid cocoa butter, its design reflecting the filling inside. Beneath the surface, layers of jewel-toned, jammy, creamy, bold, and balanced fillings deliver a fully composed dessert in one to two bites. Inspired by Houston-based founder Annie Rupani's South Asian heritage and extensive global travels, Cacao & Cardamom turns to chiles, spices, leaves, flowers, and berries to tell a story. She evokes a sense of adventure and celebrates cultural traditions.

Flavors like Five Spice Praline, with fennel, Szechuan peppercorns, and star anise over crisp hazelnut praline, and Cardamom Rose with warm, herbal green cardamom and a touch of rose water, offer uncharted culinary experiences. New releases like Knafeh Kisses, a cheeky nod to Dubai chocolate, keep the devoted cacao fiends coming back for more. Cross-country chocoholics, rest assured. Every order from Cacao & Cardamom is carefully packed and shipped with care to ensure their labors of love arrive as pristine as they left.

Our picks:

Best caramels: Fran's

A box of chocolate caramels from Fran's on a gradient peach background.
Chewy and buttery, Fran's caramels are simply the best. Fran's

Shop all chocolate at Fran's Chocolates.

Caramels come in all shapes and sizes, firmnesses, colors, degrees of bitterness and butteriness, and with all types of garnishes. Naming the best chocolate with caramel was no easy task, but I found that Fran's Chocolates caramels offer the "pull," deliberate chew, and strategic salting that a great caramel should possess. 

Like the perfect bagel or pizza crust, a caramel needs to have just the right amount of chew — not too hard, not too soft. Secondly, salt is great in moderation. It highlights the burnt sugar notes and cuts through the rich, buttery flavor of the confection. However, salt applied with a heavy hand makes for an unpleasant surprise; it stomps out nuanced flavors and tramples on the chocolate coating.

Fran Bigelow, founder of Fran's Chocolates, was inspired by a trip to Paris and has since been dedicated to sharing the joie de vivre philosophy through exceptional confections. This Seattle-based candy producer features Fair Trade-certified chocolate to complement, not overshadow, the caramel's delicate yet luxurious buttery flavor.

Our picks:

Best subscription: Chocolate of the Month Club

A box of chocolates and a flyer from the Chocolate of the Month Club on a peach gradient background.
The Chocolate of the Month Club is a must-have subscription for any chocoholic. Monthlyclubs.com

Shop at monthlyclubs.com

Monthly subscriptions are available for just about anything: flower bouquets, meal kits, smoked meats, gifts in a box, and yes, you guessed it, chocolate. Subscriptions are a fun, interactive way to learn more about a specific product through exposure and experience. When searching for the best chocolate subscription, we considered each brand's selection, how the items are made, the brand's chocolate sustainability and trade models, and opportunities to learn more about chocolate while enjoying our deliveries.

The Gourmet Chocolate of the Month Club provided through monthlyclubs.com works with professionals at the esteemed Zingerman's Delicatessen in Ann Arbor, Michigan to offer a curated assortment of chocolates, including bonbons and bars. Zingerman's prides itself on a thorough product selection that sources chocolates from international, small-batch chocolatiers.

It's noteworthy and respectable that these chocolates are sourced from eco-friendly, fair-trade producers you can feel good about supporting. Past boxes have even included some of our top picks mentioned above. Best of all, each delivery comes with an educational newsletter containing tasting notes, background reading material, and product information, so you'll get more out of your subscription than just really, really delicious chocolate.

Best vegan: Neuhaus

A pack of vegan Neuhaus bonbons on a peach gradient background.
Perfect for vegans or the dairy-sensitive, Neuhaus has an impressive range of plant-based confections. Neuhaus Chocolates

Shop all chocolate from Neuhaus.

Vegan chocolate bars are a dime a dozen nowadays. After all, dark chocolate is innately dairy-free. But creating rich, creamy fillings without the dairy is a whole other feat, and Neuhaus Belgian Chocolates rises to the challenge. Its vegan bonbons, filled with impossibly velvety caramel in a variety of flavors, rival butter- and cream-laden counterparts. Silky ganaches burst with distinctive, bold notes, like the yuzu and ginger or Earl Grey tea and mandarin. Each confection is decorated with a simple yet elegant disc of chocolate in warm, earthy tones, its hue hinting at the flavors within.

Neuhaus achieves these decadent, dairy-free fillings against all odds by masterfully using natural, recognizable ingredients like chickpea protein, pea protein, and coconut oil in place of the milk fats and protein found in dairy.

Its dairy-free options extend beyond the designated vegan bonbon collection. The Carré Origin box features individually wrapped, delicately thin tiles of divine chocolate sourced from around the world. Neuhaus also offers dark chocolate enrobed toasted almonds and bittersweet orange peels, further proving that indulgence without dairy is not only possible — it's exceptional.

Our picks:

Our top picks, compared

Our pickWinnerBest for
Best for giftsLa Maison du ChocolatGorgeous, giftable boxes of truffles and pralines
Best candy barsCompartésChocolate bars in unique, inventive flavors
Best for gourmandsDandelion ChocolateSingle-origin chocolates, tasting flights
Best bean-to-barGoodnow FarmsEthically-sourced, direct-trade chocolate roasted and processed in the USA
Best budgetChocoloveNon-GMO, affordable chocolate bars in classic flavors
Best for nut loversSee's CandiesChocolate-covered nuts and pralines
Most kid-friendlyTony's ChocolonelyMilk chocolate candy bars
Best bonbonsCacao and CardamomJewel-colored bonbon collections
Best caramelsFran's ChocolatesBoxes of chocolate-covered caramels
Best subscriptionChocolate of the Month ClubSmall-batch, premium chocolate every month
Best veganNeuhausVegan chocolate-coated goodies and boxes of vegan chocolate

How we test chocolate

A white gloved hand holding a Dandelion Chocolate bar against a peach gradient background.
I tested 45 brands and 100 different chocolates to make my picks for this guide. Dandelion Chocolate; iStock; Gilbert Espinoza/Business Insider

Meet the expert behind the guide

Anne Wolf, professional chocolatier, chef, and food writer: While I am a chocolatier, I've lived previous lives in both scientific research and recipe development. My education in the hard sciences, the savory culinary arts, and my work as a chocolatier have all been in preparation for the daunting task of selecting the best chocolates. I cut no corners and left no truffle unturned.

How I tested

I started by reading about top brands in the chocolate industry, then taste-tested countless confections, evaluating their flavors, textures, and presentation. In all, I sampled more than 100 products from 45 brands for this guide. Here is how I tested:

ConsiderationNotes
FlavorGrowing conditions of cacao impact the flavor, as do ingredients used to make confections. Rancid chocolate will have a soapy or cheesy flavor
FreshnessChocolates should taste and look fresh. They should be free from a chalky or overly dry mouthfeel, with no signs of melting and re-solidifying
TextureCorrectly tempered chocolate should be firm and "snap" when bitten into and melt smoothly
PresentationPackaging must protect the chocolates and be beautiful as a gift

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Disclosure: Written and researched by the Insider Reviews team. We highlight products and services you might find interesting. If you buy them, we may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our partners. We may receive products free of charge from manufacturers to test. This does not drive our decision as to whether or not a product is featured or recommended. We operate independently from our advertising team. We welcome your feedback. Email us at reviews@businessinsider.com.

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Anne Wolf is a professional chef, food writer, culinary educator, and R&D specialist with over 17 years of experience developing thoughtful, reliable, and craveable recipes. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in St. Helena, she began her career cooking in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean kitchens before shifting her focus to recipe development, food science, and product innovation.Anne spent nearly five years at America's Test Kitchen, where she co-authored more than 15 cookbooks, including IACP award winners The Complete Mediterranean Cookbook, Breads Illustrated, and The Complete Diabetes Cookbook, as well as bestsellers like Vegan for Everybody. Her expertise spans dietary-specific, plant-based, gluten-free, and allergen-conscious recipe development, always rooted in flavor, creativity, and culinary integrity.An experienced chocolatier and cannabis edibles chef, Anne is passionate about crafting decadent, reliably dosed infused products and honing her craft in fine chocolate work. Today, she teaches in Boston University’sProfessional Pastry Arts Programand develops culinary content for a variety of food media outlets, offering inclusive education on global cuisines and translating professional technique into approachable, everyday kitchen confidence.Learn more about how our team of experts tests and reviews products at Insider here.