Nestlé (SWX: NESN) confirmed Monday that thieves made off with a truck carrying more than 413,000 KitKat chocolate bars while the vehicle was in transit across Europe, in a theft the company says it is disclosing publicly to spotlight an escalating wave of cargo crime on the continent.
The missing shipment weighs approximately 12 tonnes and consists of 413,793 units from KitKat’s new Formula One-branded chocolate range. The truck departed a production facility in central Italy last week bound for Poland — a route spanning 1,250 to 1,350 kilometers — before the vehicle and its cargo vanished. The load has not been recovered.
Regarding recent press coverage pic.twitter.com/Huh4EnFV2J
— KITKAT (@KITKAT) March 29, 2026
Nestlé said it is working with local authorities and supply chain partners to investigate the theft. The company warned that the stolen bars could surface in unofficial sales channels across European markets, but said each unit carries a unique batch code that allows retailers, wholesalers, and consumers to verify whether a product is part of the stolen consignment. Anyone who identifies a match is asked to contact local law enforcement rather than attempt to recover the goods independently.
Despite the scale of the theft, Nestlé said consumer safety is not at risk and that broader supply has not been affected. The company added that the timing ahead of Easter — one of the highest-demand periods for chocolate — makes the loss commercially significant even if shelves remain stocked.
“We’ve always encouraged people to have a break with KitKat,” a spokesperson said, “but it seems thieves have taken the message too literally and made a break with more than 12 tonnes of our chocolate. Whilst we appreciate the criminals’ exceptional taste, the fact remains that cargo theft is an escalating issue for businesses of all sizes.”
A joint report published in February by the International Union of Marine Insurance and the Transported Asset Protection Association EMEA found that nearly 160,000 cargo-related crimes were recorded across 129 countries between 2022 and 2024, with total losses running into the billions of euros. The organizations warned that the nature of cargo crime is shifting — from traditional truck hijackings toward digitally enabled fraud, including fake carriers, cloned company identities, and forged documentation.
Nestlé cited the IUMI-TAPA findings directly, saying the company chose to go public with the incident specifically to raise awareness of what it called “an increasingly common criminal trend” driven by more sophisticated criminal methods.
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