The first Cheetos product was Crunchy Cheetos, invented in 1948 in
San Antonio, Texas. Crunchy Cheetos remained the brand's sole product for 23 years until the introduction of Cheetos Puffs in 1971. The baked varieties, otherwise known as Baked Cheetos, became available beginning in 2004. As of 2010, there are 21 different variants of Cheetos snacks distributed in the United States. In addition to the original Crunchy Cheetos, Cheetos Puffs and Baked varieties are sold in alternate shape and flavor variations—including a spicy variety known as
Flamin' Hot Cheetos. Cheetos are among the snack varieties included in the Frito-Lay
Munchies snack mix. With the introduction of
Frito-Lay's Natural line, Natural Cheetos were introduced in the mid-2000s, touting all-natural ingredients and real
Wisconsin white cheddar cheese. They accompany other Frito-Lay products in the Natural line and compete in the market space occupied by other health-conscious snack foods, such as
Pirate's Booty. The Natural brand was re-branded to Simply in 2014. Cheetos first entered Brazil in 1976, followed by other countries such as Australia during the 1980s. In 1994, Cheetos became the first American brand of snack food to be made and distributed in China. As the distribution of Cheetos expanded outside the U.S. to include more than 36 countries, localized versions were produced to conform to regional tastes and cultural preferences. Frito-Lay conducted extensive testing before settling on flavors for the Chinese market, with ranch dressing, North Sea crab, smoked octopus and caramel being passed up for two flavors: Savory American Cream and Zesty Japanese Steak. These flavors were produced as the result of focus group testing, in which the original Crunchy Cheetos did not test as well. Strawberry Cheetos, a plain corn Cheeto coated in strawberry icing, were released in Japan in 2008. In 2013, a
Pepsi-flavored Cheeto was introduced in Japan, and a
Mountain Dew-flavored variety was available in 2014. In India, Cheetos Whoosh are sold, made of ingredients such as
whole grain and vegetables. In 2015, Frito-Lay released a limited edition cinnamon sugar-flavored snack called Sweetos to U.S. markets. Sweetos were the first sweet snack that Cheetos had released in the United States in the brand's 67-year history. In the first week of 2020,
Frito-Lay began distributing "Cheetos popcorn". In August 2020, Frito-Lay introduced
Mac n' Cheetos, a Cheetos macaroni and cheese. In November 2025, Frito-Lay announced it would be introducing Simply NKD Cheeto Puffs and Flamin' Hot Cheetos, a version of Cheetos without artificial colors, in response to the
FDA's initiative to phase out petrolium-based food coloring such as
Red 40 from the American food supply.
Flamin' Hot Cheetos According to Frito-Lay records, Flamin' Hot Cheetos, a spicy version of the product, was developed at the company's headquarters in Texas starting in 1989, as part of a project led by Lynne Greenfeld, and introduced in test markets in the summer of 1990, alongside Flamin' Hot versions of Fritos and Lays. They became available nationwide in early 1992, and
The Washington Post would go on to call them "something of a cultural phenomenon", with
Newsweek noting that it "rejuvenated the brand" and would become a "central element in Cheetos marketing". Beginning in the late 2000s,
Richard Montañez, who had started his career at Frito-Lay as a plant janitor and later became a marketing director for the company, claimed that he had invented Flamin' Hot Cheetos in the early 1990s while still a janitor, observing that the brand did not have any products targeting
Latinos. Montañez claimed he had pitched his idea to CEO
Roger Enrico as part of Enrico's initiative to empower employees to help the fledgeling company. It starred
Jesse Garcia as Montañez and marked actress
Eva Longoria's feature directorial debut.
Hulu and
Disney+ released the film, titled ''
Flamin' Hot'', in 2023. In May 2021, the
Los Angeles Times reported that Frito-Lay had begun an internal investigation in 2018 following a complaint by Greenfeld. The company, which had not previously contradicted Montañez's story publicly, said of the results of that investigation: "None of our records show that Richard [Montañez] was involved in any capacity in the Flamin' Hot test market ... we do not credit the creation of Flamin' Hot Cheetos or any Flamin' Hot products to him." ==Manufacturing==