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A truck carrying 12 tonnes of our favourite KitKat chocolates vanished into thin air during transit in Europe. The brand confirmed that over 400,000 bars of crispy wafer goodness went missing without a trace just this week.As news of the heist spread across social media, many wondered if it was a clever PR stunt or just an April Fool’s prank. But the brand insists – it’s no joke.KitKat has now introduced a “Stolen KitKat Tracker,” letting people scan their bars and possibly help trace the missing batch. Sounds wild, but here we are.From Italian factories to distribution across Europe, the trail went cold. Now, every KitKat wrapper could hold a clue.
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Kit-Kat says ‘not a prank!’: Brand launches ‘stolen chocolates’ tracker’ after 12 tonn Kit Kat heist; How to use the tracker (Photo: X)
KitKat issues an official confirmation
KitKat confirmed that 4,13,793 chocolate bars from its new range disappeared during transit from central Italy to Poland. In an official post on X, the brand addressed speculation, saying:“Thank you for your interest in the missing KitKats. But just to clarify, this is not a stunt or an April Fool’s joke. Someone really stole 12 tonnes of KitKats, and we really want to know where they’ve gone.”
KitKat launches stolen chocolates tracker
The Nestlé-owned brand has rolled out a “Stolen KitKat Tracker” tool, where customers can scan unique batch codes printed on wrappers.
“We’ve created a Stolen KitKat Tracker that lets you check if your KitKat is from the missing batch,” the brand shared online. If there’s a match, users are guided on what to do next – basically turning snack lovers into accidental detectives.
How the tracker works
Buy a KitKat → peel the wrapper → scan the unique code → the tracker checks it against the stolen batch database → if there’s a match, the brand shares next steps.
What exactly got stolen?
The heist involved 12 tonnes of KitKat’s latest chocolate variants, meant for distribution across multiple European countries.
The truck reportedly disappeared somewhere between Italian production units and Polish logistics hubs.Each bar carries traceable batch codes, which is what makes the tracker possible.
Social media reactions pour in
Users on X reacted with a mix of confusion and humour.“At this point, it’s hard to say if it’s true,” one user wrote. Another said, “I really, really hope the stolen KitKat tracker is a real thing and not an April Fool’s joke.”One post summed it up perfectly: “Someone stole 12 tonnes of KitKats.
That’s not a snack theft. That’s a logistics operation. Whoever did this had a truck, a plan, and a very specific vision for their future.”Memes quickly followed, with people calling it “Fast and Furious: chocolate edition.” Others joked about underground KitKat bunkers and “Have a break? Nah, steal a break.”And just like that, the tracker became meme material too: “Scan your snack, catch a crook!”

