Burritos and tortillas
QDOBA Burritos Calories Guide
QDOBA burrito calorie planning starts with the tortilla, then layers in rice, beans, protein, queso, cheese, sour cream, salsa, and other fillings.
Short answer
A burrito typically adds tortilla calories on top of the same fillings you might put in a bowl. That makes the tortilla an important first difference when comparing a QDOBA bowl and burrito with similar ingredients.
Create Your Own Burrito is a configurable menu card, so this calculator uses a default component estimate where available. A live order with different rice, beans, protein, queso, salsa, or toppings will not necessarily match that default.
Source context: this page uses QDOBA source metadata with a nutrition PDF date of 2026-06-15 and saved ordering-menu snapshots from 2026-06-25.
How to compare burrito options
Use the burrito as a container plus fillings. The same protein can look different when paired with rice and beans, queso, sour cream, cheese, guacamole, or a drink. If you are choosing between a burrito and a bowl, add the same fillings in the calculator and compare the tortilla effect directly.
Burritos can also be part of group or breakfast formats in the saved menu data. Those items may use different default components or serving assumptions, so compare the actual card name rather than assuming every burrito row uses the same serving size.
- Compare tortilla, base, protein, and extras as separate decisions.
- Check sodium and carbs when the burrito includes rice, beans, queso, and a tortilla.
- Use default estimates as a starting point, then verify official sources for strict needs.
Common questions
Why can a burrito differ from a bowl with similar fillings?
A burrito includes a tortilla, and the wrapper can change calories, carbs, sodium, and total serving context.