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“Chocolate biscuits” covers a few different snacks in the UK: chocolate-coated biscuits (think Digestive-style), biscuits with chocolate pieces, and chocolate biscuit assortments for sharing.

The best one for you depends less on the fanciest box and more on biscuit crunch, chocolate thickness, and how you’ll actually eat them (tea-dunking, lunchbox, or after-dinner nibble).
Quick Picks Box
- Best overall: McVitie’s Digestives Dark Chocolate
- Best for a mixed tin/box: McVitie’s Family Circle Biscuit Assortment
- Best for “proper chocolatey” indulgence: Fox’s Fabulous Chocolatey
- Best premium gift-style biscuits: Cartwright & Butler Triple Chocolate Chunk Biscuits
- Best for orange-chocolate fans: Bahlsen Choco Leibniz Orange
How we judged these
- Biscuit-to-chocolate ratio: a satisfying coat without masking the biscuit
- Crunch and snap: stays crisp rather than soft or overly crumbly
- Chocolate flavour: cocoa-forward vs sweet milk-chocolate lean
- Tea/coffee performance: holds up to dunking or goes soggy fast
- Sharing practicality: individual biscuits vs assortments that suit a crowd
- Freshness risk: packaging that protects crunch once opened
- Everyday value: feels worth buying again, not just once
Ranked picks
1) McVitie’s Digestives Dark Chocolate
Best for: A classic tea biscuit with a richer chocolate hit
Why it’s good
- Strong all-rounder: sturdy biscuit base with a proper chocolate layer.
- Dark chocolate brings balance if you find milk-choc biscuits too sweet.
- Works for dunking without instantly falling apart.
Trade-off
- If you prefer a softer, more “melty” bite, this can feel quite firm and snappy.
How to use
- Tea dunker of choice.
- Crumble over yoghurt or ice cream when you want texture.
Substitution
If you want the same format but milder sweetness, swap to a milk-chocolate Digestive-style biscuit from another brand.
2) Fox’s Fabulous Chocolatey (biscuit selection box)
Best for: Indulgent “grab one more” chocolate biscuits for sharing
Why it’s good
- Feels noticeably more treat-like than standard everyday biscuits.
- Good variety for family grazing or putting out with coffee.
- A handy shortcut when you don’t want to pick a single style.
Trade-off
- Variety packs often mean you’ll love some biscuits more than others.
How to use
- Serve with coffee after dinner.
- Keep in a tin to protect the crunch once opened.
Substitution
If you want less variety and more consistency, choose a single-biscuit pack (e.g., Digestive-style) rather than another mixed selection.
3) Cartwright & Butler Triple Chocolate Chunk Biscuits
Best for: A giftable, “proper biscuit tin” upgrade
Why it’s good
- Chunky chocolate pieces give a bakery-style feel.
- Rich enough to stand up to a strong coffee.
- A good choice when you want something that looks presentable on the counter.
Trade-off
- Premium packs are usually less budget-friendly for everyday snacking.
How to use
- Coffee companion, not a dunker (chunks can encourage breakage).
- Serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream for an easy dessert.
Substitution
If you want a similar “chunky” vibe for less, look for supermarket chunky chocolate cookies/biscuits in larger packs.
4) Bahlsen Choco Leibniz Orange
Best for: Orange-chocolate fans who like a crisp, clean snap
Why it’s good
- Distinct citrus note cuts through sweetness and keeps it interesting.
- Crisp biscuit base with a neat, even chocolate layer.
- Feels a bit lighter than heavy cookie-style options.
Trade-off
- If you’re not into orange chocolate, there’s nowhere to hide, this one is very clearly flavoured.
How to use
- With black tea or espresso.
- Great as a small “something sweet” rather than a big snack.
Substitution
If orange isn’t your thing, pick another Choco Leibniz flavour or a plain chocolate-coated biscuit with a similar snap.
5) McVitie’s Family Circle Biscuit Assortment
Best for: A crowd-pleasing tin/box when tastes vary
Why it’s good
- Covers multiple biscuit moods in one go (useful for families and guests).
- Easy to put out for visitors without overthinking it.
- A reliable standby for the cupboard when you want “something for everyone”.
Trade-off
- Not every biscuit is chocolate-forward, so it’s less focused than a dedicated chocolate pack.
How to use
- Keep for guests, school holidays, and “cup of tea, pick a biscuit” moments.
- Decant into an airtight tin to keep biscuits crisper for longer.
Substitution
If you want only chocolate biscuits, go for a chocolate-specific selection box rather than a general assortment.
How to choose (by the way you snack)
- You dunk biscuits in tea: pick a sturdy base first (Digestive-style usually wins).
- You want “chocolate first, biscuit second”: go for a chocolatey selection box.
- You’re buying for a group: assortment tins reduce complaints and leftovers.
- You want a posher feel: choose chunky, cookie-style biscuits in a gift tin/jar.
- You get bored easily: choose a flavoured option like orange-chocolate for variety.
FAQs
Are wafer bars like KitKat “chocolate biscuits”?
They’re biscuit-like (wafer), but they eat more like a chocolate bar. If you want something for tea, traditional chocolate biscuits usually fit better.
What keeps chocolate biscuits from going soft?
Airtight storage. Once opened, a tin or sealed container makes a bigger difference than brand.
Dark chocolate or milk chocolate, what’s best?
Dark often tastes less sweet and more cocoa-forward. Milk is creamier and usually more crowd-pleasing.
What’s best for sharing on a table?
Selection boxes and assortments are easiest, more styles, less decision fatigue.
Can chocolate biscuits be used in desserts?
Yes. They’re great crushed into cheesecake bases, layered in fridge cakes, or as a crunchy topping.
Conclusion
If you want one dependable buy for most UK homes, McVitie’s Digestives Dark Chocolate is the safest pick: solid biscuit, satisfying chocolate, and a proper tea companion. For sharing, go Fox’s Fabulous Chocolatey or McVitie’s Family Circle depending on whether you want chocolate-heavy or broad variety. For a more premium treat, Cartwright & Butler delivers that “special” biscuit feel, while Bahlsen Choco Leibniz Orange is the easy choice when you want a crisp snap with a clear flavour twist.
