The cyclic (1,100°C, air) and isothermal (1,000°C, O2) oxidation behavior of a Fe-28Al-5Cr (at%) alloy, with and without a prior H2-anneal heat treatment at 1,200°C for 100 h, was studied. Changes in interfacial chemistry were evaluated using Scanning Auger Microscopy after removal of the oxide film in ultra high vacuum. This was achieved by making a scratch on the specimen surface, which caused spallation of the film at various locations along the scratch. The scale thickness and the temperature drop at which spallation took place during cooling were utilized to semi-quantitatively compare the adherence of the scales. Porosity at the scale–alloy interface and the scale microstructure were determined from scanning electron microscope observations. It was found that H2-anneal greatly improved scale adhesion and resulted in a pore-free and sulfur-free interface. The effects were similar to that of a 0.1 at% Zr-containing alloy, except that the improvement in scale adhesion was not as great as that from Zr doping. This implies that oxide/alloy interfaces are not intrinsically strong and the effect of reactive elements, such as Zr, is more than preventing impurity from segregating to the interface. Results are also compared with the effect of H2-anneal on other model alloys, such as NiCrAl, FeCrAl and NiAl, and on single crystal superalloys.