8 March, 2026
9min read

How to Read a Food Label: What Every Line Really Means

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You spend a few seconds glancing at a package before putting it in your cart. But those seconds are enough to miss a lot — added sugars hidden under five different names, a serving size set at 30 g for a 200 g product, or a bold ‘Natural’ claim that means absolutely nothing under current FDA rules.

Food labelling exists to protect consumers. Yet the same rules that mandate transparency also leave room for creative wordsmanship. Understanding how labels are structured — and where the loopholes are — lets you make genuinely informed choices rather than relying on front-of-pack marketing.

This guide walks through every element of a standard food label, explains what each one actually tells you, and points out the tricks worth watching for.

What Is a Food Label and Why It Matters

A food label is the legally required block of information printed on packaged food. In the United States it is governed by FDA regulations (21 CFR Part 101); in the European Union by Regulation No 1169/2011; in the UK by retained EU law and FSA guidance following Brexit.

At minimum, a compliant label must include: the product name, ingredients list, net quantity, nutrition information (Nutrition Facts panel in the US), allergen declarations, best-before or use-by date, storage conditions, and name and address of the manufacturer or importer.

ℹ️  Front-of-pack claims (‘Low Fat’, ‘High Protein’, ‘Natural’) are largely unregulated marketing. The back-of-pack label is the legally binding document.

Every Element Explained: A Reference Table

Use this table as a quick-reference decoder for the labels you encounter every day.

Label ElementWhat It MeansWhat to Look ForCommon Marketing Trick
Product NameOfficial name per regulatory standard or manufacturer’s specification‘Dairy product’ ≠ ‘Milk’. ‘Cheese-style product’ ≠ ‘Cheese’Similar name, different formulation
Ingredients ListListed in descending order by weight — from the largest to the smallest proportionFirst 3–4 ingredients make up the bulk of the productSugar split across 5+ different names throughout the list
Nutrition FactsProtein, fat, carbohydrate, and calorie content per serving or per 100 gCheck whether values are ‘per serving’ or ‘per 100 g’ — manufacturer picks the more flattering optionTiny ‘serving size’ makes calorie count look low
Net WeightActual product quantity excluding packagingCompare price per 100 g, not per packLarge, attractive packaging with minimal contents
Expiration Date‘Use by’ — hard safety deadline. ‘Best before’ — quality guideline‘Use by’ is non-negotiable. ‘Best before’ is more lenientPrinted on the bottom or lid — hard to find
Storage ConditionsTemperature range and conditions (dark, dry, etc.)Conditions often change after opening — check the footnoteFine print placed on the side panel
Manufacturer / ImporterLegal name and address of the company responsible for the product‘Produced for’ ≠ ‘Produced by’. Actual manufacturer may differBrand and manufacturer are separate companies
Certification MarksOrganic, Non-GMO, Halal, Vegan, etc. — confirm compliance with a standardOfficial seal vs decorative graphic — the difference mattersDecorative ‘leaf’ icons with no certification behind them

Five Steps to Reading Any Label in Under a Minute

Step 1 — Check the Product Name

The legal product name (not the brand name) tells you what the food actually is. ‘Cheese-style product’ is not cheese; ‘fruit drink’ is not fruit juice. If the name sounds vague, that is intentional.

Step 2 — Scan the First Three Ingredients

Ingredients are listed in descending order by weight. Whatever appears first makes up the largest share of the product. If the first ingredient of a ‘strawberry yoghurt’ is water, followed by sugar, followed by modified starch — you are looking at a heavily processed product with very little actual dairy or fruit.

💡  Rule of thumb: the shorter and more recognisable the ingredients list, the less processed the product.

Step 3 — Count the Sugar Aliases

Sugar is rarely labelled as just ‘sugar’. Manufacturers spread it across the list under multiple names to prevent it from appearing near the top. See Section 4 for a full list. If you spot three or more sweeteners, the combined sugar content is almost certainly high.

Step 4 — Read the Nutrition Facts Panel Per 100 g

Always normalise to per 100 g rather than ‘per serving’. The serving size is determined by the manufacturer, not by any nutrition standard, and is frequently smaller than what people actually eat. Compare products on a per-100-g basis.

Step 5 — Verify Certification Claims

Look for official seals rather than decorative graphics. In the US: USDA Organic, Non-GMO Project Verified, Certified Gluten-Free. In the EU: EU Organic leaf logo, Protected Designation of Origin (PDO). A stylised leaf drawn by a graphic designer carries no legal weight.

⚠️  ‘Natural’, ‘Wholesome’, ‘Farm-fresh’, and ‘Artisan’ have no legal definition under FDA rules. They are marketing language, not regulated claims.

The Sugar Name Game: 30+ Aliases

The FDA requires all added sugars to be declared on the Nutrition Facts panel as ‘Total Sugars’ and ‘Added Sugars’. However, individual sugar types still appear in the ingredients list under their own names — which allows manufacturers to split a large sugar content across multiple entries.

Obvious NamesDisguised Names‘Healthy’ Aliases
Sugar, glucose, fructose, sucrose, lactose, maltoseCorn syrup, high-fructose corn syrup, invert sugar, dextrose, maltodextrinHoney, agave nectar, maple syrup, coconut sugar, date syrup, molasses

Any of the above can appear anywhere in the ingredients list. If you count three or more across a single product, the total added sugar is likely significant — even if no single entry appears in the top three ingredients.

ℹ️  The American Heart Association recommends no more than 25 g of added sugar per day for women and 36 g for men. A single flavoured yoghurt or sports drink can exceed both limits.

Marketing Claims That Mean Nothing

TechniqueHow It WorksHow to Detect It
Sugar SplittingAdding sugar under multiple names spreads it throughout the list, preventing it from appearing in the top 3Count all sweeteners: if there are 3+, the total sugar content is likely very high
Misleading Serving SizeA ‘serving’ may be defined as 30 g for a 200 g pack — making calories appear 6× lowerAlways recalculate to per 100 g or per full pack, especially for snacks
Unverified Claims‘Natural’, ‘Wholesome’, ‘Farm-fresh’, ‘Artisan’ have no legal definition under FDA rulesLook for certified seals (USDA Organic, Non-GMO Project Verified) rather than marketing words

A useful counterintuitive rule: products that genuinely are organic, non-GMO, or nutritionally superior tend to display a certified seal rather than bold front-of-pack adjectives. The louder the claim, the more carefully you should read the back.

Who Should Pay Extra Attention

People Managing Chronic Conditions

Anyone living with type 2 diabetes, coeliac disease, irritable bowel syndrome, hypertension, or chronic kidney disease needs to scrutinise labels closely. Hidden sugars, gluten derivatives, high-FODMAP ingredients, excess sodium, and elevated potassium can all appear under non-obvious names.

Parents of Young Children

Children’s products often carry ‘fruit’, ‘natural’, or ‘wholegrain’ on the front panel while containing significant added sugar or sodium. The Nutrition Facts panel and ingredients list are the only reliable guides.

People with Allergies

The FDA mandates declaration of the ‘Big Nine’ allergens: milk, eggs, fish, shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, soya, and sesame. However, cross-contamination warnings (‘may contain’) are voluntary. If a severe allergy is involved, contact the manufacturer directly.

Older Adults

Sodium intake is a particular concern. ‘Reduced sodium’ means at least 25% less sodium than the original product — not that the product is low in sodium overall. Always check the absolute milligram figure on the Nutrition Facts panel.

People Monitoring Their Weight

‘Low fat’ often means ‘high sugar’. Fat was replaced with sugar or refined starch to maintain palatability when manufacturers reformulated products during the low-fat era of the 1990s. Check both fat and sugar columns.

Using Labels at the Supermarket

  • Use your smartphone calculator to convert ‘per serving’ figures to ‘per 100 g’.
  • Compare sodium content across similar products — ranges can vary by 300–400% within the same category.
  • For tinned fish or vegetables, check whether sodium is listed per drained weight or per total contents.
  • Scan for allergen declarations in bold — legally required in the US and EU.
  • Apps such as Open Food Facts, Yuka, and Fooducate can scan barcodes and pull up full label data.
💡  The five-second shortcut: name → first three ingredients → sugar content per 100 g → serving size → certification seal. That covers 80% of what matters.

Three Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Trusting Front-of-Pack Claims

‘Made with real fruit’, ‘Contains whole grains’, ‘A source of fibre’ — these claims are technically true even when the relevant ingredient appears in a trace amount. Always verify against the ingredients list and Nutrition Facts panel.

Mistake 2: Not Adjusting for Serving Size

A breakfast cereal may list 130 calories per 30 g serving. But the average person pours 60–80 g. That triples or quadruples the apparent calorie count. Nutritional databases and recipe apps typically use 100 g as a standard — align your label reading accordingly.

Mistake 3: Ignoring the Allergen Summary

Allergen information is often printed separately from the main ingredients list — in a dedicated ‘Allergens’ line or a ‘Contains:’ summary box. It is easy to overlook, especially on small packages. If you or someone you are cooking for has a known allergy, check both locations.

⚠️  ‘May contain traces of nuts’ is a voluntary advisory statement. It indicates shared manufacturing equipment or facility, not a guaranteed absence of allergens.

Conclusion

A food label is a legal document designed to give you the information you need to make an informed choice. It is also, in practice, a space where manufacturers can exercise considerable creativity within the rules.

The fundamentals are straightforward: ingredients are listed largest to smallest by weight; the Nutrition Facts panel tells you what is actually in a serving; certification seals carry legal weight while marketing adjectives do not.

Once you build the habit of checking the first three ingredients, normalising to per 100 g, and recognising sugar aliases, most of the manipulation becomes obvious. That 30-second check at the shelf is one of the most cost-effective things you can do for your long-term health.

Questions and answers

Does 'use by' mean the food is dangerous after that date?

Yes — ‘use by’ is a safety deadline, not a quality guideline. It applies primarily to perishable products such as meat, fish, dairy, and ready-to-eat salads. Do not consume food past its ‘use by’ date regardless of appearance or smell.

What does 'best before' mean?

‘Best before’ refers to quality, not safety. A product past its ‘best before’ date may taste slightly different but is generally safe to consume if it has been stored correctly and shows no signs of spoilage.

Why does the same product show different calorie counts in different countries?

The US Nutrition Facts panel uses kilocalories (kcal) without labelling them as such — the figure listed as ‘Calories’ is technically kilocalories. The EU uses kJ alongside kcal. Values can also differ because the US uses the Atwater system and the EU uses specific conversion factors for dietary fibre.

Are organic products required to list ingredients differently?

No. Organic products follow the same labelling regulations as conventional products. The difference is the presence of a certified organic seal (USDA Organic in the US, EU Organic leaf in the EU) and sourcing restrictions on ingredients. The ingredients list format is identical.

What does 'contains X% of daily value' mean?

In the US, ‘Daily Value’ (%DV) is based on a reference diet of 2,000 kcal/day as defined by the FDA. It is a guide, not a prescription. Individual requirements vary by age, sex, body weight, and health status. The UK uses ‘Reference Intake’ (RI) based on similar benchmarks.

Is it safe to eat products that contain E-numbers?

E-numbers are simply codes for food additives approved for use in the EU. Their presence on a label does not indicate that a product is unsafe — all approved additives have been assessed by EFSA. However, certain additives (such as artificial colours linked to hyperactivity in children) may be worth avoiding for specific populations. Consult your GP if you have concerns.

⚠️ Medical disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Before making significant changes to your diet or if you have chronic conditions, consult a physician or a certified dietitian.

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Current version
3 August, 2026
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