In the
United States, the Nutritional Facts label lists the Daily Value (%DV) or the percentage supplied in a serving (portion) or an entire package that is recommended to be met or not exceeded in the daily American diet. A footnote on the label states that the % Daily Value (DV) refers to the percent each nutrient "contributes to a daily diet" and that "2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice." With certain exceptions, such as baby foods and infant formula, the following Daily Values are used. These are called
Reference Daily Intake (RDI) values and were originally based on the highest 1968
Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA) for each nutrient in order to assure that the needs of all age and sex combinations were met. These are older than the current RDA of the
Dietary Reference Intake. For
vitamin C,
vitamin D,
vitamin E,
vitamin K,
calcium,
phosphorus,
magnesium, and
manganese, the current highest RDAs are up to 50% higher than the older Daily Values used in labeling, whereas for other nutrients the recommended needs have gone down. A side-by-side table of the old and new adult Daily Values is provided at
Reference Daily Intake. As of October 2010, the only micronutrients that are required to be included on all labels are vitamin A, vitamin C, calcium, and iron. To determine the nutrient levels in the foods, companies may develop or use databases, and these may be submitted voluntarily to the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for review. Additionally, there is a requirement for ingredients to be listed in order from highest to lowest quantity, according to their weight. This requirement has some flexibility during the COVID-19 pandemic. The label was mandated for most food products under the provisions of the 1990
Nutrition Labeling and Education Act (NLEA), per the recommendations of the FDA. It was one of several controversial actions taken during the tenure of FDA Commissioner
Dr. David Kessler. The law required food companies to begin using the new food label on packaged foods beginning May 8, 1994 (meat and poultry products were not covered by NLEA, though the U.S. Department of Agriculture proposed similar regulations for
voluntary labeling of raw meat and poultry). Foods labeled before that day could use the old label. The old "voluntary" FDA nutrition label had been introduced in the 1970s, and was titled "Nutrition Information Per Serving" or simply, "Nutrition Information". The 1990s revised "Nutrition Facts" label would appear on all products in 1995. The label begins with a standard
serving measurement,
calories are listed second, and then following is a breakdown of the constituent elements including % daily value (%DV). Always listed are
total fat,
sodium,
carbohydrates and
protein; the other nutrients usually shown may be suppressed, if they are zero. Usually all 15 nutrients are shown: calories, calories from fat, total fat,
saturated fat,
trans fat,
cholesterol, sodium, carbohydrates,
dietary fiber,
sugars, protein,
vitamin A,
vitamin C,
calcium, and
iron. Products containing less than 5 g of fat show amounts rounded to the nearest 0.5 g. Amounts less than 0.5 g are rounded to 0 g. For example, if a product contains 0.45 g of trans fat per serving, and the package contains 18 servings, the label would show 0 g of trans fat, even though the product actually contains a total of 8.1 g of trans fat. In addition to the nutrition label, products may display certain nutrition information or health claims on packaging. These health claims are only allowed by the FDA for "eight diet and health relationships based on proven scientific evidence", including: calcium and osteoporosis, fiber-containing grain products, fruits and vegetables and cancer, fruits, vegetables, and grain products that contain fiber—particularly soluble fiber—and the risk of coronary heart disease, fat and cancer, saturated fat and cholesterol and coronary heart disease, sodium and hypertension, and folate and neural tube defects. The Institute of Medicine recommended these labels contain the most useful nutritional information for consumers: saturated fats, trans fats, sodium, calories, and serving size. In January 2011, food manufacturers and grocery stores announced plans to display some of this nutrition information on processed food. The nutrition facts label currently appears on more than 6.5 billion food packages. President
Bill Clinton issued the Presidential Award for Design Excellence for the nutrition facts label in 1997 to
Burkey Belser and
Jerold Mande. The nutrition facts label has been used as a design model for consumer transparency in the tech industry, including the
Federal Communications Commission's "Broadband Facts" digital label introduced in March 2024. The FDA does not require any specific typeface be used in the Nutrition Facts label, mandating only that the label "utilize a single easy-to-read type style", though its example label uses
Helvetica. However, as regulated by the FDA and the USDA, it is mandatory for certain information listed in the label to be written in English, including: name of the product, net quantity, serving size and number of servings per package, nutrition facts, ingredient list, and name of manufacturer or distributor. The smallest lettering should be at least 1/16th of an inch tall (1.5875 millimeters), based on the height of a lowercase "o". In January 2006,
Trans fat was required to be listed under saturated fat. This was the first significant change to the Nutrition Facts panel since it was introduced in 1993.
2016 revision In 2014, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration proposed several simultaneous improvements to nutrition labeling for the first time in over 20 years. The proposed changes were based on trends of consumption of nutrients of public health importance. However, studies had shown that the majority of the U.S. population could not understand the information in the then current Nutrition Facts Label. Nutrition label numeracy is particularly low in older individuals, of black and Hispanic race/ethnicity, who are unemployed, born outside of the US, have lower English proficiency, lower education achievement, lower income, or live in the South. Final changes included raising serving sizes to more accurately reflect how many servings the average individual is actually consuming, removing "calories from fat" and instead focusing on total calories and type of fats being consumed in a product, and listing extra sugar added to a product, as well as declaring the amount of
vitamin D and
potassium in a product and adjusting recommended Daily Value amounts. Major American food associations opposed the label change, indicating "lack of merit" and "no preponderance of evidence" to justify the inclusion of sugar added in the new label. The rules for the new design were finalized on May 20, 2016. Manufacturers were initially given until July 26, 2018, to comply (or July 26, 2019, if they have less than $10 million in annual food sales); a rule change extended the compliance deadline to January 1, 2020 (or January 1, 2021, for smaller sellers).
Alcohol In the United States,
alcoholic beverages are regulated by the
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB). As of 2012, the TTB does not require alcoholic beverage packaging to have a nutrition facts label. Since at least 2003, consumer groups have lobbied the TTB to require labeling disclosing Nutrition Facts information. Some marketing terms, such as "light" and "table wine", must follow TTB guidelines. Packaging must disclose alcohol content in some circumstances. • Brand name • Name and address of manufacturer (either bottling plant or main headquarters) • Country of origin if imported (required by
U.S. Customs and Border Protection regulations) • Class, the definitions of which are regulated (e.g.
beer,
ale,
lager,
gin,
vodka,
rum,
tequila,
cordial,
liqueurs) • Health warning for beverages 0.5% or more alcohol by volume • Net contents • For malt beverages, must be in
United States customary units (e.g. pints or fluid ounces) • For distilled spirits, must be in
metric units. Bottles must be 50 mL, 100 mL, 200 mL, 375 mL, 750 mL, 1 L, or 1.75 L. Bottles must be 50 mL, 100 mL, 200 mL, or 355 mL. • For wine, must be in
metric units, and bottles must be 50 mL, 100 mL, 187 mL, 375 mL, 500 mL, 750 mL, 1 L, 1.5 L, 3 L, or a larger size with an even number of liters. • Alcohol content (percent by volume): • For malt beverages, mandatory only if some alcohol is due to added flavors, or if required by state law • For distilled spirits, mandatory • For wine, optional • Declaration of sulfites required for wine sold in interstate (not intrastate) commerce if 10 ppm or more of
sulfur dioxide • Optional but regulated terms: • For malt beverages: "draft", "light", "low-carbohydrate" • For wine: grape variety and
appellation of origin, wine designation (e.g. "white", "red", "rose", "table"), viticultural area, "estate bottled", "vinted", vintage date • "Organic" (regulated by USDA) • Declarations for major allergens
Caffeine Health researchers have called for the mandatory labeling of food products with added
caffeine, which is a psychoactive nervous system stimulant. If over-consumed, caffeine can cause seizures, kidney problems, liver problems, heart arrhythmia, and death.
The Coca-Cola Company and
PepsiCo began labeling caffeine content in 2007. ==See also==