Published: February 2026

ID #: 383000935

Journal: Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics

Authors: Petimar J, Hatton R, Zhang Y, Moran AJ, Grummon AH, Cleveland LP, Block JP, Musicus AA

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has proposed a mandatory “Nutrition Info” label be placed on the front of packaged foods, showing whether products have low, medium, or high amounts of saturated fat, sodium, and added sugar. The agency has also considered a “High-In” labeling system, which would require labels on products with high levels of these nutrients. The aim of this study was to analyze the proportion of purchased packaged foods that would display specific front-of-package labels under the Nutrition Info and High-In front-of-package labeling systems overall and across 15 food groups. This was a cross-sectional study of 1 year of sales data. This study used sales and nutrition data from 2022 from a supermarket chain with 184 stores in the Northeast United States. The sales-weighted percentage of products that would display different Nutrition Info labels (“non-mixed”: all nutrients have the same level; “slightly mixed”: mix of low/medium or medium/high; “severely mixed”: a mix of low/high) and High-In labels (eg, percentage with ≥1 High-In label) was determined overall and by food group. Descriptive statistics and χ2 tests were calculated. Under Nutrition Info labeling, 12% of products would display non-mixed labels, and 40% would display severely mixed labels. In 7 food groups (eg, pizza, candy), >50% of products would display severely mixed labels. Under High-In labeling, 49% of products would display ≥1 High-In label. The Nutrition Info front-of-package label would place severely mixed labels on a large proportion of products in unhealthy food groups, which may confuse consumers. High-In front-of-package labeling would place labels on a large proportion of these products without mixed messaging.

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