Food Labels

Food Label Education Hub

Short, practical guides to decoding food labels. Learn to read ingredient lists, spot hidden sugars, understand flavor claims, and avoid serving size tricks — so you can shop faster and with more confidence.

Reading the Ingredient List

Understanding Flavors and Additives

Sugar and Serving Sizes

Why Food Labels Matter

Food labels are the only window into what you're actually buying. Manufacturers are required to list every ingredient, but the rules allow for a lot of flexibility in how information is presented. A product can be marketed as "natural," "low sugar," or "no artificial flavors" while still containing dozens of additives, multiple sugar aliases, and misleading serving sizes.

The guides in this hub explain the rules manufacturers must follow and the tactics they use to make products look healthier than they are. Once you know the patterns, reading a label takes seconds.

Quick Reference

Ingredients are listed by weight
The first ingredient is the most abundant. If sugar is first, the product is mostly sugar.
Sugar has 60+ names
Brown rice syrup, dextrose, maltose, and fruit juice concentrate are all sugar. Check the "Added Sugars" line for the true total.
"Natural flavors" is a broad term
It covers hundreds of compounds derived from natural sources through extensive processing. It can include animal-derived ingredients.
Serving sizes can be misleading
Always check "servings per container" and multiply the nutrition numbers by how much you actually eat.