Healthy Eating Tips: Label Literacy Guides
Short, practical guides on healthy eating connected to food label literacy. Learn to read ingredient lists, spot hidden sugars, understand additives, and make faster decisions at the store.
All Guides
How to Read Food Labels for Beginners →
A step-by-step guide to decoding food labels: ingredient order, serving sizes, E-numbers, and what to look for first.
Practical Tips to Reduce Sugar Intake →
Label-based strategies for cutting added sugar: spotting aliases, using the Added Sugars line, and swapping high-sugar drinks.
Understanding Food Additives →
What food additives are, why they are used, how they are regulated, and which ones are worth knowing by name.
Whole Foods vs Processed Foods →
How to use the ingredient list to tell whole foods from ultra-processed ones, and practical swaps that make a difference.
Healthy Snacking for Kids →
What to look for on kids' snack labels, which additives to avoid, and quick swaps that reduce additive exposure.
Reading Ingredient Lists: Tips That Actually Help →
The order rule, ingredient splitting, the 2% clause, and what manufacturers are allowed to leave off the label.
Avoiding Artificial Colors in Food →
How to identify synthetic dyes on labels, where they are most common, and what natural colorants to look for instead.
Low-Sodium Eating Tips →
Where sodium hides in packaged food, how to read sodium label claims, and practical ways to reduce your intake.
Why Label Literacy Is the Foundation of Healthy Eating
Healthy eating advice is everywhere, but most of it skips the step that actually happens at the store: reading the label. Marketing claims on the front of the package — "natural," "wholesome," "no artificial flavors" — are designed to influence your decision before you flip the package over. The ingredient list and nutrition facts panel are where the real information lives.
The guides in this section connect healthy eating habits to specific label-reading skills. Each guide focuses on one practical area — sugar, additives, sodium, processing level — and explains exactly what to look for on the label.