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Reading Nutrition Labels Without the Marketing Spin

A short guide to the parts of the US Nutrition Facts label that actually matter — and the front-of-pack claims that mostly don't.

By Daniel OkaforHealth 2 min read 480 wordsFact-checked April 3, 2026
A close-up of a US Nutrition Facts panel on a packaged food item.
A close-up of a US Nutrition Facts panel on a packaged food item.

Originally published . Last reviewed and updated .

Contents(5 sections)
  1. 1. Start with the serving size
  2. 2. What matters most
  3. 3. The percent Daily Value
  4. 4. What front-of-pack claims actually mean
  5. 5. Ingredient lists

The front of a food package is marketing. The back is regulation. The Nutrition Facts label, standardized by the FDA, is one of the most reliable consumer-protection tools on a grocery shelf — if you know which parts to read first.

This guide walks through the panel and the front-of-pack claims, with a focus on what actually affects nutrition decisions for most US households.

Start with the serving size

Every number on the panel is per serving. A package can list 70 calories per serving and contain three servings; the bag delivers 210 calories if you eat it all. Manufacturers are required to use standardized reference amounts, but those amounts do not always match the way people eat.

Read the serving size before reading anything else. If the serving size is implausible — a quarter of a small can of soup — multiply through to a realistic portion.

What matters most

For most readers, four lines deserve the most attention: added sugars, saturated fat, sodium, and fiber. Dietary guidelines specifically cap added sugars at less than 10% of daily calories and recommend limits on saturated fat and sodium for cardiovascular health.

Total sugars include naturally occurring sugars; added sugars are the ones added during processing. The added-sugar line is the more actionable one for most products.

The percent Daily Value

The percent Daily Value column lets you quickly gauge whether a serving is high or low in a nutrient. A general rule of thumb: 5% DV or less is low, 20% DV or more is high. The reference is based on a 2,000-calorie diet, which is a population average rather than a personal target.

Use DV for direction, not precision.

What front-of-pack claims actually mean

Some claims are regulated. 'Low sodium' has a specific FDA definition. 'Healthy' as of recent FDA rules has a regulated definition. Others — 'natural,' 'made with whole grains,' 'multigrain' — are essentially marketing language.

When a claim is regulated, the standard is in the Code of Federal Regulations. When it is not, treat it as advertising.

Ingredient lists

Ingredients are listed in order by weight. The first three ingredients are usually the most informative. Long lists are not automatically bad — some long lists are simply detailed — but a product that names a sweetener three different ways is hiding the total quantity.

Allergens must be declared. If you have a food allergy, the regulated allergen statement is more reliable than the marketing copy.

Read in this orderWhy
Serving sizeAnchors every other number
CaloriesUseful baseline
Added sugarsMost actionable for many products
Saturated fat & sodiumTied to cardiovascular guidance
FiberOften under-consumed
Ingredient list (first 3)Tells you what the product mostly is
How to read a Nutrition Facts panel quickly

Frequently asked questions

Is 'natural' regulated?
For most products, no. The FDA has a longstanding policy but not a binding rule defining 'natural' on food labels.
Are organic and healthy the same thing?
No. 'Organic' refers to agricultural practices. It does not indicate nutritional content.
Should I avoid sugar entirely?
Dietary guidelines focus on added sugar, not naturally occurring sugar in fruit or dairy. Moderation in added sugar is the practical goal.
What about ultra-processed foods?
Research on ultra-processing as a category is evolving. Reading the label and the ingredient list still applies.

How we researched this

We reviewed primary sources, official guidance, and reporting from established outlets. Where data shifts quickly, we date each claim. ClearBrief editors fact-check every article before publication.

Sources

  1. How to Understand and Use the Nutrition Facts Label FDA
  2. Dietary Guidelines for Americans USDA / HHS
  3. Food labeling claims FDA

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This article is informational and not a substitute for professional advice. ClearBrief does not provide medical, legal, or financial services.