Use this guide to make a clearer decision before you brief, order, or review a design project.
UK food labelling rules exist to protect consumers and keep products legal on shelf. Artwork that looks beautiful but misses mandatory elements can be rejected by retailers or flagged by trading standards. Here is what your label design must include in 2026.
Mandatory label elements (prepacked foods)
- Food name — Accurate and not misleading
- Ingredient list — Descending order by weight
- Allergen emphasis — The 14 allergens highlighted in the ingredients (bold, caps, or colour contrast)
- Quantitative ingredient declaration (QUID) — Where emphasised on pack or in the name
- Net quantity — Weight or volume
- Best before / use by date — With appropriate wording
- Storage instructions — Where needed for safety or quality
- Name and address — Of the food business operator
- Country of origin — Where required (e.g. certain meats, honey, olive oil)
- Nutrition declaration — Per 100g/ml format unless exempt
Allergens — the most common print failure
Allergens must be emphasised every time they appear in the ingredients list — not just in a separate "contains" box. Your designer needs the final approved recipe before artwork is locked. Changing a supplier after design is signed off can invalidate the label.
Nutrition panel layout
The UK uses a standard table format (energy, fat, saturates, carbohydrate, sugars, protein, salt). Font size minimums apply — illegible nutrition panels are a common compliance issue at small label sizes.
Health and marketing claims
Claims like "high protein", "low sugar", or "source of fibre" have legal definitions. Your artwork must match substantiated product data — designers should not invent claims.
Why this affects design cost
Compliant food labels require more layout discipline than cosmetic labels. A studio experienced in UK food packaging builds compliance into the grid from day one — saving reprints and launch delays.
Our packaging and label design team delivers print-safe files for UK food brands. Start your brief with your recipe and printer spec.


