| |
The Nutrition Facts panel has two parts: The
main or top section (see #1-5 on the sample nutrition label below), which
contains product-specific information (serving size, calories, and nutrient
information) that varies with each food product; and the bottom part (see #6 on
the sample nutrition label below), which contains a footnote. This footnote is
only on larger packages and provides general dietary information about important
nutrients.
|
The Serving Size
|
 |
(#1 on sample label): The first place to start when you
look at the Nutrition Facts panel is the serving size and the number of
servings in the package. Serving sizes are provided in familiar units,
such as cups or pieces, followed by the metric amount, e.g., the number of
grams. Serving sizes are based on the amount of food people typically eat,
which makes them realistic and easy to compare to similar
foods. |
Pay attention to the serving size, including how many servings there are
in the food package, and compare it to how much YOU actually eat. The size
of the serving on the food package influences all the nutrient amounts listed on
the top part of the label. In the sample label above, one serving of macaroni
and cheese equals one cup. If you ate the whole package, you would eat
two cups. That doubles the calories and other nutrient numbers, including
the %Daily Values as shown below (see Calories and %Daily Value for more
information).
| Example |
| |
Single Serving |
%DV |
|
Double Serving |
%DV |
| Serving Size |
1 cup (228g) |
|
2 cups (456g) |
|
| Calories |
250 |
|
500 |
|
| Calories from Fat |
110 |
|
220 |
|
| Total Fat |
12g |
18% |
24g |
36% |
| Trans Fat |
1.5g |
| 3g |
|
| Saturated Fat |
3g |
15%
| 6g |
30% |
| Cholesterol |
30mg |
10%
| 60mg |
20% |
| Sodium |
470mg |
20%
| 940mg |
40% |
| Total Carbohydrate |
31g |
10%
| 62g |
20% |
| Dietary Fiber |
0g |
0%
| 0g |
0% |
| Sugars |
5g |
| 10g |
|
| Protein |
5g |
| 10g |
|
| Vitamin A |
|
4%
| |
8% |
| Vitamin C |
|
2%
| |
4% |
| Calcium |
|
20%
| |
40% |
| Iron |
|
4%
| |
8% |
|
Calories and Calories from
Fat
|
|
(#2 on sample label): Calories provide a measure of how much energy
you get from a serving of this food. The label also tells you how many of
the calories in one serving come from fat. In the example, there are 250
calories in a serving of this macaroni and cheese. How many calories
from fat are there in ONE serving? Answer: 110 calories, which means
almost half come from fat. What if you ate the whole package content?
Then, you would consume two servings, or 500 calories, and 220 would come
from fat.
Eating too many calories per day is linked to overweight and
obesity. |
The Nutrients (#3 and 4 on sample
label): Look at the top section in the sample nutrition label. It shows
nutrients that are important for your health and separates them into two main
groups:
Limit
These Nutrients
|
|
(#3 on sample label): The nutrients listed first are the ones
Americans generally eat in adequate amounts, or even too much. They are
identified in yellow on the chart as Limit these Nutrients. Eating
too much fat, saturated fat, trans fat, and cholesterol, or sodium
may increase your risk of certain chronic diseases, like heart disease,
some cancers, or high blood pressure. Eating too many calories is linked
to overweight and obesity.
*Note: Health experts recommend that you keep your intake of
saturated fat, trans fats and cholesterol as low as possible as
part of a nutritionally balanced diet. |
Get
Enough of These
|
|
(#4 on sample label): Americans often don't get enough
dietary fiber, vitamin A, vitamin C, calcium, and iron in their diets.
They are identified in blue on the chart as Get Enough of these
Nutrients. Eating enough of these nutrients can improve your health
and help reduce the risk of some diseases and conditions. For example,
getting enough calcium can reduce the risk of osteoporosis, in which bones
become brittle and break as one ages (see calcium example below).
|
Remember: You can not only use the food label to help limit those
nutrients you want to cut back on, but also to increase those nutrients you want
to consume in greater amounts.
The Percent Daily Value (%DV):
This part of the Nutrition Facts panel tells you whether the nutrients (fat,
sodium, fiber, etc) in a serving of food contribute a lot or a little to your
total daily diet. By diet we mean all the different foods you eat in a day.
%DVs are based on recommendations for a 2,000
calorie diet. For labeling purposes, FDA set 2,000 calories as the reference
amount for calculating %DVs. The %DV shows you the percent (or how much) of the
recommended daily amount of a nutrient is in a serving of food. By using the
%DV, you can tell if this amount is high or low. You, like most people, may not
know how many calories you consume in a day. But you can still use the %DV as a
frame of reference, whether or not you eat more or less than 2,000 calories each
day.
It's not hard to follow nutrition experts' advice for a healthy diet. Try to
limit your total daily intake of fat, saturated fat, sodium, and cholesterol
(shown in yellow on the chart) to less than 100%DV.
Likewise, you should try to get enough essential nutrients like calcium,
iron, and vitamins A and C as well as other components such as dietary fiber
(shown in blue on the chart). Try to average 100% for each one of these
nutrients each day.
%DVs are easy to use. Do you need to know how
to calculate percentages to follow this advice? No, the label (the %DV) does the
math for you. It helps you interpret the numbers (grams and milligrams) by
putting them all on the same scale (0-100%DV), much like a ruler. This way you
can tell high from low and know which nutrients contribute a lot, or a little,
to your daily recommended allowance (upper or lower).
Example of %DV for Total Fat: If you
cover up the %DVs on the sample label, can you tell if 12g of Total Fat is
high or low? Another way of asking this question is, does one serving
(containing 12g of fat) contribute a lot or a little Total Fat to your daily
diet?
Now look at the %DVs on the label example: 12g
fat equals 18%DV. When one serving of macaroni and cheese contains 18%DV for
Total Fat, that means you have 82% of your fat allowance left for all the
other foods you eat that day (100%-18%=82%).

Quick Guide to %DV
(#5 on sample label): This
general guide tells you that 5%DV or less is low and 20%DV or more is high.
This means that 5%DV or less is low for all nutrients, those you want to
limit (e.g., fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, and sodium), and those that you
want to consume in greater amounts (fiber, calcium, etc). As the Quick
Guide shows, 20%DV or more is high for all nutrients.
Example: Look again at the amount of Total Fat in one serving listed
on the sample nutrition label for macaroni and cheese. Is 18%DV contributing a
lot or a little to your maximum fat limit of 100% DV? Check the Quick Guide
to %DV. You see that 18%DV, which is below 20%DV, is not yet high, but
what if you ate the whole package (two servings)? You would double that
amount, eating 36% of your daily allowance for Total Fat. That amount, coming
from just one food, would contribute a lot of fat to your daily diet. It would
leave you 64% of your fat allowance (100%-36%=64%) for all of the other
foods you eat that day, snacks and drinks included.

Comparisons: The %DV also makes it easy for you
to make comparisons. You can compare one product or brand to a similar product.
It's easy to see which one is higher or lower in a nutrient because the serving
sizes are generally consistent for similar types of foods. See comparison example
#1.
Nutrient Content Claims: You can quickly
distinguish one claim from another, such as "reduced fat" vs. "light" or
"nonfat." Just compare the %DVs for Total Fat in each food product to see which
one is higher or lower in that nutrient--there is no need to memorize
definitions. This works when comparing all nutrient content claims, e.g.,
less, light, low, free, more, high, etc. See comparison example #1
and #2
Dietary Trade-Offs: You can use the %DV to
help you make dietary trade-offs with other foods throughout the day. You
don't have to give up a favorite food to eat a healthy diet. When a food you
like is high in fat, balance it with foods that are low in fat at other times of
the day. Also, pay attention to how much you eat so that the total amount of fat
for the day stays below 100%DV.
Nutrients that Have No %DV: Trans Fats, Sugars, and
Protein: Note that Trans fat, Sugars and, Protein
do not list a %DV on the Nutrition Facts panel.
Trans Fat: Scientific reports link trans fat (and
saturated fat) with raising LDL ("bad") blood cholesterol levels, both of which
increase your risk of coronary heart disease, a leading cause of death in the
US. But experts could not provide a reference value for trans fat nor any
other information that FDA believes is sufficient to establish a Daily Value or
%DV.
Sugars: No daily reference value has been established because no
recommendations have been made for the total amount of sugars to eat in a day.
Keep in mind, the sugars listed on the Nutrition Facts panel include naturally
occurring sugars (like those in fruit and milk) as well as those added to a food
or drink. Check the ingredient list for specifics on added sugars.
Protein: A %DV is required to be listed if a claim is made for
protein, such as "high in protein". Otherwise, unless the food is meant for use
by infants and children under 4 years old, none is needed. Current scientific
evidence indicates that protein intake is not a public health concern for adults
and children over 4 years of age.
To limit nutrients that have no %DV, like trans fat and sugars,
compare the labels of similar products and choose the food with the lowest
amount.
Calcium: Experts advise consumers to consume
adequate amounts of calcium in their daily diet. This advice is given in
milligrams (mg), but the Nutrition Facts panel only lists a %DV for calcium. For
consumers to know how the calcium they consume relates to expert advice, they
need to do some simple math. (This applies to calcium only).
Example: Experts advise adolescents, especially girls, to consume
1,300mg and post-menopausal women 1,200mg of calcium daily. To find the %DV
that corresponds with 1,300mg and 1,200mg, just divide the number of mg by 10.
(The DV for calcium on food labels is 1,000mg). When converted to a percent,
this gives a factor of 10. Thus, the daily target for teenage girls, 1,300mg ,
equals 130%DV, and the daily target for post menopausal women, 1,200mg, equals
120%DV.
If you want to convert the %DV for calcium into milligrams, just multiply
by 10. A container of yogurt might list 30%DV for calcium. To convert this to
milligrams, multiply by 10, which equals 300mg of calcium for the
yogurt.

| Equivalencies |
| 30% DV = 300mg calcium = one cup of milk |
| 100% DV = 1,000mg calcium |
| 130% DV = 1,300mg calcium |

The important thing is to look at
the %DV for calcium on the food package so you know how much one serving
contributes to the total amount you need. Remember, a food with 20%DV
or more contributes a lot of calcium to your daily total, while one with 5%DV
or less contributes a little. See Comparison Example
#2.
The Footnote, or lower part of the
Nutrition Facts Panel
(#6 on sample label) Note the *
used after the heading "%Daily Value" on the Nutrition Facts panel. It refers to
the Footnote in the lower part of the nutrition label, which tells you that
"%DVs are based on recommendations for a 2,000 calorie diet". This
statement must be on all food labels. But the remaining information in the full
footnote may not be on the package if the size of the label is too small. When
the full footnote does appear, it will always be the same. It doesn't change
from product to product, because it shows dietary advice for all Americans--it
is not about a specific food product.
The Daily Values are based on expert dietary advice about how much, or
how little, of some key nutrients you should eat each day, depending on whether
you eat 2,000 or 2,500 calories a day.
Example: look at the Total Fat
information in the footnote. It tells you that if you eat a 2,000 calorie
diet, you should eat less than 65g of fat in all the foods you
eat in a day. By doing this, you will follow nutrition experts' advice to
consume no more than 30 percent of your daily calories from fat. Because the
DV for total fat is "less than 65g," this is the same thing as saying, to keep
your total fat intake for the day below 100%DV.
If you consume 2,500 calories per day, the
Footnote shows you how your daily values would change for some nutrients but
not for others. The Daily Values for Cholesterol (300mg) and Sodium (2,400mg
sodium) remain the same no matter how many calories you eat. But recommended
levels of intake for other nutrients do depend on how many calories you
consume.
Remember: %DVs listed on the top half of the food label are based on
recommendations for a 2,000 calorie diet, not a 2,500 calorie diet.
Comparison Example #1
Below are two kinds of milk- one is "Reduced Fat," the other
is chocolate "Nonfat" milk. Each serving size is one cup. Which has more
calories? Which is higher in fat and saturated fat?
|
REDUCED FAT MILK 2% Milkfat
|
CHOCOLATE NONFAT MILK
|
 |
 |
Comparison Example #2
Below are two kinds of milk- one is "Reduced Fat," the other
is chocolate "Nonfat" milk. Each serving size is one cup. Which has more
calcium?
|
REDUCED FAT MILK 2% Milkfat
|
CHOCOLATE NONFAT MILK
|
 |
 |
|
|