FDA gives a 20% leeway for accuracy on nutrition labels.

Just a heads up to let everyone know to use caution if they, like me, sometimes count daily available calories down to 0. You know if they get a 20% leeway most food manufacturers are going to use it to their advantage and under report the calories in their products.

Here's a video about a guy in New York who had some of his favorite foods tested.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/opinion/calorie-detective.html?smid=fb-share&_r=2&

Nice to know that Subway sandwich shops are accurate. I'm going to go there more often because of their honesty. Plus, their fresh baked multigrain bread and sandwiches are pretty good.
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Replies

  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    Just a heads up to let everyone know to use caution if they, like me, sometimes count daily available calories down to 0. You know if they get a 20% leeway most food manufacturers are going to use it to their advantage and under report the calories in their products.

    Really ? I would use it to give yo 19.9% less food than it said on the label.
  • dopeysmelly
    dopeysmelly Posts: 1,390 Member
    Just a heads up to let everyone know to use caution if they, like me, sometimes count daily available calories down to 0. You know if they get a 20% leeway most food manufacturers are going to use it to their advantage and under report the calories in their products.

    Here's a video about a guy in New York who had some of his favorite foods tested.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/opinion/calorie-detective.html?smid=fb-share&_r=2&

    Nice to know that Subway sandwich shops are accurate. I'm going to go there more often because of their honesty. Plus, their fresh baked multigrain bread and sandwiches are pretty good.

    Wow! Thanks for this. I figured there was a margin of error, but 20% is not a margin of error IMO, it's a margin negotiated between the food industry lobby and the USDA..
  • pbbagel
    pbbagel Posts: 53 Member
    But I guess you don't have to worry about this too much if you eat mostly non-commercial foods? Or more natural foods?
    For example, things like fruit and vegetables should always have a similar amount of calories, right? And maybe things like rice, pasta, meat, etc.?
  • Meerataila
    Meerataila Posts: 1,885 Member
    Just a heads up to let everyone know to use caution if they, like me, sometimes count daily available calories down to 0. You know if they get a 20% leeway most food manufacturers are going to use it to their advantage and under report the calories in their products.

    Here's a video about a guy in New York who had some of his favorite foods tested.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/opinion/calorie-detective.html?smid=fb-share&_r=2&

    Nice to know that Subway sandwich shops are accurate. I'm going to go there more often because of their honesty. Plus, their fresh baked multigrain bread and sandwiches are pretty good.

    Wow! Thanks for this. I figured there was a margin of error, but 20% is not a margin of error IMO, it's a margin negotiated between the food industry lobby and the USDA..

    This. I thought they were planning on tightening up that margin, but maybe it got canned already. Weigh and measure everything, trust no label, and cook from scratch as much as possible. That last one will put a hurting on the packaged food industry, too.
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  • sakuya3834
    sakuya3834 Posts: 116 Member
    Always weight prepackaged solid foods. For example, a slice of bread. Weigh it, don't just assume it's "x" amount of grams because the package says so. Of course this gets complicated if there are various components or its a restaurant meal (or something else potentially complicated) but the more foods you do this with the more accurate your logs will be.
  • basicbaby
    basicbaby Posts: 7
    I kinda knew this, but I didn't know it was like 20%, thats alot. Actually, that is just inacurate and kinda alot BS, noone else gets that kind of leeway! Just think if I eat all those food and I have 5% of my calories leftover, but I ate food all that day that was 20% over, I just BLEW my calories way out of the water. *cries*

    I usually do inflation anyways, but not 20%. Guess its a good thing I set my goal at 1500 and not 2000. >.>
  • No_Finish_Line
    No_Finish_Line Posts: 3,661 Member
    i think there are two things to remember

    - no food is product is going to be 100% consistent. one snickers bar might way slightly more then the other, get an extra peanut, etc. its always an estimate. perhaps a calorie range would be a better idea.

    - although 20% is a lot, perhaps a take away is that its not as important to be nearly 100% accurate as you might think.
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    The 20% difference is actually referring to what restaraunts say is in their food.

    And its not so much that they allow 20% and above that they dont allow. Its that they take these companies at their word, and in one study it was shown to be up to 20% more than what was listed.
  • kimny72
    kimny72 Posts: 16,011 Member
    The 20% difference is actually referring to what restaraunts say is in their food.

    And its not so much that they allow 20% and above that they dont allow. Its that they take these companies at their word, and in one study it was shown to be up to 20% more than what was listed.

    ^This.
    There is no official leeway. It's just that the FDA doesn't have the time, resources, and/or inclination to actually test the figures restaurants are claiming. In this little experiment, the guy bought 5 typical food items from local restaurants and lab tested them. He found he would have eaten 550 more calories than he was told he would if he had eaten all 5. It was like a muffin from a local muffin shop, something from Subway, that sort of thing. Not packaged grocery store items. Hopefully those are a little bit closer to the truth calorie wise!
  • No_Finish_Line
    No_Finish_Line Posts: 3,661 Member
    ahhh, important distinction. yay for those who actually read lol
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    But I guess you don't have to worry about this too much if you eat mostly non-commercial foods? Or more natural foods?
    For example, things like fruit and vegetables should always have a similar amount of calories, right? And maybe things like rice, pasta, meat, etc.?

    Actually, it's just as bad or worse for natural foods. The nutrition facts represent an average for that food based on certain (often unstated) assumptions about the food items.

    When it comes down to it, every measurement is an estimate.
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    When it comes down to it, every measurement is an estimate.

    While this is true, it may not be accurate to say that everything is up to 20% off.
  • Branstin
    Branstin Posts: 2,320 Member
    Many of the nutrition labels are based on diet amounts of 2000 or 2500 calories. If you are not consuming these amounts then your numbers are going to be off anyway.
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    Many of the nutrition labels are based on diet amounts of 2000 or 2500 calories. If you are not consuming these amounts then your numbers are going to be off anyway.

    The calories contained in an item do not change based on the consumer's caloric needs.
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    Here's a fun fact:
    ... a Harvard professor created a buzz when she spoke out about the shortcomings of the 100+ year old formula used to determine the calorie values many people rely upon. Turns out, based on further study, several foods actually contain less, because some components don’t get digested. Incomplete digestion means that rather than being absorbed into the body, where calories have to be burned, used, or stored, some simply travel through your digestive system, to become excreted as waste. This type of analysis led to the recent insight that almonds supply about 30% fewer calories than the label states...

    So just as some items may be higher, some may be lower.
  • SueInAz
    SueInAz Posts: 6,592 Member
    Here's a fun fact:
    ... a Harvard professor created a buzz when she spoke out about the shortcomings of the 100+ year old formula used to determine the calorie values many people rely upon. Turns out, based on further study, several foods actually contain less, because some components don’t get digested. Incomplete digestion means that rather than being absorbed into the body, where calories have to be burned, used, or stored, some simply travel through your digestive system, to become excreted as waste. This type of analysis led to the recent insight that almonds supply about 30% fewer calories than the label states...

    So just as some items may be higher, some may be lower.
    This is also true of foods once you cook them. If you're using MFP and choosing "Broccoli, raw" but are actually steaming said broccoli, you're removing some of the calories during the process.

    I always inwardly chuckle when people are posting in here on having to be absolutely accurate when entering calorie amounts. There is no "absolute" when it comes to counting calories; everything about it is an estimate. HRMs give an estimate of calories burned, food entries are an estimate as well. All we can do is track as best we can and hope it all washes out in the end.
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    When it comes down to it, every measurement is an estimate.

    While this is true, it may not be accurate to say that everything is up to 20% off.

    It certainly can't hurt to assume wide margins of error. Just like scale weight, there are just too many variables we can't measure to be absolutely certain of any specific value. That said, the long term averages (of both calories and scale weights) are fairly decent approximations for what the actual values were. If we focus on those, it is easier to make sense of the data. It is why I use the weekly total calories instead of daily, and the weekly sum of my daily weights, when I consider my progress. The error is still there (about 150 calories plus or minus a day and 0.5 kg plus or minus a day) but are much smaller than the typical daily error amounts.

    Last week's calorie band is actually +/- 165 calories if I assume a 20% daily error. And I actually use a weighted trend, so error rate for the the change in that is less than a 10th of a kg.
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    When it comes down to it, every measurement is an estimate.

    While this is true, it may not be accurate to say that everything is up to 20% off.

    It certainly can't hurt to assume wide margins of error. Just like scale weight, there are just too many variables we can't measure to be absolutely certain of any specific value. Thay said, the long term averages (of both calories and scale weights) are fairly decent approximations for what the actual values were. If we focus on those, it is easier to make sense of the data. It is why I use the weekly total calories instead of daily, and the weekly sum of my daily weights, when I consider my progress. The error is still there (about 150 calories plus or minus a day and 0.5 kg plus or minus a day) but are much smaller than the typical daily error amounts.

    I agree its helpful to KNOW there is a margin of error. However, to put a number on it that is not entirely accurate could cause someone to decrease their caloric intake to dangerous levels. I am 5"0' so 1200 isn't necessary unhealthy for me BUT if I was 5"0' and was told my calories are inflated by 20%, I may cut down to the dangerously low 1000 just to account for that inflation.

    BTW I am not at 1200, my body doesn't like it and it's not right for me. I'm closer to 1430 and while I know there is some room for error, its certainly better than the 3000-4000 cal (estimated) I was consuming every day.
  • jnord8729
    jnord8729 Posts: 234 Member
    But I guess you don't have to worry about this too much if you eat mostly non-commercial foods? Or more natural foods?
    For example, things like fruit and vegetables should always have a similar amount of calories, right? And maybe things like rice, pasta, meat, etc.?

    Actually, it's just as bad or worse for natural foods. The nutrition facts represent an average for that food based on certain (often unstated) assumptions about the food items.

    When it comes down to it, every measurement is an estimate.

    If anything, completely unprocessed, natural, organic, non-gmo foods are the worst at being an exact nutrient measurement. It's not necessarily a bad thing, just that's how biology works with there are no outside influences.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
    But I guess you don't have to worry about this too much if you eat mostly non-commercial foods? Or more natural foods?
    For example, things like fruit and vegetables should always have a similar amount of calories, right? And maybe things like rice, pasta, meat, etc.?

    Actually, it's just as bad or worse for natural foods. The nutrition facts represent an average for that food based on certain (often unstated) assumptions about the food items.

    When it comes down to it, every measurement is an estimate.

    if you weigh food, instead of counting it, e.g. logging the numger of grams you ate, rather than logging it as e.g. "1 apple, large" then it's pretty accurate.

    It may not be entirely accurate as the amount of calories in an apple will vary a little, but it's not going to be that far off.

    The issue of restaurants is because they don't weigh everything that goes onto the plate, the kitchen staff put the food on the play paying attention to presentation and getting the dish right - they're not going to cut every steak to the exact same size, or weigh the exact same number of french fries onto the plate... but if you're making your own food at home, you can weigh the steak and the fries and log the exact number of grams - so even if you account for individual variation between one steak and another, it's still more accurate than the way the portion foods in the restaurant.

    Also, when cutting, I weigh foods and whatever level of inaccuracy still exists due to small variations in one piece of food compared to another piece of the same type of food is clearly not enough to make any significant impact in my deficit

    As for packaged food - I usually weigh these as well, and find that the exact number of grams is slightly different to what it says on the packet, but not by much. And it's just as often slightly under. When you consider that shops will lose revenue if they're selling overweight portion sizes, that's not surprising. If they make enough for a batch of 1000 items, but then make the portion sizes too big, then they'll end up with only 950 items... the unit price will be the same so they'll make less profit. Having the weight on the package was made a legal requirement long before people were concerned about calories - they were concerned about companies selling them underweight portion sizes to make more money. Calories are only a recent concern because so many people get fat from being sedentary nowadays.
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    I agree its helpful to KNOW there is a margin of error. However, to put a number on it that is not entirely accurate could cause someone to decrease their caloric intake to dangerous levels. I am 5"0' so 1200 isn't necessary unhealthy for me BUT if I was 5"0' and was told my calories are inflated by 20%, I may cut down to the dangerously low 1000 just to account for that inflation.

    BTW I am not at 1200, my body doesn't like it and it's not right for me. I'm closer to 1430 and while I know there is some room for error, its certainly better than the 3000-4000 cal (estimated) I was consuming every day.

    That person would be misunderstanding the numbers. The calories can be as much as 20% higher or lower. The could just as well justify increasing their intake so as not to fall below 1,200 as they could justify decreasing it because they don't want to be over it. Understanding the margin of error isn't a reason to change anything. It's helpful when considering why you may not be getting exactly the results that "calories-in minus calories-out" suggests you should.

    It is also worth noting that the 20% is essentially a wash. If one product is 15% higher, another 13% lower, one 4% higher, the next 6% lower... etc... the error margin dramatically reduces rapidly. Even more than a daily error of 20%, we should be considering all products with a 20% error. If you eat 6 different 200 calories foods (keeping with the 1200 calories / day number), you don't get an error of +/- 240 calories at the end of the day. The error is actually +/- 98 calories (around 8%). The more measurements made, the smaller the percentage of the cumulative error becomes. I tend to consider the daily total when calculating error ranges, only because it simplifies the calculations. The error ranges I get are actually much larger than the real error ranges would be. My long term averages (assuming I measure and log accurately) can be assumed to very reasonably approximate the actual values.

    Knowing the error is useful only for deeper analysis. It can't be used to drive decisions because you have no way of knowing the magnitude nor direction of the error for every item you consume. You just have to base your decisions on the values you have to work with, and accept that approximation is the way of life.
  • Branstin
    Branstin Posts: 2,320 Member
    Many of the nutrition labels are based on diet amounts of 2000 or 2500 calories. If you are not consuming these amounts then your numbers are going to be off anyway.

    The calories contained in an item do not change based on the consumer's caloric needs.

    If this is the case then why even place any specific amounts on the label?
  • simplydelish2
    simplydelish2 Posts: 726 Member
    Wow...so many FDA experts on today!

    Thanks OP for the heads up - I'm sure some of us needed the reminder that in the calorie world it is not always as it appears!
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    I agree its helpful to KNOW there is a margin of error. However, to put a number on it that is not entirely accurate could cause someone to decrease their caloric intake to dangerous levels. I am 5"0' so 1200 isn't necessary unhealthy for me BUT if I was 5"0' and was told my calories are inflated by 20%, I may cut down to the dangerously low 1000 just to account for that inflation.

    BTW I am not at 1200, my body doesn't like it and it's not right for me. I'm closer to 1430 and while I know there is some room for error, its certainly better than the 3000-4000 cal (estimated) I was consuming every day.

    That person would be misunderstanding the numbers. The calories can be as much as 20% higher or lower. The could just as well justify increasing their intake so as not to fall below 1,200 as they could justify decreasing it because they don't want to be over it. Understanding the margin of error isn't a reason to change anything. It's helpful when considering why you may not be getting exactly the results that "calories-in minus calories-out" suggests you should.

    It is also worth noting that the 20% is essentially a wash. If one product is 15% higher, another 13% lower, one 4% higher, the next 6% lower... etc... the error margin dramatically reduces rapidly. Even more than a daily error of 20%, we should be considering all products with a 20% error. If you eat 6 different 200 calories foods (keeping with the 1200 calories / day number), you don't get an error of +/- 240 calories at the end of the day. The error is actually +/- 98 calories (around 8%). The more measurements made, the smaller the percentage of the cumulative error becomes. I tend to consider the daily total when calculating error ranges, only because it simplifies the calculations. The error ranges I get are actually much larger than the real error ranges would be. My long term averages (assuming I measure and log accurately) can be assumed to very reasonably approximate the actual values.

    Knowing the error is useful only for deeper analysis. It can't be used to drive decisions because you have no way of knowing the magnitude nor direction of the error for every item you consume. You just have to base your decisions on the values you have to work with, and accept that approximation is the way of life.

    I am comfortable with your explanation at this level. Thank you.

    ETA: I know the person would be misunderstanding the numbers. Your explanation should clear up that misunderstanding.
  • Jess__I__Can
    Jess__I__Can Posts: 307 Member
    Many of the nutrition labels are based on diet amounts of 2000 or 2500 calories. If you are not consuming these amounts then your numbers are going to be off anyway.

    The calories contained in an item do not change based on the consumer's caloric needs.

    If this is the case then why even place any specific amounts on the label?

    You are talking about the % of daily value (vitamins, minerals, fat, carb, etc.), which is based on a 2000 calorie diet. The calories in an item don't care who is eating them.
  • AllOutof_Bubblegum
    AllOutof_Bubblegum Posts: 3,646 Member
    This is old news.
  • FIT_Goat
    FIT_Goat Posts: 4,224 Member
    if you weigh food, instead of counting it, e.g. logging the numger of grams you ate, rather than logging it as e.g. "1 apple, large" then it's pretty accurate.

    It may not be entirely accurate as the amount of calories in an apple will vary a little, but it's not going to be that far off.

    It can be off by more than you suspect. I've read one study that found differences as large as two orders of magnitude when ripeness was taken into account. Those were not typical, and most fruit fell within a range where the max value was 1.65 times the min value. So, assuming that is typical (for this fruit), that means most fruit will have an error of as much as 25%. That's a pretty large error. Granted, if the same error holds for an apple, 100g of apple would have an error of about +/- 13 calories. The more ripe a fruit is, for example, the more calories you get from it. And that's just one factor. There are many more to take into account.

    When it comes to meat, the amount of fat is highly variable, hard to measure, and can have a big impact on total calories. So, 20% isn't unreasonable for an error range there either.
    Also, when cutting, I weigh foods and whatever level of inaccuracy still exists due to small variations in one piece of food compared to another piece of the same type of food is clearly not enough to make any significant impact in my deficit

    This is the right way to view it. It doesn't really matter because the items that are more calorie dense than you account for will be compensated for by those that are less calorie dense. You just can't be sure. So, you have to accept the averages and live with the fact that you don't know if that 100g of apple has more or less than the average apple would.
  • leggup
    leggup Posts: 2,942 Member
    Calorie counts at chipotle are off? You mean the lady scooping my rice isn't weighing it, or even leveling it? (sounds of dripping sarcasm). At chains like subway and chipotle where they make it while you watch, you can ask for "heavy" or "light" on any ingredient. For example, I always say, "a little rice" because I don't want my veggie bowl to be mostly rice.

    Learn how much is about a portion, weigh it as best as you can when you can, and modify your daily intake of regular foods based on how your weight changes over time if nothing else is changing.
  • Holy ****. The (prepackaged) tofu sandwich had almost DOUBLE the calories. That's bonkers. How is this allowed!?