What Does 'Natural' Really Mean?

A young woman reads the label on a food jar while shopping at a grocery store.

The FDA considers “natural” to mean the food does not contain added colors, artificial flavors or synthetic substances.

Take a stroll through your . You’ll be hard-pressed to find a box, bag or bottle that isn’t covered with labels touting the food’s nutritional merits. Among the most confusing labels are “natural,” “made with 100 percent natural ingredients” and “all natural.”

But ? Largely, whatever the food manufacturer – and its marketing division – want it to mean, says Marion Nestle, a professor of nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University and author of “Food Politics."

While no regulatory agency has settled on a definition of “natural,” the does have some parameters food manufactures must follow when using the term, says FDA spokeswoman Jennifer Corbett Dooren. The administration considers “natural” to mean the food does not contain added colors, artificial flavors or synthetic substances.

Fortunately for food manufacturers – and unfortunately for consumers – that leaves a lot of wiggle room, says registered dietitian Wesley Delbridge, a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics.

Foods that sport a “natural” label can contain , trans fats and genetically modified ingredients, or GMOs. They aren’t necessarily organic, grass-fed or free-range. They can be deep-fried, covered in icing or filled with artificial ingredients, he says. No, “artificial” and “synthetic” do not actually mean the same thing.

“At present, the word ‘natural’ in food marketing is meaningless, and that’s the way food companies want it,” says Gary Ruskin, executive director of U.S. Right to Know, a nonprofit organization that promotes transparency within the food industry. “It’s a swindle. It’s a scam. It’s a term crafty marketers use to make you buy something.”

It’s working. One 2014  found that 62 percent of supermarket shoppers seek out “natural,” “all natural” or “100 percent natural” when selecting nutritious choices. And in , this one from Consumer Reports, about two-thirds of respondents said they believe the term “natural” means that a food has no artificial ingredients, pesticides or .

As such, a  published in the Journal of Public Policy & Marketing shows that consumers are increasingly filing lawsuits against food manufacturers using the term “natural.” In 2009, 30 percent of newly launched foods claimed to be natural but by 2013 this dropped to 22 percent, possibly due to an increase in the number of consumer lawsuits,” wrote the authors, explaining that “lawyers are increasingly willing to take cases which regulatory agencies have abandoned.”

In 2014, in response to a series of lawsuits over “natural,” the FDA said it didn’t have the resources to devote to defining the term once and for all. The administration’s letter to the courts explains, “At present, priority food public health and safety matters are largely occupying the limited resources that FDA has to address foods matters … Because, especially in the foods arena, FDA operates in a world of limited resources, we necessarily must prioritize which issues to address.”


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