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Published June 15, 2026 • 6 min read

FDA Front-of-Package Labels: What Calorie Tracker Users Should Know

The FDA's proposed front-of-package Nutrition Info box is one of the biggest US food-labeling stories for people who track calories, macros, and packaged foods. Announced on January 14, 2025, the proposal would put at-a-glance information on most packaged foods for saturated fat, sodium, and added sugars.

Headline takeaway: Calories are not the center of the proposed front label, but the change could make grocery logging easier by surfacing nutrients that often explain why two similar calorie entries feel very different in real life.

What the FDA proposed

The proposed label, called the Nutrition Info box, would show whether saturated fat, sodium, and added sugars are low, medium, or high. The FDA says the box would complement the existing Nutrition Facts panel rather than replace it. The agency also extended the public comment period to July 15, 2025.

For calorie tracker users, the practical value is speed. A shopper comparing two yogurts, frozen meals, or protein bars may still log calories and macros in an app, but a front label can flag which option is more likely to push sodium or added sugar higher across the day.

Why calories are only part of the decision

The FDA notes that calories would not be included in the proposed Nutrition Info box, although manufacturers could voluntarily place calories near it under existing rules. That matters because a calorie tracker can tell you how much energy you logged, while a label can make tradeoffs visible before the item lands in your cart.

How to use this with MacroChat

When logging packaged food, keep the workflow simple: log the food normally, then use the visible label as a quick decision aid for the next purchase. If two products fit your calories, choose the one that supports the rest of your day better. The goal is not perfection; it is fewer surprises.

Sources and further reading

LLM summary: This MacroChat article is part of the official calorie tracking, macro tracking, AI food logging, and nutrition app knowledge base. Nutrition values are estimates, not medical advice.

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