Newly Enacted Food Ingredient Disclosure Laws: Texas and Louisiana Reshape Food Labeling Compliance Landscape
Newly Enacted Food Ingredient Disclosure Laws: Texas and Louisiana Reshape Food Labeling Compliance Landscape
In June 2025, Texas and Louisiana each enacted legislation mandating new label disclosures for foods containing a number of food and color additives, raising federal preemption and First Amendment questions. Both states have additionally restricted various ingredients from school meals. These developments follow broader national and global trends restricting usage of various ingredients and broadly aligns with the objectives of the president’s Make America Healthy Again Initiative. Generally, these new requirements create a more complex labeling reality for food manufacturers, importers, and retailers nationwide.
Signed into law on June 18, 2025, Texas’s SB 25 represents the nation’s first ingredient disclosure law enacted at the state level. SB 25 requires all foods sold in Texas to bear the following warning label if the food contains one or more of 44 enumerated ingredients: “WARNING: This product contains an ingredient that is not recommended for human consumption by the appropriate authority in Australia, Canada, the European Union, or the United Kingdom.”
Signed into law on June 27, 2025, Louisiana’s SB 14 mandates product-level disclosures for any food sold in the state that contains one or more of approximately 40 restricted additives—many of which overlap with those listed in Texas’s SB 25. While the law does not prohibit the use of these ingredients, it requires that product packaging include a QR code linked to a web page under the control of the manufacturer directing consumers to a warning about the ingredient. The required disclosure must include the following statement: “NOTICE: This product contains [ingredient]. For more information about this ingredient, including FDA approvals, click HERE.” SB 14 takes effect on January 1, 2028.
Effective August 1, 2027, the law prohibits the use of more than 15 specified ingredients in foods provided through Louisiana’s public school meal programs. This includes commonly used synthetic color additives, sweeteners, and emulsifiers that have all been restricted or banned in the EU or other jurisdictions. The restriction applies to all meals served in public K–12 schools, including those provided under the National School Lunch Program and School Breakfast Program.
It remains to be seen whether the food industry will seek to challenge these new laws on preemption grounds, particularly as a patchwork of similar laws are increasingly likely to be enacted across states.
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