Australian food labels must easily convey where food is grown, produced, made or packed. This helps consumers make informed decisions about the food they buy.

Requirements and tools for business

If you sell food in retail stores in Australia, you will need to consider if your products need country of origin food labels.

Country of origin labelling requirements for food are in the Country of Origin Food Labelling Information Standard 2016. You can design and apply your own labels as long as they meet the standard.

On the business.gov.au website we provide the following resources:

an online decision tool that helps you to choose the right label to download

a style guide for guidance on how to apply the labels

a library of design elements that you can personalise for your own labels

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) website explains how to:

make a country of origin claim

label food

make an origin claim for non-food products

Consumer rights and label types

Consumers want quick and accurate information to help decide what food to buy. Food labels need to be clear, consistent and honest. It’s against the law for suppliers to mislead or lie about where their food comes from.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) website explains the meaning of each label and your rights as a consumer.

Developing the food labelling system

We consulted with industry and consumers about a new food labelling system and undertook market research. Our findings showed strong support for a new food labelling system. Consumers called for greater clarity about where their food comes from.

The Legislative and Governance Forum on Consumer Affairs (CAF) approved the Decision regulation impact statement with the following endorsed options:

using the familiar ‘kangaroo in a triangle’ logo

displaying the percentage of Australian ingredients with accompanying statement

allowing for a 24 month transition period for businesses

removing the system from the Food Standards Code

creating a new Information Standard under Australian Consumer Law

Evaluating the food labelling system

The current requirements for country of origin labelling for food came into full-effect in July 2018. We’re now evaluating the reforms.

We’re examining how well country of origin labelling reforms for food:

improved consumer access to information about the origin of food

clarified the origin claims businesses can make about their products

avoided imposing excessive costs on impacted businesses

We expect to finish the review in June 2021. A variety of methods will inform us, including public consultation on a discussion paper.

Read the evaluation terms of reference [603KB PDF] [78KB DOCX]

Digitising food product data for consumers

We commissioned a report into the potential for digital food labelling in Australia. This would enable businesses to provide digital food product information to their consumers and share information with other businesses in their supply chains.

The report looked at work underway in Australia and overseas to develop web-based data sources, ledgers, apps and interactive supermarket displays.

We found Australia’s food industry is already considering ways to collect and provide digital food product information, and this will be used to inform the future development of digital food labelling. Contact us if you would like to view the report.

Origin labelling for seafood sold in the foodservice sector

The Minister led a working group to consider whether origin labelling should be extended to seafood sold in foodservice. A working group paper and addendum informed discussions. The government is considering outcomes from the consultation.

Origin labelling for complementary medicines

Regulations for country of origin labelling for complementary medicines have changed. This change follows public consultation on the use of the Australian made logo for the complementary medicine sector.

To see what has changed, visit the Competition and Consumer Amendments (Australian-made Complementary Medicines) Regulations 2019 on the Federal Register of Legislation.

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