Allergen Labeling: EU vs. USA vs. China Compared

EU vs USA vs China — EU allergen labeling in food service | ChinaYung solution
EU vs USA vs China — EU allergen labeling in food service | ChinaYung solution

Introduction

In a globalized food industry, knowing only your local allergen regulations is no longer sufficient. International restaurant chains, food exporters, and operators serving guests from multiple countries must understand at least three regulatory frameworks simultaneously: the European Union, the United States, and China. These three markets represent the world’s most significant and most actively enforced allergen labeling regimes — and they differ substantially in scope, structure, and enforcement approach.

This article places all three systems side by side in a structured comparison. The goal is not only orientation, but a clear basis for action: what applies where, what the decisive differences are, and which strategy keeps you compliant across all three markets at once.


The Master Comparison Table

CriterionEUUSAChina
Legal basisRegulation (EU) No 1169/2011 (FIC Regulation / LMIV)FALCPA (2004) + FASTER Act (2021/2023)GB 7718-2024
In force since13 December 20142006 (FALCPA); sesame: 1 January 202327 March 2027
Number of mandatory allergens149Approx. 8–9 (based on current information)
Applies directly to restaurants?Yes — direct obligation for all food service operatorsNo federal requirement — state laws only (e.g. Massachusetts, Michigan)Based on current information, primarily packaged food; restaurant obligation unclear
Labeling formatEmphasis within ingredient list (e.g. bold) or footnote system„Contains: [Allergen]“ statement or emphasis within ingredient listEmphasis within ingredient list (based on current information)
Oral communication permitted?Partially — permitted in Germany under strict conditions; not in FrancePartially — no federal rule; depends on state lawNo explicit provision based on current information
„May contain traces of…“Voluntary — not legally required, but strongly recommendedVoluntary — not mandated by FALCPA or FASTER ActVoluntary — no obligation based on current information
Maximum penalty (examples)Germany: up to €50,000 for serious violationsVaries significantly by state; civil liability often more consequentialUnder Food Safety Law (食品安全法): up to 5× illegal proceeds + license revocation
Responsible authorityNational food authorities (e.g. BVL in Germany, DGCCRF in France)FDA (Food and Drug Administration) for packaged foodSAMR (国家市场监督管理总局); enforcement at provincial level
Sesame mandatory?Yes — since FIC Regulation 2014Yes — since FASTER Act, 1 January 2023Yes — based on current information
Gluten or wheat?„Cereals containing gluten“ — covers wheat, rye, barley, oats, spelt„Wheat“ only — rye and barley not automatically coveredSpecific grain types (similar to US — no EU-style umbrella category)

For detailed articles on each individual system:


What All Three Systems Have in Common

Despite their differences, the EU, US, and Chinese frameworks share a foundational consensus: protecting consumers with food allergies is a public regulatory obligation. All three systems require that allergen information be made available before a purchase is completed or a dish is consumed — not retroactively upon request.

EU vs USA vs China: Allergen Labeling Compared — practical example | ChinaYung
EU vs USA vs China: Allergen Labeling Compared — practical example | ChinaYung

In terms of substance, there is a stable shared core: milk, eggs, fish, crustaceans, peanuts, soybeans, and tree nuts are mandatory allergens in all three jurisdictions. These seven allergens represent the global minimum — a logical starting point for any internationally oriented allergen strategy.

The most important cross-cutting trend is unambiguous: allergen lists are growing longer, not shorter. Sesame was added to the EU list in 2014, to the US list in 2023, and China follows in 2027. It is foreseeable that additional allergens — such as buckwheat in Japan, or mustard in emerging markets — will generate regulatory pressure in further jurisdictions in the years ahead.


The Biggest Differences Between the Three Systems

1. Scope of the allergen list

The EU leads with 14 mandatory allergens — the most comprehensive framework of the three. The US requires 9; China, based on current information, a similar number. Five allergens are mandatory only in the EU: celery, mustard, lupin, molluscs, and sulphur dioxide/sulphites. Any product or menu labeled only to US or Chinese standards leaves these five undeclared.

2. Gluten vs. wheat — a consequential terminological difference

The EU uses the umbrella category „cereals containing gluten,“ capturing wheat, rye, barley, oats, spelt, and kamut under a single declaration requirement. The US designates only „wheat“ as a major allergen — rye and barley are not automatically covered, despite containing gluten and posing serious risks to individuals with coeliac disease. China follows, based on current information, the narrower US approach. The practical consequence: a product containing barley malt extract could be legally compliant under US and Chinese rules while triggering a mandatory allergen declaration in the EU.

3. Direct restaurant obligation exists only in the EU

The EU’s FIC Regulation directly obliges restaurants, caterers, delivery services, and food trucks to provide allergen information to consumers. In the US, no equivalent federal law exists — only state-level rules in jurisdictions such as Massachusetts and Michigan. China’s position on restaurant-level allergen obligations under GB 7718-2024 remains, based on current information, to be clarified.

4. Maturity of enforcement

The EU system has been operational since December 2014 — over eleven years of enforcement practice, case law, and regulatory guidance. The US FALCPA framework dates to 2006, with the sesame addition in 2023. China enters binding allergen regulation for the first time in March 2027, with correspondingly limited enforcement history in the early years.

5. Precautionary labeling is voluntary everywhere

„May contain traces of…“ is not legally mandated in any of the three jurisdictions. All three systems recommend it when cross-contamination cannot be reliably excluded — and in all three markets, the absence of a precautionary statement can generate civil liability exposure in the event of an allergic incident.


Practical Implications for International Restaurateurs

International chains and franchise operations

The most efficient strategy is straightforward: consistently declare all 14 EU allergens. The EU list is the most comprehensive of the three — full EU compliance automatically covers the 9 US allergens and China’s list, without the need to maintain separate label variants for each jurisdiction. The EU framework is the safe universal minimum across all three markets simultaneously.

Exporters

Exporting food to China or the US requires compliance with the target market’s rules — even if the product is already correctly labeled for the EU market. For the US market, this means adding a „Contains:“ statement in the correct format. For the Chinese market, it means Chinese-language labels meeting the GB 7718-2024 format requirements, in force from March 2027.

Tourism and international guests

American guests are accustomed to the „Contains:“ style. Chinese guests are developing growing allergen awareness as GB 7718 normalizes labeling in their home market. European guests know the footnote or symbol system. A clear, legible allergen declaration — supplemented by multilingual information for international clientele — builds trust across all guest groups simultaneously. For guidance on software solutions that manage multiple regulatory standards in parallel, see Allergen labeling software comparison.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many allergens must be declared in the EU, USA, and China?

The EU mandates declaration of 14 allergens under Regulation (EU) No 1169/2011 (FIC Regulation): cereals containing gluten, crustaceans, eggs, fish, peanuts, soybeans, milk, tree nuts, celery, mustard, sesame, sulphur dioxide and sulphites, lupin, and molluscs. This obligation has applied since 13 December 2014 and extends directly to restaurants, caterers, and delivery services — not only to packaged food manufacturers.

The United States has recognized nine major food allergens since the FASTER Act took effect on 1 January 2023: milk, eggs, fish, crustacean shellfish, peanuts, tree nuts, soybeans, wheat, and sesame. These apply mandatorily to packaged food under FDA oversight. China is in the process of introducing its first binding allergen declaration requirements under GB 7718-2024, effective 27 March 2027 — with a list that, based on current information, broadly parallels the US Top 9. Declaring all 14 EU allergens today means you are already covered for all three markets.


Which country has the strictest allergen regulations?

The EU is generally considered the most stringent system of the three across all dimensions: the longest allergen list at 14 mandatory substances, a direct legal obligation that extends to restaurants and food service operators — not only packaged food manufacturers — and meaningful financial penalties. In Germany, serious labeling violations can attract fines of up to €50,000 under national implementing law; other member states have comparable frameworks. The EU rules apply uniformly across 27 member states and are enforced by national food authorities with over a decade of operational experience.

The US has no federal requirement for allergen declaration on restaurant menus — making it less demanding than the EU in the food service context, though strict for packaged food under FDA oversight. China is introducing binding requirements for the first time in 2027 and, under its Food Safety Law (食品安全法), carries potentially severe penalties including fines of up to five times illegal proceeds, though enforcement practice in allergen labeling specifically is still developing. For international operators, the expert consensus is clear: use EU standards as your baseline. Declaring all 14 EU allergens ensures you meet the requirements of all three markets without maintaining separate compliance frameworks.


As an international restaurateur, do I need to understand all three regulatory frameworks?

It depends on your operational scope. If you operate exclusively within the EU, compliance with the FIC Regulation and applicable national implementing measures — such as Germany’s LMIDV — is sufficient. If you export products, operate locations in other jurisdictions, or regularly serve guests from the US or China, understanding the key features of all three systems is genuinely necessary, not just helpful.

The pragmatic approach for internationally active operators is to declare all 14 EU allergens as your standard. The EU list is the most comprehensive of the three, meaning full EU compliance automatically satisfies the US Top 9 and China’s requirements without additional effort. The only supplementary work for export markets lies in format adaptation: the US requires a „Contains:“ statement, and China requires Chinese-language labels meeting GB 7718-2024 specifications from March 2027 onwards. A software platform that maps your ingredient database against multiple regulatory frameworks simultaneously — such as ChinaYung — significantly reduces the operational burden of this parallel compliance and minimizes the risk of jurisdiction-specific labeling errors.


Last updated: March 2026 · ChinaYung — Allergen labeling for food service

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