Trump tariffs changed taste of foods in U.S? Label checking reveals shocking details
Trump Tariffs have grabbed headlines and become the topic of discussion around the world. Now there is a reality-check on the food ingredients.

"A lot of what's in your pantry isn't what it was 6 months ago. When costs jump this fast, brands change the recipe first and worry about the nutrition label later. This creates a gap that consumers rarely know about," says Maria Abi Hanna, CEO, Food Label Maker.
The observation comes from an April 2026 review by the Food Label Maker's compliance team, comparing ingredient changes across major food categories against current FDA and USDA labeling requirements.
1. 'Safe Foods' May Not be So Safe
Affects: salad dressings, mayonnaise, snack foods, crackers, frozen meals, protein bars, baked goods.
Canada supplies 96 per cent of US canola oil imports. With a 25 per cent tariff on non-USMCA Canadian goods, many formulas have shifted to soybean, palm, or sunflower. Soybean is one of nine FDA-recognized major allergens. For households managing soy allergies, a familiar product is no longer safe.
Expert Advice: If you've reformulated with soybean, palm, or sunflower oil in place of canola, your allergen statement and ingredient list need updating before the next production run. Soy is a major allergen under FALCPA. Shipping a product with an inaccurate allergen declaration is a recall risk, not just a labelling oversight.
2. 'Naturally Sweetened' Isn't Always True
Mexican cane sugar faces 25 per cent tariffs and Chinese speciality syrups up to 35 per cent. Because of this, brands are switching to cheaper alternatives, meaning "no artificial sweeteners" and "naturally sweetened" may no longer match packaging claims.
3. 'Original Flavour' Is Not Original Anymore
Affects: ready meals, marinades, instant noodles, chips and snack seasonings, sauces, and fast food.
China supplies most of the US garlic, ginger, chilli, soy sauce, and MSG behind familiar flavors, now hit with 35% combined tariffs. Brands are sourcing from elsewhere, so the "original flavor" in your instant noodles or sauce often isn't coming from the original source.
Expert Advice: Switching spice or sauce suppliers doesn't just change the flavor profile. It can change country-of-origin declarations, allergen status, and supplier documentation requirements. If you've re-sourced ingredients in your seasoning or sauce line, make sure your spec sheets, COAs, and labels all reflect the new supply chain.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.