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Australia’s federal and state food ministers have moved to require the front-of-pack Health Star Rating (HSR) on all packaged food, after officials concluded the voluntary scheme failed to reach its uptake target.
Governments indicated on Feb. 10–11, 2026, that they will ask the food regulator to develop a formal proposal for mandatory application, with a final decision expected in about 12 months.
The voluntary target — 70% of packaged products labelled by November 2025 — was not met, with take-up around 37% according to Assistant Health Minister Rebecca White.
Public health experts want the HSR algorithm revised to account for ultra-processed foods and close perceived loopholes that allow reformulated products to achieve higher star ratings despite containing additives.
The National Health and Medical Research Council is reviewing evidence on ultra-processed foods.
Industry groups argue processing improves safety, affordability and access, and say nutrient-based scoring already considers positives and negatives.
If adopted, mandatory HSRs would be the first major update to national labelling guidance in 13 years and would change how products are marketed and presented on supermarket shelves nationwide.
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International Business Times AU RSS FeedFood Ministers Push for Mandatory Nutrition Labels on All Packaged Food Products
ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)Major change could be coming to supermarket shelves
















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