FSANZ PEAL Allergen Labelling: How to Read an Australian Food Label in 30 Seconds
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FSANZ PEAL Allergen Labelling: How to Read an Australian Food Label in 30 Seconds

May 13, 2026 Β· 10 min read

Y

Yong Jae Lee

May 13, 2026 Β· 10 min read

Written and reviewed by Yong Jae Lee Β· Content follows Australian Dietary Guidelines

Allergy Friendly

Since February 2024, all packaged food in Australia must declare allergens in Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL) format. This guide shows you what to look for, where to find it, and how to read 'contains' vs 'may contain' without standing in the supermarket aisle for 20 minutes.

The first month after my kid's nut allergy diagnosis, I spent more time in the Woolworths packaged-snack aisle than I did at home.

Then in February 2024, Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL) became mandatory across Australia and New Zealand. The whole game changed. Allergens now appear in a specific, standardised place on the label, in plain English, in bold, and the differences between "contains" and "may contain" are defined by regulation.


What PEAL Is

Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL) is a 2021 amendment to FSANZ Standard 1.2.3, mandatory for all packaged food sold in Australia from 25 February 2024.

Headline changes:

1. Declared allergens use the standardised plain-English name.

2. The declaration appears in a Summary Statement directly under the ingredient list, on the same panel, in bold.

3. "Contains" is regulated β€” intentional ingredient.

4. "May contain" statements are *voluntary* but follow industry best-practice.

5. Some allergens were renamed for clarity.


Mandatory Declared Allergens

Allergen groupPlain English term
Peanut"peanut"
Tree nutseach named individually: "almond", "cashew", "hazelnut", "pecan", "pistachio", "macadamia", "walnut", "Brazil nut", "pine nut"
Milk"milk"
Egg"egg"
Fish"fish"
Crustacean"crustacean" with type (prawn, crab)
Mollusc"mollusc" with type
Wheat"wheat"
Gluten-containing cereals"wheat", "rye", "barley", "oats", "spelt"
Soybean"soybean"
Sesame"sesame"
Lupin"lupin"
Sulphites"sulphites" when β‰₯10 mg/kg

Tree nuts are now individually named. Tree-nut allergies are often allergen-specific β€” a child allergic to cashew may tolerate almond.


Where to Look

1. In the ingredient list β€” bold

> Ingredients: wheat flour, sugar, sunflower oil, milk solids, salt, raising agents...

2. In the Summary Statement directly below

> Ingredients: wheat flour, sugar, sunflower oil, milk solids, salt, raising agents, may contain traces of peanut and tree nuts.

>

> Contains: wheat, milk.

The Summary Statement is the 30-second read.


"Contains" vs "May Contain"

"Contains [allergen]" β€” regulated, intentional

The allergen is deliberately in the product. If your child is allergic, unsafe.

"May contain [allergen]" β€” voluntary, cross-contamination risk

The allergen is not an ingredient, but the product is made in a facility where the allergen is also handled. Voluntary statement following VITAL (Voluntary Incidental Trace Allergen Labelling) guidance.

  • Mild allergies/intolerances: usually a manageable risk
  • Anaphylactic allergies: treat as contains
  • ASCIA and Allergy & Anaphylaxis Australia both recommend anaphylactic patients avoid "may contain" products entirely. Make this decision *with your child's clinical immunology/allergy specialist*.


    30-Second Scan Routine

    1. Find the Summary Statement (3s) β€” directly below ingredient list

    2. Scan for your child's allergens (5s) β€” listed in "Contains:"?

    3. Check "may contain" (5s) β€” apply risk tolerance

    4. Sanity-check ingredient list (10s) β€” skim for bold

    5. Decision (7s) β€” trolley or shelf


    Hidden Allergens

    Wheat hidden as

  • Hydrolysed wheat protein, wheat starch, triticale
  • Milk hidden as

  • Whey, whey powder, casein, caseinates
  • Milk solids, milk solids non-fat
  • Ghee, butter
  • Egg hidden as

  • Albumen, egg white powder, globulin
  • Lysozyme (preservative in some cheeses, wines)
  • Soybean hidden as

  • Soy lecithin (E322) β€” common in chocolate, biscuits
  • Soya bean oil
  • TVP, edamame, miso, tempeh, tofu
  • PEAL: even soy lecithin must trigger "Contains: soybean" if derived from soy.


    What PEAL Did Not Change

    1. Restaurants and unpackaged food

    Only packaged food at retail is subject. Restaurants, school canteens, bakeries β€” not.

    2. Imported products

    Imported packaged food at Australian retail must comply with PEAL.

    3. Allergen-free certification

    "Made in a nut-free facility" claims on the front β€” not regulated by PEAL. Follow ACCC consumer protection rules.


    Australian Lunchbox Decisions

    For nut-free schools

    Scan for "peanut" and individually-named tree nuts. Check "may contain" β€” most Australian schools accept items with cross-contamination warnings, but check your school's policy.

    For dairy-free children

    Watch for "milk". Many "vegetable-based" spreads still contain milk solids β€” PEAL bold formatting catches them.

    For gluten-free (coeliac)

    "Contains: wheat, rye, barley, oats" should all be absent. Coeliac Australia Endorsement Logo is a stronger claim.


    References

  • Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ): *Standard 1.2.3* β€” foodstandards.gov.au
  • FSANZ: *Plain English Allergen Labelling (PEAL)* β€” mandatory 25 February 2024
  • VITAL Programme (Allergen Bureau)
  • Allergy & Anaphylaxis Australia (A&AA) β€” allergyfacts.org.au
  • ASCIA β€” allergy.org.au
  • Coeliac Australia β€” endorsement logo and gluten-free standards
  • Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC)
  • Informational only β€” not personalised medical/allergy advice. For diagnosed allergies and anaphylaxis management, always work with your child's clinical immunology/allergy specialist.


    Plan Allergy-Safe Lunches

    The Aussie Lunchbox Planner lets you tick allergens to avoid and filters the menu library accordingly.

    Try the planner β†’

    References & Sources

    1. foodstandards.gov.au
    2. allergyfacts.org.au
    3. allergy.org.au

    About this article

    This article was written and reviewed by Yong Jae Lee, a Senior Product Designer based in Australia. Aussie Lunchbox is a solo project β€” every article is researched, tested at home with my own kids, and aligned with Australian Dietary Guidelines. If you spot an error or have a suggestion, please contact us.

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