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woman reading nutrition label of juice at grocery store
Obradovic/istockphoto

It isn’t easy to stay healthy. Not only is it often pricier and more time-consuming to eat nutritious meals, it can also be exceedingly difficult to determine just what foods are nutritious in the first place. These brands and products don’t make the process any easier by subtly trying to shape consumers’ perceptions with bogus nutritional claims.

Related: 26 Tips for Eating Healthy on a Budget

‘Free Range’ Means Animals Roam Freely

Chickens in a cage
RomeoLu/shutterstock

Most consumers want their meat products to come from animals that were treated humanely, and the common label of “free range” gives the impression that the animals were allowed to roam free in open fields their whole lives. In reality, the phrase only means the animal was allowed access to the outdoors — not necessarily that they ever actually went outside. To tell which meat products are truly free range, one must research the company making the claim.

Related: 50 Cheap and Easy Chicken Recipes

The Food Offers Increased Immunity to Illness

Rice Krispies Cereal
Amazon

In 2011, the Kellogg Co. paid $5 million back to consumers for making the common claim that its Rice and Cocoa Krispies can help a child’s immune system, shortly after a similar settlement concerning its Frosted Mini-Wheats. Kellogg’s was dinged in part for aiming its claims at children, but many products — including other cereals — can still make similarly dubious claims as long as they don’t say they’ll prevent or cure diseases.

Related: 30 Things You Didn’t Know About Your Favorite Childhood Cereals

It’s ‘Heart Healthy’

Quaker Instant Oatmeal Maple & Brown Sugar
Amazon

Claims of foods promoting heart health can also be a little dubious under FDA regulations, particularly for flavored instant oatmeals like Quaker’s, which undermine the fiber content naturally present in oatmeal (though only 3 grams per serving here) with added sugar and sodium.

Related: 15 Free Ways to Protect Your Heart

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‘Organic’ Means Healthy

Kraft Organic Macaroni & Cheese Dinner
Amazon

The term “organic” is more reliable than most labels since any food labeled as such must contain at least 95% organic sources free of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. But organic doesn’t make an unhealthy food suddenly nutritious, which means the organic version of popular foods like Kraft’s Macaroni & Cheese can still contain plenty of fat, calories, and sugars.

Related: Here’s How Much More You’ll Pay for Organic Groceries Across America

‘Whole Grain’ Means More Fiber

Whole Wheat Ritz Crackers
Walmart

Another dubious claim about many snacks and breads is that they’re “made with whole grain,” so buyers may think they’re eating healthier by consuming fiber-rich whole flour rather than enriched flour. As with Cheez-Itz and other products, even the whole wheat Ritz Crackers are made with primarily refined flour and contain only a measly 1 gram of fiber per serving.

‘Good Source of Fiber’ Means a Lot of Fiber

Amazon

Like many other foods, cans of baked beans may be touted as a “good source of fiber,” which means they must contain at least 10% of the recommended daily value, but that doesn’t mean that food is necessarily healthy. Ten percent isn’t really all that much, and it doesn’t counteract the added sugar and sodium present in baked beans.

‘Natural’ Means Straight From Nature

Minute Maid Lemonade
Target

Minute Maid is one of many companies that take advantage of the Food and Drug Administration’s “lack of restrictions on the term natural” to make consumers think its products are healthy. It often boasts that its lemonades are made with “100% natural flavors,” but they still include high-fructose corn syrup, which is made by extracting starch from corn and treating it with multiple enzymes.

‘Made With Real Fruit’ Means No Artificial Sugars

Fruit Gushers Variety Pack
Amazon

When Gushers, a Betty Crocker product, and other “natural” fruit snacks advertise being “made with real fruit,” it doesn’t mean the product doesn’t contain added artificial sugars that compromise whatever health benefits come with the fruits, which, in the case of Gushers, are all from concentrate.

Related: I Banned Sugar From My Diet for a Week and Here’s What Happened

‘Reduced Fat’ Means Healthier

Amazon

Peanut butter contains a lot of fat per serving, but the reduced-fat versions remove a small amount of healthy monounsaturated fat, which promotes weight loss and healthy cholesterol, only to replace it with added sugar and sodium. The reduced-fat version of Jif’s creamy peanut butter takes away 4 grams of fat but adds an extra 1 gram of sugar and 115 milligrams of sodium.

‘Gluten-Free’ Also Means Nutritious

gluten-free bread section
chameleonseye/istockphoto

The FDA allows any product to make claims of being “gluten-free” as long as one serving contains less 20 parts per million of gluten. And while gluten-free foods are useful for those with gluten intolerance or celiac disease, this buzzword doesn’t guarantee nutrition, since many gluten-free foods have less fiber than the standard versions.

Related: 25 Best Gluten-Free Finds at Costco

Zero Calories + Zero Sugar = Healthier

Diet Coke
Amazon

Diet sodas tout zero calories and zero sugar, but that should send up red flags. The main source of sweetness is aspartame, an artificial sweetener linked to weight gain in studies, along with other bad side effects. The sweetness runs the risk of confusing the body into thinking it is eating sugar, which prompts a surge of insulin. Unused, that can cause problems and even lead to or worsen long-term blood sugar issues such as insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.

Related: I Gained 25 Pounds — and I’ve Never Been Happier With How I Look

Protein Bars Are Diet Friendly

Assorted Cliff Bars
Amazon

Protein bars are marketed as a dieter’s best friend, but most are glorified candy bars full of sugar, carbs, and fat. What’s worse, added protein makes their taste and texture funky, so it’s basically like eating a candy bar that doesn’t even taste good.

‘Nonfat’ or ‘Fat Free’ Means Not Fattening

Stonyfield Fat Free Frozen Yogurt
Whole Foods Market

Most people think frozen yogurt is healthier than ice cream because it is lower in fat. But when one ingredient lacks, it is generally replaced with an overabundance of something else — in this case with Stonyfield Fat Free Frozen Yogurt, extra sugar and sodium, leading to a higher carbohydrate load for each serving. Once again, those concerned with losing weight and maintaining a healthy lifestyle are better off with a full-fat dairy version for a more balanced nutritional profile.

Acai Helps With Weight Loss

Acai Berries
TinaFields/istockphoto

The acai berry from South America has a lot of things going for it. It has loads of fiber, antioxidants, and healthy fats. But helping with weight loss isn’t among its attributes, and several companies together have paid millions of dollars in settlements with the FTC for making such claims. Worse, many people find the bitter taste unpalatable without a lot of not-so-healthy sweeteners. 

Cereal With No Artificial Coloring Is Healthier

Trix Cereal
Target

In 2016, General Mills made good on a commitment to cut artificial dyes and preservatives from sugary cereals like Trix, whose new box showed the more muted colors and touts the new lack of artificial ingredients. That might have made parents feel better about letting their children eat Trix, but it didn’t alter the cereal’s high levels of sugar. (Eventually, the company brought back the artificial colors in response to consumer complaints.)

Meet the Writer

Born and raised in southern California, Jeffrey Rindskopf is a freelance writer based in Seattle, focusing on fiction as well as feature articles pertaining to travel, food, film, personal finance, music and local arts.