Food Safety

Calorie Labelling (Out of Home Sector) (England) Regulations 2022

Calorie display requirements for large food businesses

Effective: 6 April 2022
Enforcement Body
Local Authority Trading Standards
Applies To
Food businesses with 250 or more employeesLarge restaurant and cafe chainsLarge takeaway chainsLarge hotel chains
Effective Date
6 April 2022
Last Amended
Not amended

The Calorie Labelling (Out of Home Sector) (England) Regulations 2022 came into force on 6 April 2022. They require food businesses in England with 250 or more employees to display calorie information for food and non-alcoholic drinks at the point of choice. This applies to food prepared for immediate consumption at restaurants, cafes, takeaways, and similar outlets, as well as food delivered to customers. The regulations do not currently apply to businesses with fewer than 250 employees, although the government encourages smaller businesses to provide calorie information voluntarily. Calorie information must be displayed on physical menus, online menus, food delivery platforms, and food labels. The aim is to help consumers make more informed choices about the food they eat.

Key Requirements

1

Display calories at the point of choice

Calorie information in kilocalories (kcal) must be displayed for each food item at the point where the customer chooses their food. This includes menus, menu boards, online ordering, and delivery platforms.

2

Applies to businesses with 250+ employees

Only businesses with 250 or more employees in England are currently required to comply. Employee count includes all employees across the entire business, not just those at a single location.

3

Statement about daily calorie intake

A statement that adults need around 2,000 kcal per day must be displayed alongside the calorie information.

4

Applies to food and non-alcoholic drinks

Calorie labelling is required for both food and non-alcoholic drinks that are prepared for immediate consumption. Alcoholic drinks are currently exempt.

What Your Business Must Do

Calculate calories for every menu item

Work out the calorie content per portion for every food and non-alcoholic drink item on your menu. Keep calculation records.

Display on menus and menu boards

Add calorie counts next to each item on physical menus, digital menu boards, and any other point-of-choice displays.

Update online and delivery platforms

Ensure calorie information appears on your website menu, app, and on third-party delivery platforms.

Include the reference intake statement

Display the statement "Adults need around 2,000 kcal a day" prominently alongside your menu calorie information.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Failure to display calorie information

Trading Standards can issue improvement notices. Persistent non-compliance can result in prosecution with an unlimited fine.

Displaying inaccurate calorie information

May constitute a misleading food description. Prosecution under consumer protection legislation with an unlimited fine.

Failure to include reference intake statement

Improvement notice from Trading Standards, with potential prosecution for persistent non-compliance.

How Paddl Helps

Menu and allergen management

Paddls menu management tools help you maintain accurate records of menu items, which can be used alongside calorie calculations.

Document storage for nutritional data

Store supplier nutritional specifications and calorie calculation records in Paddls document management system.

Staff training on nutritional requirements

Use Paddls knowledge hub to share calorie labelling procedures and train staff on how to respond to customer queries.

Keep exploring

Related resources

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this apply to my small restaurant?

If your business has fewer than 250 employees, these regulations do not currently apply to you. However, the government encourages voluntary provision of calorie information and may extend the requirement to smaller businesses in the future.

Do I need to display calories for alcoholic drinks?

No, alcoholic drinks are currently exempt from the calorie labelling requirements. However, non-alcoholic cocktails, soft drinks, and other non-alcoholic beverages are covered.

How accurate do calorie counts need to be?

Calorie information should be as accurate as reasonably possible. There is an accepted tolerance of plus or minus 20 per cent. You should use reliable methods such as nutritional analysis or calculation from ingredient data.

Stay compliant with Calorie Labelling 2022

Paddl makes regulatory compliance simple. Digital records, automated reminders, and audit-ready documentation — all in one platform built for UK hospitality.