The Swiss voice in the world since 1935

Nestlé scraps Nutri-Score food label in Switzerland

Nestlé puts an end to the Nutri-Score for products sold in Switzerland
Nestlé puts an end to the Nutri-Score for products sold in Switzerland Keystone-SDA

Nestlé plans to phase out its Nutri-Score nutrition labelling system on products sold in Switzerland. The food giant claims it is almost the last company in the country to use it.

+Get the most important news from Switzerland in your inbox

“Nestlé has decided to gradually withdraw the Nutri-Score from its local brands Cailler, Thomy, Leisi, Incarom, Chokito, Henniez, Nestea and Romanette,” it says. This is a decision that “applies only to these brands sold exclusively on the Swiss market”, according to an article on the Vevey-based food giant’s website, which was reported by Blick. A Nestlé Switzerland spokesperson confirmed to the AWP news agency that the publication was posted online on Friday.

The company said that “the withdrawal of the Nutri-Score from Nestlé’s local brands in Switzerland will be carried out gradually to avoid wasting packaging. It will be carried out brand by brand, from mid-2025 until the end of 2026”.

More

On the other hand, other Nestlé brands bearing one of the five letters from A to E and one of the colours ranging from green – the healthiest – to red – the least healthy – which “are sold in several markets, including Switzerland, will continue to display the label”.

Explaining its decision, Nestlé said: “This nutritional labelling has not had the hoped-for roll-out here in Switzerland: a number of companies never took part, major players pulled out, political support waned, and the result is that today we are practically the only ones still carrying the Nutri-Score in the product categories in which we are present”.

Migros and Emmi withdraw

In May 2024, Migros announced that it was gradually withdrawing the labelling from its products. For the Swiss supermarket chain, the Nutri-Score was still “too little known”, while incorporating it into packaging “requires a lot of effort”. Shortly afterwards, Lucerne-based milk processor Emmi also dropped the scheme from its Caffè Latte range.

More

Nestlé also deplores “the drop in political support in our country” for this system, which is supposed to enable consumers to “compare the nutritional value of products within the same category”, in order to “help them make more informed choices”.

The company will be adding QR codes containing “even more detailed information” to its packaging. At the same time, it “remains committed to supporting and implementing the Nutri-Score for eligible products across Europe”, where it is affixed to “thousands of products”, it said.

Translated from French by DeepL/sb

How we work

We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools such as DeepL to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication. Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

Did you find this explanation helpful? Please fill out the short survey below to help us understand your needs.

External Content

Popular Stories

Most Discussed

News

Call for caution due to risk of forest fires

More

Risk of forest fires in Geneva triggers warning

This content was published on Geneva, which is facing several days of very hot weather, has raised its level of vigilance with regard to the risk of forest fires and is issuing an appeal for caution.

Read more: Risk of forest fires in Geneva triggers warning
Tourists spent more last year

More

Tourist spending in Switzerland grew in 2024

This content was published on Visitors to Switzerland spent CHF19.6 billion ($23.9 billion) last year, a 2.2% rise compared to the previous year, the Federal Statistical Office (FSO) said on Monday.

Read more: Tourist spending in Switzerland grew in 2024
Swiss population remains in a spending mood despite crises

More

Swiss consumer sentiment remains positive despite crises

This content was published on Despite the current tense economic situation, Swiss consumer sentiment remains positive. The Swiss spent more money in May than the previous year, particularly on restaurant visits and leisure activities, as shown by the latest figures released by PostFinance.

Read more: Swiss consumer sentiment remains positive despite crises
Bear kills four sheep near Scuol GR

More

Bear kills sheep in southeastern Switzerland

This content was published on A bear killed four sheep in the Lower Engadine region near Scuol, canton Graubünden, last week. This was the first bear attack on local livestock in four years.

Read more: Bear kills sheep in southeastern Switzerland
Economists lower their expectations for economic growth in 2026

More

Swiss economists lower growth forecast for 2026

This content was published on Experts believe that economic development in Switzerland will be weaker in 2026 than the forecasts made three months ago. They have also lowered their predictions for the current year.

Read more: Swiss economists lower growth forecast for 2026
Fewer and fewer people are attending religious events

More

Survey: more Swiss reject organised religion

This content was published on Fewer people in Switzerland have a religious affiliation and the proportion who practice their religion regularly is steadily declining, a survey finds.

Read more: Survey: more Swiss reject organised religion
Trees cool cities better than previously assumed

More

Study: trees have major cooling effect even in extreme heat

This content was published on Plane trees in cities have an important cooling effect even in extreme heat, according to a new study by the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL). 

Read more: Study: trees have major cooling effect even in extreme heat
The panorama of the Battle of Murten is digitised

More

EPFL launches digitised version of Battle of Murten panorama

This content was published on To mark the anniversary of the Battle of Murten on 22 June 1476, the Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) has launched a website that offers the public an immersive experience of the huge panorama painting of the historic battle. 

Read more: EPFL launches digitised version of Battle of Murten panorama

In compliance with the JTI standards

More: SWI swissinfo.ch certified by the Journalism Trust Initiative

You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!

If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR