Place of sale

Will the food product be sold in Australia at one or more of the below?

  • A physical store or market
  • Online
  • A vending machine

In this tool, food means anything that can be consumed by humans. That includes chewing gum.

It does not include pet food.

Read more about country of origin labelling terms.

A label is required for most food sold in retail settings. Retail settings include stores, markets, vending machines and online.

A label isn’t required for food that is sold for immediate consumption. For example, by a:

  • restaurant
  • takeaway
  • food truck
  • canteen
  • caterer.
Will the food product be sold in Australia at one or more of the below?

This field is required.

Will the product be sold in the same premises where it was made and packed?

A label isn’t required for food sold in the same premises it was made and packed. For example, bread sold at the bakery it was made.

Will the product be sold in the same premises where it was made and packed?

This field is required.

Packaging and food type

Will the product be sold in a packet or package?

A packet or package is a container or wrapper in which food for sale is fully or partly encased, covered, enclosed, contained or packaged. For example, a bag, bottle, can, jar, box or wrapper.

Read more about country of origin labelling terms.

Will the product be sold in a packet or package?

This field is required.

Where was the product packed?

Where was the product packed?

This field is required.

What type of food is it?

If you're not sure what type of food your product is, see our definitions of country of origin labelling terms.

What type of food is it?

This field is required.

What type of food is it?

What type of food is it?

This field is required.

Country of origin

Where was the product grown, produced or made?

A food is grown or produced in a country if both:

  • all of its significant ingredients were grown or otherwise obtained in that country
  • all (or virtually all) of its processing occurred in that country.

An ingredient is significant if it is important to the nature or function of the food, even if it only makes up a small proportion of the product.

A food is made in a country if it was last substantially transformed in that country.

Substantial transformation is any process where the end product is fundamentally different from its ingredients.

For example, a cake is fundamentally different from its ingredients such as flour, sugar, eggs and butter. This means the cake has been substantially transformed.

Minor processing that only changes the form or appearance of a food or ingredient is not substantial transformation. Some examples of minor processing are:

  • cleaning
  • shelling
  • slicing
  • freezing
  • canning
  • bottling
  • crumbing
  • seasoning
  • marinating
  • reconstituting
  • roasting
  • packing, packaging or re-packaging.

Read some more examples of substantial transformation.

Where was the product grown, produced or made?

This field is required.

Was the product exported from Australia for processing and then re-imported to Australia?

Was the product exported from Australia for processing and then re-imported to Australia?

This field is required.

What kind of processing was conducted on the product overseas before it was re-imported to Australia?

Minor processing means processing that only changes the form or appearance of a food or ingredient. For example:

  • cleaning
  • shelling
  • slicing
  • freezing
  • canning
  • bottling
  • crumbing
  • seasoning
  • marinating
  • reconstituting
  • roasting
  • packing, packaging or re-packaging.

If non-Australian ingredients are added during minor processing overseas, the food product can’t claim to be grown, produced or made in Australia.

A food has been substantially transformed if the end product is fundamentally different from its ingredients.

For example, a cake is fundamentally different from its ingredients such as flour, sugar, eggs and butter. This means the cake has been substantially transformed.

Read some more examples of substantial transformation.

What kind of processing was conducted on the product overseas before it was re-imported to Australia?

This field is required.

What percentage of the ingredients is Australian?

An ingredient that was exclusively grown or produced in Australia.

Find out how to calculate the percentage of Australian ingredients.

Round the result down to the nearest whole percentage. For example, 99.5% becomes 99%.

What percentage of the ingredients is Australian?

This field is required.

What percentage of the ingredients is Australian?

An ingredient that was exclusively grown or produced in Australia.

Find out how to calculate the percentage of Australian ingredients.

Round the result down to the nearest whole percentage. For example, 99.5% becomes 99%.

What percentage of the ingredients is Australian?

This field is required.

What percentage of the ingredients is Australian?

An ingredient that was exclusively grown or produced in Australia.

Find out how to calculate the percentage of Australian ingredients.

Round the result down to the nearest whole percentage. For example, 99.5% becomes 99%.

What percentage of the ingredients is Australian?

This field is required.

Is the percentage of Australian ingredients in this product always the same?

If the percentage of Australian ingredients varies, your label can show the average percentage of Australian ingredients.

Is the percentage of Australian ingredients in this product always the same?

This field is required.

Your product label

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Guidelines

Place of sale

Will the food product be sold in Australia at one or more of the below? Unanswered
Will the product be sold in the same premises where it was made and packed? Unanswered

Packaging and food type

Will the product be sold in a packet or package? Unanswered
Where was the product packed? Unanswered
What type of food is it? Unanswered
What type of food is it? Unanswered

Country of origin

Where was the product grown, produced or made? Unanswered
Was the product exported from Australia for processing and then re-imported to Australia? Unanswered
What kind of processing was conducted on the product overseas before it was re-imported to Australia? Unanswered
What percentage of the ingredients is Australian? Unanswered
What percentage of the ingredients is Australian? Unanswered
What percentage of the ingredients is Australian? Unanswered
Is the percentage of Australian ingredients in this product always the same? Unanswered

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