LabelGuard
Question Guide

Can I use titanium dioxide on a EU food label?

It depends on the market. Titanium dioxide is banned for food use in some jurisdictions and still permitted with declaration in others. For EU, check the final wording against FIC Regulation 1169/2011 and any product-category rules before printing.

Direct Answer Context

This is a high-intent label question because it affects real packaging decisions: ingredient wording, allergen declarations, claims, warnings, or export relabeling. In European Union, the answer depends on the exact product formula, label wording, nutrition values, intended category, and where the product will be sold.

Common Edge Cases
  • Edge case to check: Food versus supplement or medicine classification
  • Edge case to check: Legacy artwork after reformulation
  • Edge case to check: White coatings and sprinkles supplied as compound ingredients
Common Violations
  • Using "titanium dioxide" wording copied from another market without checking EU rules
  • Relying on front-of-pack marketing copy while the ingredient list, nutrition panel, or warnings say something different
  • Missing supplier documentation, test data, or formula evidence needed to support the label wording
  • Updating the recipe without updating the claim, allergen declaration, or mandatory warning
Examples: Compliant vs Non-Compliant

Compliant Examples

A market-specific formulation that removes titanium dioxide where banned, or declares it correctly where permitted.

Non-Compliant Examples

A single global ingredient list containing titanium dioxide used for all markets without checking local authorization.
How LabelGuard Checks This

Paste your label text or upload the artwork and ask LabelGuard to check this exact issue. The scan compares "titanium dioxide" against EU food and supplement labeling rules, then flags contradictory wording, missing declarations, weak claim support, and market-specific changes before you print.

Start Your Compliance Check
Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use titanium dioxide on a EU food label?

It depends on the market. Titanium dioxide is banned for food use in some jurisdictions and still permitted with declaration in others. For EU, check the final wording against FIC Regulation 1169/2011 and any product-category rules before printing.

What should I check before using this wording in EU?

Check the formula, supplier specs, nutrition data, allergen sources, product category, mandatory warnings, and whether the same wording is allowed under FIC Regulation 1169/2011.

Can I reuse the same label in multiple countries?

Not safely without review. The same ingredient, claim, or warning can be acceptable in one market and non-compliant or incomplete in another.

Regulation Sources

Last updated: 2026-04-24

Disclaimer: This information is for guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult official regulations and seek professional legal advice for specific compliance questions.

Ensure EU Compliance

Get your label checked against all EU regulations in seconds.

  • AI-powered compliance check
  • 200+ regulatory checks
  • Detailed violation reports
  • Fix suggestions included
Start Compliance Check

Starting at $29 per label check

EU Compliance Hub

Explore all EU labeling requirements in one place.

View EU Hub

Ready to Ensure Full EU Compliance?

LabelGuard checks your labels against all FIC Regulation 1169/2011 requirements in seconds. Catch violations before they cost you.

Trusted by food manufacturers, supplement brands, and compliance teams worldwide