Often yes. Compound ingredients usually need their component ingredients declared unless a specific exemption applies. For UK, check the final wording against Retained EU Law & UK FIC and any product-category rules before printing.
This is a high-intent label question because it affects real packaging decisions: ingredient wording, allergen declarations, claims, warnings, or export relabeling. In United Kingdom, the answer depends on the exact product formula, label wording, nutrition values, intended category, and where the product will be sold.
Paste your label text or upload the artwork and ask LabelGuard to check this exact issue. The scan compares "compound ingredient sub-ingredients" against UK food and supplement labeling rules, then flags contradictory wording, missing declarations, weak claim support, and market-specific changes before you print.
Start Your Compliance CheckOften yes. Compound ingredients usually need their component ingredients declared unless a specific exemption applies. For UK, check the final wording against Retained EU Law & UK FIC and any product-category rules before printing.
Check the formula, supplier specs, nutrition data, allergen sources, product category, mandatory warnings, and whether the same wording is allowed under Retained EU Law & UK FIC.
Not safely without review. The same ingredient, claim, or warning can be acceptable in one market and non-compliant or incomplete in another.
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.
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