I understand that alcoholic beverages are regulated by the ATF and not the FDA, which is why nutrition fact labels aren’t legally required on alcoholic beverages, but why does this carry over to NA beer?

It’s basically just beer-flavored soda. It has less than the required alcohol content (<0.5%) to be legally classified as an alcoholic beverage. Is it not regulated by the FDA?

The only clue I have is that Nutrition Fact labels appear on cans of NA beer made by companies that only produce NA beer (e.g. Athletic / Partake), but not NA beers produced by existing full-alcohol breweries (e.g. Heineken / Guinness). Is there some sort of “we also produce alcoholic beverages” loophole to avoid FDA regulation?

If so, would it be possible for Coca-Cola, who distributes alcoholic beverages (e.g. Topo Chico hard seltzer / Jack & Coke premixed cocktails), to get around the requirement for their regular sodas?

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    -8
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    We don’t care about health and wellbeing. We push drugs to keep the rich in place and the down on their luck slaves. We are built on destroying other lives for the power it gives us over them. You become a strong nation by controlling your people.

    • @QuarterSwede
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      137 months ago

      That’s nice and all but this doesn’t answer the actual question.

    • mommykink
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      English
      77 months ago

      What nation ever pushed people down with N/A beer?