Check your claims against the EU Register. Before someone else does.
Under Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006, only authorized health claims may appear on supplements sold in the EU — exact wording included. We're building a checker on the same pipeline that verifies 200k+ formulations: paste your copy, see every claim flagged, get the nearest permitted wording.
Free to join. Compliance modules in early access.
Enforcement is real, and marketplaces are enforcing it.
- 43.8% of protein supplements analyzed on Amazon and Google Shopping carried health claims not authorized under Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006.¹ That is not a niche problem — it is the default state of supplement marketing.
- Enforcement is national: the same claim can trigger a delisting in Germany, a warning letter in France, and pass unnoticed in another market. Brands discover the rules at the worst possible moment — after an Amazon listing rejection, a marketplace notice, or a competitor complaint.
- The EU Register — the database of authorized and rejected claims under Regulation 1924/2006 — is public but hard to search by copy. You need to match your words to exact authorized wording. We are building the tooling to make that search practical.
How the claims checker works.
Paste your copy
Drop in label text, ad copy, or a product page URL. The checker reads everything — not just the obvious claim sentences.
Claims extracted and classified
Every health and nutrition claim is identified and mapped to a claim type — health claim, nutrition claim, reduction-of-disease-risk claim — under the Regulation 1924/2006 framework.
Matched against the EU Register
Each claim is checked against the EU Register of nutrition and health claims. Verdict: authorized, on-hold (botanical claims list), or prohibited. Every verdict links to the register entry.
Claim your listings today
While the checker is in development, you can claim your brand listings, correct normalized data, and get the verified badge — live today.
Frequently asked questions
Can I say 'boosts immunity' on a supplement in the EU?
No. 'Boosts immunity' is not an authorized claim under Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006. The nearest authorized claim for immune function is specific to certain vitamins (e.g., vitamin C, vitamin D, zinc) and must be worded exactly as listed in the EU Register of nutrition and health claims. Using unauthorized wording — even if the underlying effect is real — is non-compliant regardless of the ingredient.
What is the EU Register of nutrition and health claims?
The EU Register of nutrition and health claims is the official database maintained under Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006. It lists every claim that has been evaluated by EFSA (the European Food Safety Authority): authorized claims appear with exact permitted wording, rejected claims are explicitly prohibited, and botanical claims remain on a separate on-hold list pending evaluation. Only claims on the authorized list may appear on supplements sold in the EU.
Are botanical health claims allowed in the EU?
Botanical health claims occupy a legally ambiguous position. They are not in the main authorized list and not yet definitively rejected — they sit on a separate 'on-hold' list that has been there since around 2010. Member states apply different transitional rules, so a botanical claim may be tolerated in some markets and challenged in others. This is an area where national legal advice is essential. Our checker will surface on-hold status explicitly so you can make an informed decision.
What is the difference between a health claim and a nutrition claim?
A nutrition claim states that a food has particular beneficial nutritional properties (e.g., 'high in vitamin C', 'low fat'). A health claim states that a relationship exists between a food or constituent and health (e.g., 'vitamin C contributes to normal immune system function'). Both are regulated under Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006, but they follow different authorization conditions. Reduction-of-disease-risk claims are a distinct sub-category with additional requirements.
Does the EU Register apply to my website and advertising, or just the product label?
It applies to all commercial communications — your product label, website product pages, social media posts, and paid advertising. Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006 covers any commercial message to consumers about a food or supplement, not just physical packaging. Platform-level enforcement by Meta, Google, and Amazon increasingly mirrors EU requirements, which is why ad rejections often follow the same logic as regulatory non-compliance.
Check your claims against the EU Register. Before someone else does.
Free to join. Compliance modules in early access.
¹ Rodríguez-Hernández et al., 2025 — analysis of 209 health claims on protein supplements sold via Amazon and Google Shopping.