For Individuals, the thought of watching stay tv with out the fixed barrage of commercials for prescription drugs and junk meals may appear international. That’s now the norm within the United Kingdom.
Beginning on Monday, a ban has gone into impact that prohibits advertising meals excessive in fats, salt, and sugar on TV earlier than 9 p.m. and at any time on-line. It’s an try by the UK authorities to sort out childhood weight problems. In 2022, 15% of youngsters between the ages of two and 15 had been overweight, in accordance with figures from the Nationwide Well being Service.
What constitutes a banned product is a bit complicated to decipher, as the principles cowl 13 wide-ranging classes of food. Some merchandise included within the promoting ban are apparent—soda, sweet, potato chips, and desserts, for instance—whereas others could also be a bit shocking, like breakfast cereals, numerous kinds of yogurts, and ready-made meals like stuffed ravioli.
‘WELL OVERDUE’
The UK has lengthy banned TV commercials for prescribed drugs, and this newest promoting ban dates again to 2020, in the course of the period of former Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Nevertheless, it didn’t obtain a lot traction underneath his successor.
In 2023, now-Prime Minister Keir Starmer campaigned on reforming the Nationwide Well being Service and promised to place a ban into impact on promoting junk meals if elected, saying it was “properly overdue.”
That sentiment was echoed extra just lately by Katherine Brown, a professor of conduct change in well being on the College of Hertfordshire, who informed the BBC on Monday that the ban was “lengthy overdue and a transfer in the suitable course.”
COMPLYING WITH BAN
However meals firms are already discovering inventive methods to adjust to the ban, whereas nonetheless promoting.
These firms can promote more healthy variations of banned merchandise or they’ll proceed to promote on-line and on tv, as long as they don’t present an “identifiable” product. This latter concession was one the UK authorities made following threats of authorized motion by the meals business in opposition to the blanket ban.
“Laws permits firms to change from product promoting to model promoting, which is more likely to considerably weaken [the] affect [of the new rules],” Anna Taylor, government director of The Meals Basis, a nonprofit targeted on the UK meals system, informed The Guardian.
What’s extra, firms are switching up how they promote, opting as an alternative for out of doors promoting that embrace billboards and on public transportation. Out of doors promoting is the second-largest supply of publicity to meals promoting for kids, in accordance with the 2025 annual report from The Meals Basis, and meals firms elevated their promoting spend by 28% between 2021 and 2024 in anticipation of the TV and on-line ban.
MORE TO BE DONE
Whereas the UK authorities has estimated that the promoting ban may forestall about 20,000 circumstances of childhood weight problems, there’s extra work to be completed, in accordance with advocates.
Brown referred to as on the federal government to make nutritious choices “extra inexpensive, accessible and interesting,” whereas Taylor stated the ban marked a milestone on a much bigger journey to guard youngsters.
“We are able to’t cease right here, we should stay targeted on the aim: banning all types of junk meals promoting to youngsters,” Taylor informed The Guardian.

