LiveWell Magazine

Ultra-processed foods, new state rules, and higher grocery bills: what the RFK Jr. fight could mean for seniors

If you feel like groceries keep getting more expensive, you’re not imagining it. And now, a very public policy fight in Washington and in state capitols is putting food prices, labels, and “ultra-processed” ingredients right in the spotlight.

On one side, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and supporters of the “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) movement are backing a wave of state proposals to restrict certain additives, dyes, and ultra-processed foods. On the other, big food and beverage companies are warning that state-by-state rules will raise costs and push for one national (federal) standard instead.

For older adults, the stakes are practical: will your favorite products change, will labels get louder, and will this end up helping health without making shopping even harder on a fixed income?

What’s happening right now

Major food and beverage players have backed a new coalition called Americans for Ingredient Transparency, arguing that a patchwork of different state rules could increase costs for consumers and complicate compliance for manufacturers and retailers. The coalition has promoted the idea that ingredient and labeling policy should be set federally, not state by state, and it has funded advertising to press that message.

This push is a direct response to a surge of state proposals targeting nutrition and ingredients—ranging from synthetic food dyes to warning labels and restrictions tied to ultra-processed foods.

Why seniors should care

Many seniors are living with (or managing risk for) heart disease, type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, kidney disease, or inflammatory conditions. Diet quality matters for all of these. At the same time, affordability matters too—especially when you’re budgeting month to month.

Polling on food and health suggests two things can be true at once: many Americans are worried about the cost of living and groceries, and many also believe highly processed foods are a major health concern (especially for children, but the worry often extends to family health overall).

So this debate isn’t just politics—it’s about what ends up in your cart, what you can afford, and how easy it is to make healthier choices without feeling punished at checkout.

The state laws driving the fight

California: In October 2025, California announced a first-in-the-nation plan to phase out certain ultra-processed foods from school meals over time, with the state tasked with defining what counts as “ultra-processed foods of concern.”

Texas: Texas passed a law requiring warning labels for foods containing any of 44 listed additives, with the labeling requirement tied to a future effective date. The policy has drawn legal challenges from industry groups, with arguments that the warnings could be misleading and that federal law should control labeling standards.

Other states have also advanced bills focused on dyes, additives, and nutrition rules, contributing to the “50 different rulebooks” concern that industry groups keep highlighting.

Federal standard vs. state-by-state: the real disagreement

Food companies generally prefer one federal standard because it’s simpler: one label design, one compliance playbook, one reformulation strategy. That’s the core argument behind their “preemption” push (the idea that federal rules should override state rules in this area).

MAHA-aligned advocates and some consumer groups argue the opposite: states often move faster than Washington, and state pressure can force changes that would otherwise get delayed or watered down at the federal level.

In other words, the dispute isn’t only “health vs. business.” It’s also about where decisions get made—and how quickly.

What the science says about ultra-processed foods

“Ultra-processed” typically refers to industrial formulations made with ingredients you wouldn’t use in a home kitchen—often designed to be hyper-palatable, convenient, and shelf-stable. Researchers continue debating the cleanest definition, but the broader health concern is consistent: diets high in ultra-processed foods are associated with higher risks of obesity, metabolic disease, and cardiovascular problems.

Large public health discussions—including recent coverage of a The Lancet series—have highlighted the growing concern that ultra-processed foods are a major population-level health issue.

For seniors, one key nuance matters: “processed” isn’t automatically bad. Frozen vegetables, canned beans, plain yogurt, and whole-grain breads can be processed and still nutritious. The bigger issue is ultra-processed products that are heavy on added sugars, refined starches, sodium, and certain additives—while being low in fiber and protein.

Will these rules actually raise your grocery bill?

Industry groups argue that complying with different state requirements can raise costs through reformulation, labeling changes, distribution complexity, and legal risk—costs that can trickle down to shoppers.

Health advocates counter that clearer labeling and stronger standards can push companies to improve recipes, and that better nutrition can reduce long-term health costs (even if the short-term transition has friction).

The honest answer is: some products may change, and some costs may move around. But price effects won’t be uniform. Store brands, regional supply chains, and how aggressively companies reformulate will all matter.

Practical ways to eat “less ultra-processed” without spending more

You don’t need a perfect diet to benefit. For many older adults, the goal is a steady, realistic pattern that protects heart health, blood sugar, and muscle mass.

What to watch next

Going into 2026, expect three developments to keep showing up in headlines:

If you’re a senior (or shopping for one), the most useful approach is to ignore the noise and focus on what you can control: build a “default” grocery list that’s affordable, protein-forward, and lower in ultra-processed snacks and drinks.

Quick checklist for your next grocery trip

Note: this article is for education and does not replace medical advice. If you have diabetes, kidney disease, heart failure, or take blood thinners/diuretics, ask your clinician for nutrition guidance tailored to your medications and labs.

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