Mexico – New Guidelines for Advertising Prepackaged Foods in Mexico

The Ministry of Health has presented a draft of the “Guidelines Establishing the Requirements and Procedures to be Observed by Advertising Officials, Advertisers, Advertising Agencies, and Media Outlets to Obtain Permission to Advertise Prepackaged Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages on Broadcast and Non-Broadcast Television, Movie Theaters, the Internet, and Other Digital Platforms.”

Purpose: To establish the requirements and procedures to be observed by advertising officials, advertisers, advertising agencies, and media outlets to obtain permission to advertise prepackaged food and non-alcoholic beverages on broadcast and non-broadcast television, movie theaters, the Internet, and other digital platforms, in accordance with the provisions of Articles 22 Bis, 24 Bis, and 79, Section X of the Regulations of the General Health Law on Advertising, and in compliance with the principle of the best interests of children established in Article 4 of the Political Constitution of the United Mexican States.
The requirements and procedures established in these Guidelines are mandatory.

Relevant aspects:

  • Terms and definitions (Children’s characters, cartoons, celebrities, animations)
  • Establishes the permitted media for advertising prepackaged foods and non-alcoholic beverages.
  • Prohibits the inclusion of children’s characters, animations, cartoons, celebrities, athletes, or mascots, interactive elements, such as visual-spatial games or digital downloads, aimed at children that incite, promote, or encourage the consumption, purchase, or selection of such products.
  • Comparisons with foods and non-alcoholic beverages of natural origin must be included in the upper right corner of the advertising, in a clear, visible, and legible manner, the elements of the front-of-package labeling system for the advertised product(s).
  • Establishes the requirements and procedure for evaluation and ruling.

Brazil – ANVISA amends the regulations on maximum tolerated limits for contaminants in food

The National Health Surveillance Agency (ANVISA in Portuguese) has published Normative Instruction IN No. 351/2025 amending Normative Instruction – IN No. 160/2022, which establishes the maximum tolerated limits (MRLs) for contaminants in food.

Paraguay – New technical regulation project that sets forth requirements for the composition and labeling of gluten-free packaged foods

The National Directorate of Sanitary Surveillance (DINAVISA) has released a draft of the technical regulation that outlines the composition and labeling requirements for gluten-free packaged foods sold within the national territory, along with a guide for good manufacturing and storage practices.

The aim of this regulation is to establish the criteria that must be met by packaged foods, whether domestically produced or imported, that are marketed as “gluten-free,” “free of gluten,” “exempt from gluten,” or “does not contain gluten.” Additionally, it includes control measures designed to ensure that consumers receive accurate, clear, and truthful information regarding the absence of gluten in the composition of these packaged foods.

Ecuador – New technical standards projects regarding food are currently open for public consultation

The Ecuadorian Institute for Standardization (INEN in Spanish) has made several amendments to existing standards and introduced new draft standards related to food available for public consultation.

  • Green or raw coffee.
  • Dairy beverages.
  • Sardines and similar or analogous canned products.
  • Canned tuna and bonito.
  • Standards for jams, jellies, and preserves.
  • Animal and vegetable fats and oils.
  • Plant-based protein products.
  • Vegetable products.
  • Cereals and their derivatives.

Colombia – The Ministry of Health has released for public consultation the health requirements that must be met by treated bottled drinking water and ice intended for human consumption

The Ministry of Health and Social Protection has released a draft resolution concerning the sanitary requirements for treated bottled drinking water and ice intended for human consumption within the national territory. The purpose of this resolution is to establish the sanitary standards that must be met by treated bottled drinking water and ice produced, processed, packaged, stored, transported, imported, distributed, and sold in the country, ensuring their safety to protect human health and prevent potential harm.