Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - DISTRIBUTION AND MARKETING OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - NATIONAL BIOENGINEERED FOOD DISCLOSURE STANDARD › § 1639b
The Secretary must create a single, national rule for labeling foods that are bioengineered or may be bioengineered within 2 years after July 29, 2016. Foods can only be labeled as bioengineered under the Secretary’s rules. The Secretary will set the amount of a bioengineered substance that counts, make a process to ask about other cases, and say that an animal product is not “bioengineered” just because the animal ate bioengineered feed. Labels can be text, a symbol, or an electronic/digital link (not just a plain website address). Small packages and very small or small manufacturers get easier or delayed options. Foods sold in restaurants and very small manufacturers are excluded. A bioengineered food that passed federal pre-market review is not treated as safer or less safe just because it is bioengineered. By 1 year after July 29, 2016, the Secretary must study tech problems that could stop people from getting label info by phone or digital link. The study must look at things like wireless access, landlines, rural and small stores, and costs for scanners. If shoppers can’t get the info electronically, the Secretary must add other ways to provide it. The rules must require on-package wording telling shoppers to scan or call for more food information, make the link go to the first product info page (no ads), protect personal data, include a phone option, and make links easy to scan. States may not set different interstate labeling rules. People who knowingly fail to disclose can be punished. Covered businesses must keep industry‑usual records and allow audits, but the Secretary cannot recall food over its bioengineered label.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 1639b
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73