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Biden-Harris Administration Announces New School Meal Standards to Strengthen Child Nutrition

Release No.
USDA No. 0069.24
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FNS Press Team
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Gradual implementation of nutrition updates, to include less sugar, set to begin in Fall 2025

WASHINGTON, April 24, 2024 – Today, U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced major steps to promote the health of America’s children through school meals. Nutrition standards for school meals will be gradually updated to include less sugar and flexibility with menu planning between Fall 2025 and Fall 2027. The Department arrived at these changes after listening closely to public feedback and considering the latest science-based recommendations from the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. The new rule continues the work of the Biden-Harris Administration to address both food and nutrition security.

K-12 schools serve nutritious breakfasts and lunches to nearly 30 million children every school day. These meals are the main source of nutrition for more than half of these children and help improve child health.

“We all share the goal of helping children reach their full potential,” said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. “Like teachers, classrooms, books, and computers, nutritious school meals are an essential part of the school environment, and when we raise the bar for school meals, it empowers our kids to achieve greater success inside and outside of the classroom. Expanding on this major milestone, the Biden-Harris Administration will continue to partner with schools, districts, states and industry to build on the extraordinary progress made to strengthen school meals.”

The final rule previewed today, is a significant step toward advancing the Administration’s national strategy to end hunger and reduce diet-related disease by 2030 set forth at the historic White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health in September 2022.

“The new standards build on the great progress that school meals have made already and address remaining challenges - including reducing sugar in school breakfasts. These updates also make it easier for schools to access locally sourced products, benefiting both schools and the local economy,” said USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service Administrator Cindy Long.

Key updates to the nutrition standards to support healthy kids include:

Added Sugars

  • For the first time, added sugars will be limited in school meals nationwide, with small changes happening by Fall 2025 and full implementation by Fall 2027. USDA heard concerns from parents and teachers about excessive amounts of added sugars in some foods, which factored into this new limit. Research shows that these added sugars are most commonly found in typical school breakfast items. Child care operators will also begin limiting added sugars in cereals and yogurts – rather than total sugars – by Fall 2025.

Milk

  • Schools can continue to offer flavored and unflavored milk, which provide essential nutrients that children need, such as calcium, vitamin D and potassium. There will be a new limit on added sugars in flavored milk served at breakfast and lunch by Fall 2025. Thirty-seven school milk processors – representing more than 90% of the school milk volume nationwide – have already committed to providing nutritious school milk options that meet this limit on added sugars.

Sodium

  • Schools will need to slightly reduce sodium content in their meals by Fall 2027. In response to public comments, USDA is only requiring one sodium reduction, and not the three incremental reductions that were proposed last year. This change still moves our children in the right direction and gives schools and industry the lead time they need to prepare. The sodium limits in this final rule will be familiar to schools, as they were supported by leading school nutrition and industry stakeholders during previous rulemaking activities in 2017 and 2018.

Whole Grains

  • Current nutrition standards for whole grains will not change. Schools will continue to offer students a variety of nutrient-rich whole grains and have the option to offer some enriched grains to meet students’ cultural and taste preferences.

Supporting Other Food Preferences

  • While not a new requirement, starting in Fall 2024 it will be easier for schools to serve protein-rich breakfast foods such as yogurt, tofu, eggs, nuts, and seeds, which can help reduce sugary food options, while also supporting vegetarian diets and other food preferences.

Supporting Local Food Purchases

  • Also starting in Fall 2024, schools have the option to require unprocessed agricultural products to be locally grown, raised or caught when making purchases for school meal programs, making it easier for schools to buy local foods.

Additionally, starting in Fall 2025, schools will have limits on the percentage of non-domestic grown and produced foods they can purchase, which will enhance the role of American farmers, producers, fishers, and ranchers in providing nutritious foods to schools.

For more information about how school meals will be strengthened, see these resources:

What’s Staying the Same

School meals will continue to emphasize fruits and vegetables; whole grains; and give kids the right balance of many nutrients for healthy, tasty meals. School nutrition professionals are local experts in their communities and will continue serving meals that their students want to eat, while also prioritizing cultural and religious food preferences.

Nutritious School Meals Are Invaluable to Everyday Families

  • "Free breakfast lunches that my grandkids eat at school are huge relief,” said MomsRising member Mary Beth Cochran, a disabled homemaker raising four grandkids in Canton, North Carolina. “Honestly, I don't know what we would do without school meals. It gives me so much peace of mind to know that no matter what the kids will eat two balanced meals five days a week at school. So, I'm thrilled the USDA is taking action to raise nutrition standards for school meals. As a grandmother I'll move mountains to make sure my grandkids get the healthy food they need to learn and grow. I'm proud to support this rule because I know it will make a real difference for the health and well-being of families like mine."

School Districts Empowered to Meet Updated Standards

Today’s announcement comes a few weeks after the Spring 2024 Heathy Meals Summit in St. Louis, Mo., where hundreds of school nutrition professionals gathered to celebrate and share their innovative efforts to enhance the nutritional quality of school meals. As part of USDA’s Healthy Meals Incentives Initiative, 264 small and rural school districts each received up to $150,000 to equip them with the resources to improve their meal service operations and help them meet these updated nutrition standards.

Through the School Food System Transformation Challenge Grants, the initiative is also supporting innovation in the school meals market by increasing collaboration between schools, food producers and suppliers, and other partners.

Food Industry is Answering the Call to Produce Nutritious School Foods

  • “Prior to the Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act, my company JTM food group began reformulating our K 12 product offerings to reduce sodium. During COVID, we continued our R&D efforts in reviewing formulations, especially in our cheese and items to further reduce the sodium in anticipation of the new meal pattern,” said Carole Erb, JTM Executive Director of Education and Governmental Sales. “JTM team members have collaborated in bringing to the market reduced sodium products that will meet the new meal pattern today. We are ready to continue supporting all food service directors across the country and the important work that they and their staff are doing, feeding America's children and nourishing the nation.”
  • “As a mom and an industry member I think it's important to reduce sugar in school meals. To help schools, we created a sample menu showing how our products fit with the updated standards. We’ve also reduced added sugar by using high quality natural ingredients that ensure our baked goods are healthy and delicious," said Laura Trujillo Bruno, RDN, SNS, President of Buena Vista Foods

More Support from a School Nutrition Professional

  • “The nutrition standards give us a framework to build on and help us know that the meals we're serving are nutritious for our students. The standards help us create equity in our food system by ensuring that all kids receive healthy meals at school. And in fact, we know that school cafeterias are the healthiest places that Americans eat,” said Boston Public Schools Executive Director for Food and Nutrition Anneliese Tanner. “In Boston Public Schools we've already been moving in this direction. We have the same added sugar limits in place and reduce sodium in our menus and we have for many years. So, complying with the new regulations is totally doable. There's a long implementation runway for others to move in this direction as well.”
Additional Background on School Nutrition Standards

By law, USDA is required to set standards for the foods and beverages served through the school meal programs that align with the goals of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Each school develops meals that fit within these standards and reflect tastes and preferences of the students they serve.

The Department proposed updates to the standards in February 2023 and received tremendous feedback during the 90-day public comment period that resulted in more than 136,000 total public comments. These comments were considered in the development of the finalized nutrition standards. Leading up to the proposed standards, USDA held more than 50 listening sessions with state agencies, school districts, advocacy organizations, tribal stakeholders, professional associations, food manufacturers and other federal agencies.

The Biden-Harris Administration and USDA are dedicated to supporting the school nutrition programs. While schools bounced back from the pandemic, the Department provided them more purchasing power to buy American foods and opportunities for enhanced grant programs for updating equipment, product innovation, staff training and farm to school efforts that serve the needs of their local school districts.

To learn about more ways USDA is investing in school meal programs, see the Support for Schools webpage.

USDA touches the lives of all Americans each day in so many positive ways. In the Biden-Harris Administration, USDA is transforming America’s food system with a greater focus on more resilient local and regional food production, fairer markets for all producers, ensuring access to safe and healthy and nutritious food in all communities, building new markets and streams of income for farmers and producers using climate-smart food and forestry practices, making historic investments in infrastructure and clean-energy capabilities in rural America, and committing to equity across the Department by removing systemic barriers and building a workforce more representative of America. To learn more, visit www.usda.gov.

Additional Resources

Page updated: April 24, 2024
Resource | Infographics Final Rule for School Meal Standards

Updated School Meal Standards: working towards a common goal of healthy children and helping them reach their full potential.

04/24/2024
Resource | Infographics Implementation Timeline for Updating the School Meal Standards

School meals will continue to include fruits and vegetables, emphasize whole grains, and give kids the right balance of nutrients for healthy, tasty meals. For the first time, schools will focus on products with less added sugar, especially in school breakfast.

04/24/2024
Resource | Infographics How We Got Here: School Nutrition Standards Final Rule

School nutrition professionals continue to make school meals the healthiest meals children eat in a day! To take school meals to the next level, USDA is updating the school nutrition standards after considering recommendations from the most recent Dietary Guidelines for Americans and listening to a diverse range of voices with experience in child nutrition and health.

04/24/2024

Register to Attend the Next Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee Meeting

Registration is now open for the next meeting of the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee.

WHO: HHS and USDA invite you to attend this important meeting.
WHAT: The meeting will feature updates from each subcommittee on progress made since the committee’s fourth public meeting. Topics covered will include protocol development, evidence review and synthesis, draft conclusion statements, and plans for future committee work.
WHERE: Attend the livestream or view the recording on DietaryGuidelines.gov after the meeting.
WHEN: Wednesday, May 29, from 1:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. ET, and Thursday, May 30, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET

Learn more about the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee and its work at DietaryGuidelines.gov. Interested in staying up to date on the committee’s work? Sign up to receive regular updates via email.

DGA Second Meeting

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USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender.

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Page updated: April 23, 2024

Prince William County Food Show

USDA’s commitment to strengthening the nutrition of school meals comes from a common goal we all share: to help kids lead healthy lives. The strides made in school nutrition over the past decade show that healthier school meals are possible when everyone who plays a part works together.

During their annual food show, Prince William County Schools (PWCS) showed what’s possible when school nutrition professionals, parents, students, school meals partners, and the food industry work together.

The food show, held at Charles J. Colgan High School invites students, teachers, and members of the community to come and try new menu items that PWCS is considering for future breakfast and lunch menus and provide feedback.

Students enrolled in Colgan’s Introduction to Culinary class helped prepare dishes for the show. “I think a lot of people have like this narrative that the food is not good or that it’s unhealthy, I actually think it’s actually the opposite” said one of the culinary students.

The show is a great example of how schools can generate excitement and support for healthy school meals by engaging students and community members in the meal development process.

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Page updated: April 11, 2024
Data
Child Nutrition Dashboard

The goal of the dashboard is to provide national and state level visualization of meals served, participation, and funding data for the National School Lunch Program, School Breakfast Program, Child and Adult Care Food Program, and Summer Food Service Program. The dashboard can be used by federal, state, and local organizations to assess trends in child nutrition program activity.

02/14/2024

Registration Now Open for Fourth Meeting of the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee

DGA Third Meeting

Posted by HHS Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, USDA Food and Nutrition Service

As part of its ongoing work, the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee will hold its next public meeting on Jan. 19, 2024, from 8:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. ET. Convened jointly by the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services and Agriculture, the committee will hear updates from each subcommittee and discuss progress made since the third public meeting. Topics will include protocol development, evidence review and synthesis, draft conclusion statements, and plans for future committee work, including development of the committee’s scientific report.

Registration is now open. HHS and USDA invite the public to participate in this important event by registering in advance to view the livestream. A recorded version of the livestream will be posted on DietaryGuidelines.gov after the meeting.

Learn more about the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee and its work at DietaryGuidelines.gov. Interested in staying up to date on the committee’s work? Sign up to receive regular updates via email.

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Page updated: December 12, 2023
Resource | Technical Assistance & Guidance Professional Standards: Resources

These resources provide school nutrition professionals with the knowledge and tools to implement and meet the professional standards requirements within their programs.

11/03/2023

Growing Thriving Child Nutrition Programs in Rialto, California

There’s something growing on at Rialto Unified School District (RUSD). By growing school gardens, serving more local foods in school meals, offering all students breakfast and lunch at no cost, serving healthy summer meals, and more, RUSD is supporting a healthier future for their community. And it is all due to the school district’s commitment to serving kids healthy and tasty school meals.

RUSD students are learning how food is grown by helping to tend school gardens and citrus groves. By leveraging California’s farm to school funding, RUSD has been laying the groundwork to incorporate the produce grown by students into the meals the district’s schools serve.

At Rialto Middle School, students learn about environmental resiliency and help expand the amount of local foods purchased for school meals. Not only are students making a difference by increasing the amount of fresh, nutritious, and tasty meals served in their school, they are also bringing their learning home to teach their families about healthy eating.

students standing around a school garden
Rialto Middle School students give FNS Administrator Cindy Long a tour of their school garden.

At another RUSD campus, Werner Elementary School, a community garden is serving as a living laboratory where students can observe, experiment with, and grow edible plants. The staff that manage Werner Elementary School’s garden strive to promote good nutrition by planting, tending, harvesting, and eating organic fruits, vegetables, and herbs. The school aims to empower the community with gardens and a STEM-based curriculum that engages all students in experiential outdoor education.

students presenting in a school garden
Werner Elementary School students show off their school district’s Heritage Citrus Grove.
students with fruit bins
Other Werner Elementary School students host a mini farmers’ market in their school library.

RUSD leadership and its Board of Education recognize that nourishing food is essential to student health and development. They acknowledge that child nutrition programs have a positive and direct impact on children's well-being and success in the classroom and are committed to getting the entire school community and other stakeholders involved, including local farmers and elected leaders.

Given the RUSD community’s commitment to serving and teaching children about healthy food, the district naturally became a model for drive-thru food pick-up during the Covid-19 pandemic. The RUSD Nutrition Services’ mini documentary titled, “Rialto Unified School District: Feeding Kids During COVID,” provides a snapshot of the challenges the district faced and how their community worked together to feed students and families quality food in a comfortable, uplifting environment.

RUSD continues to support their students’ access to healthy school meals by:

  1. Participating in Community Eligibility Provision to offer all students breakfast and lunch at no cost;
  2. Serving breakfast in the classroom at elementary, middle, and high schools;
  3. Utilizing the Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program to introduce new produce and deliver nutrition education;
  4. Conducting healthy food tastes tests; and
  5. Using USDA Foods and scratch-cooking to create healthy school meals; and

As a result of their commitment to serving high-quality nutritious summer meals, RUSD was awarded USDA’s Turnip the Beet Gold Award in 2021 and 2022. The award recognizes outstanding summer meal program sponsors, including school districts across the nation who offer meals that are appetizing, appealing, and nutritious to children during the summer months.

students serving themselves strawberries
Werner Elementary School students and staff enjoy fresh strawberries from the school salad bar.

The success of RUSD's child nutrition programs is the result of an entire school community embracing efforts to serve and teach students about nutritious foods. By harnessing support from diverse community partners, as well as leveraging local, state, and federal resources, the district has put the children they serve on a path toward a healthy future. As RUSD Lead Child Nutrition Agent Fausat Rahman-Davies said in the mini documentary, “It really takes a village to feed and to raise a child.”

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Page updated: January 09, 2024
Page updated: October 14, 2021