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Food businesses face penalties for mislabelling products as Canadian: CFIA

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Canadians have been clear that they want to support Canadian businesses and buy Canadian products. Consumers deserve origin labels they can trust so they can make informed choices. Accurate origin labelling creates a fair marketplace that benefits both consumers and businesses. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) said it is protecting consumers from misleading food labels and advertisements.

Since April 1, 2025, the Agency said it has issued $47,000 in financial penalties to businesses for inaccurate or misleading country of origin claims:

  • 1000717809 Ontario Limited (Fortinos Etobicoke) received a $10,000 penalty;
  • Fresh in The City Inc. received a $7,000 penalty;
  • Meatex Farms Ltd. received a $10,000 penalty;
  • Oxford Frozen Foods Inc. received a $10,000 penalty;
  • Real Canadian Superstore received a $10,000 penalty.

Food businesses are responsible for ensuring that all food products they sell, whether made in Canada or imported, meet Canada’s legislative requirements, said the Agency.

“The CFIA takes labelling issues seriously and is directly addressing the growing concern with Canadian food businesses over inaccurate and misleading origin claims. In addition to responding to complaints, we conduct inspections to verify origin claims on labels and advertisements, including in-store signage,” it said.

The Agency said this includes CFIA inspectors:

  • raising awareness of the importance of accurate labelling and reminding businesses of their regulatory responsibilities;
  • reviewing labels and business processes;
  • issuing inspection reports and requests for corrective action;
  • verifying corrective actions are in place to prevent future non-compliance;
  • taking enforcement actions.

The CFIA said it selects appropriate compliance and enforcement actions based on a range of considerations including, the degree of risk, the harm caused by the non-compliance, the compliance history of the regulated party, whether there is negligence or intent to violate federal requirements, and responsiveness to resolving the issue.

To learn more about how the CFIA takes action to address non-compliance: 6 things the CFIA does to keep Canada’s food supply safe

The CFIA said it wants to know about foods that consumers think are labelled in a misleading manner. Consumers and industry are encouraged to report these to the CFIA through its food complaint or concern web page.

People can visit the CFIA’s quick reference guide to learn how to identify Canadian food and to find out which foods are required to include country of origin on the label.

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Mario Toneguzzi
Mario Toneguzzi
Mario Toneguzzi, based in Calgary, has more than 40 years experience as a daily newspaper writer, columnist, and editor. He worked for 35 years at the Calgary Herald covering sports, crime, politics, health, faith, city and breaking news, and business. He is the Co-Editor-in-Chief with Retail Insider in addition to working as a freelance writer and consultant in communications and media relations/training. Mario was named as a RETHINK Retail Top Retail Expert in 2024.

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