Skip to content
Medkon Medkon Medkon

Best Web Development Agency in Mumbai | India

Medkon Medkon Medkon

Best Web Development Agency in Mumbai | India

  • Home
  • Home
Close

Search

Trending Now:
Music Trends That Will Dominate This Year ChatGPT prompts – AI content & image creation trend Ghibli trend – viral anime-style visual trend
  • https://www.facebook.com/
  • https://twitter.com/
  • https://t.me/
  • https://www.instagram.com/
  • https://youtube.com/
Medkon Medkon Medkon

Best Web Development Agency in Mumbai | India

Medkon Medkon Medkon

Best Web Development Agency in Mumbai | India

  • Home
  • Home
Close

Search

Trending Now:
Music Trends That Will Dominate This Year ChatGPT prompts – AI content & image creation trend Ghibli trend – viral anime-style visual trend
  • https://www.facebook.com/
  • https://twitter.com/
  • https://t.me/
  • https://www.instagram.com/
  • https://youtube.com/
Home/Blog/Legal Labelling Requirements for Packaged Products in India — Complete 2026 Guide
Blog

Legal Labelling Requirements for Packaged Products in India — Complete 2026 Guide

By Irshad Khan
July 1, 2026 6 Min Read
0

Before your product can legally be sold in India — in a physical store, on Amazon, through your own website, or anywhere else — the packaging has to carry specific information mandated by law. Not recommended. Not best practice. Required by law, with penalties for non-compliance.

The governing framework is the Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules, 2011, which sit under the Legal Metrology Act, 2009, overseen by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT). These rules apply to every pre-packaged product sold or distributed in India — domestic or imported, physical or ecommerce channel.

Amazon and Flipkart both verify packaging compliance during their seller onboarding process for certain categories. Listings can be rejected or removed for non-compliant labelling. For food products, there’s an additional layer — FSSAI regulations, covered in Topic 6.

This guide covers everything that must be on your packaging, category-specific extras, what constitutes a common violation, and how to design your label so it’s both compliant and well-branded.


The Mandatory Declarations — Every Pre-Packaged Product

Under Rule 6 of the Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules, every pre-packaged commodity must carry these declarations:

1. Name and Address of the Manufacturer / Packer / Importer

The complete name and principal place of business address of:

  • The manufacturer (if manufactured in India)
  • The packer (if different from manufacturer)
  • The importer (for imported goods)

For a sole proprietor: your name and the complete business address registered with your GSTIN.

What “complete” means: full address including Pin code. Not just city or state — the full street-level address.

What many new brands miss: the address on your packaging must match the address registered with your GST certificate. Any mismatch creates a documentation inconsistency that can be flagged during inspection or marketplace review.

2. Common or Generic Name of the Product

The product must be identified by its common name — what it actually is in plain language that an average consumer would recognize.

This requirement exists to prevent misleading branding. If you’re selling “Vitamin C Effervescent Tablets” under the brand name “SunPower,” the label must include “Effervescent Tablets” or “Vitamin C Supplement” as the generic/common name — not just the brand name.

3. Net Quantity

The actual amount of product contained in the package — expressed in the appropriate legal unit:

  • Weight: grams (g) or kilograms (kg) for solid products
  • Volume: millilitres (ml) or litres (l) for liquids
  • Count: number of units for countable items

What’s not acceptable: “approximately 500g,” “large size,” “generous portion,” or any vague descriptor. The declaration must be exact and in the prescribed unit.

Tolerances: the Rules specify allowable tolerances (the permitted deviation from the declared quantity) by weight/volume range — staying within these tolerances is a manufacturing/packaging compliance matter, but stating an incorrect declared quantity is a separate legal violation.

4. Month and Year of Manufacture / Packing

The month and year when the product was manufactured or packed. Format: “Mfg: Month Year” or the full date if month-level precision is preferred.

5. “Best Before” or “Expiry” Date (where applicable)

For any product that can deteriorate with time — food, beverages, cosmetics, supplements, certain personal care items — a “Best Before” or “Use By” date must be declared.

“Best Before” means the product is at its best quality before that date — it may still be safe to use after, but quality isn’t guaranteed.

“Expiry” or “Use By” means the product should not be used after that date — stricter and typically used for products where post-date use is unsafe.

For products with a shelf life of less than 3 months, a “date of manufacture” may be required in addition.

6. Maximum Retail Price (MRP) — Inclusive of All Taxes

The MRP must be declared in the format: MRP ₹[amount] (inclusive of all taxes)

Critical rules around MRP:

  • MRP on packaging is a legal ceiling — selling above this price is a punishable offense under the Legal Metrology Act
  • The MRP on your packaging must match the MRP declared in your marketplace listings — mismatches are a common cause of listing suspension on Amazon and Flipkart
  • If you need to change MRP (price increase or decrease), you must either reprint/resticker packaging with the new MRP or apply a correction sticker over the old one — the correction sticker cannot obscure any other mandatory declaration
  • For products sold through FBA (Fulfilment by Amazon), Amazon often prints its own sticker over your MRP area if the MRP on the system doesn’t match the packaging — get this right from the start to avoid complications

7. Customer Care Details

A contact point for consumer grievances — either a phone number or email address. This is mandatory and frequently missed by new brands whose packaging is designed without this in mind.

The detail just needs to be functional — a dedicated customer support number or email that actually gets monitored is sufficient.

8. Country of Origin

For all products: “Made in India” (or the appropriate country of manufacture). For imported products, this is particularly important and is enforced actively.


Category-Specific Requirements

Beyond the universal requirements above, specific product categories have additional labelling obligations:

Food and Beverages (FSSAI Regulations)

In addition to Legal Metrology requirements, food products must also comply with Food Safety and Standards (Labelling and Display) Regulations:

  • Nutritional information table (for most packaged foods) — calories, protein, carbohydrate, fat, and dietary fibre per 100g/ml and per serving
  • Ingredients list — in descending order of weight, with additives identified by their class name and INS/E number
  • Allergen declarations — if the product contains any of the 8 major allergens (milk, eggs, fish, shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, soybeans), it must be clearly declared
  • FSSAI License Number — the 14-digit FSSAI number must appear on every food product label (see Topic 6)
  • Vegetarian / Non-Vegetarian symbol — the green circle (vegetarian) or brown/red circle (non-vegetarian) symbol is mandatory on all packaged food

Cosmetics and Personal Care

  • Ingredient list in INCI (International Nomenclature of Cosmetic Ingredients) names
  • Directions for use and precautions
  • For imported cosmetics: importer details + country of origin

Electronics and Electrical Products

  • BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards) certification mark — mandatory for notified categories (certain wires, cables, LED products, IT equipment, helmets, etc.)
  • ISI mark where applicable
  • Energy star rating for applicable appliances

Textiles

  • Fibre content declaration (percentage of each fibre by weight)
  • “Dry Clean Only,” “Machine Wash,” or other care instructions
  • Country of origin

The MRP Correction Sticker — Rules and Limits

The Rules permit a correction sticker to revise MRP on already-printed packaging under specific conditions:

  • The sticker must not conceal any other mandatory declaration
  • The original MRP must still be visible (struck through or visible beneath the sticker)
  • The sticker must use the same declaration format as the original

This is commonly used for price revisions after a product has been launched — when reprinting packaging isn’t practical for existing inventory.

What correction stickers cannot do: revise net quantity, change manufacture date, or alter any other mandatory declaration. Only MRP revision is permitted through stickers under the Rules.


Designing Your Label for Both Compliance and Brand Impact

A common concern for new brands is that legal declarations will dominate the label and undermine the visual design. In practice, with good label layout, compliance and aesthetics coexist cleanly:

Primary face (front of pack): brand name, product name, generic name, and variant/flavour. This is your branding surface — your logo, your hero image, your most prominent visual.

Back and sides: mandatory declarations. Net quantity, MRP, manufacturer address, manufacture date, best before date, customer care, country of origin, and any category-specific requirements.

Bottom of pack: often used for batch number and additional product codes.

Typography on declarations: mandatory declarations need to be legible — the Rules specify minimum font heights for net quantity and MRP declarations. Generally, 1mm minimum height for net quantity on packs under 200g/200ml; 2mm for larger packs. Don’t make declaration text illegible to save space.


Common Violations — and What They Cost

ViolationMaximum Penalty
Missing mandatory declarationFine per unit + seizure
MRP not declared or incorrect formatFine up to ₹1,00,000
Selling above MRPFine up to ₹1,00,000
Net quantity violationFine up to ₹25,000
Misleading declarationFine up to ₹50,000
Repeat violationIncreased penalty + prosecution

Beyond fines, marketplace listing removal for non-compliant products is an immediate operational consequence — and relabelling or reprinting thousands of units is expensive. Getting it right before your first print run is dramatically cheaper than correcting it after.

Legal Metrology compliance isn’t a final step — it’s a prerequisite. Design your packaging with all mandatory declarations planned from the start, not retrofitted after the visual design is complete. Get a pre-print compliance review from a CA or legal metrology consultant before going to bulk print — the cost of correction after printing thousands of units is many times the cost of getting it right upfront.

Next step: With compliance understood, read our guide on How to Design Packaging That Builds Brand Recall to learn how to make your legally compliant packaging also visually effective.

Author

Irshad Khan

Follow Me
Other Articles
Previous

How to Define Your Brand Personality — With Indian D2C Examples

Next

How to Design Packaging That Builds Brand Recall

No Comment! Be the first one.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • How to Source Packaging on a Budget — Low MOQ Options for New Sellers
    by Irshad Khan
    July 1, 2026
  • Business Structure 101: Proprietorship vs LLP vs Private Limited Company — Which One Should You Choose?
    by Irshad Khan
    June 24, 2026
  • GST Registration for Ecommerce Sellers in India — Complete Step-by-Step Guide (2026)
    by Irshad Khan
    June 24, 2026
  • Udyam (MSME) Registration — The Complete Free Step-by-Step Guide (2026)
    by Irshad Khan
    June 24, 2026

Welcome to the ultimate source for fresh perspectives! Explore curated content to enlighten, entertain and engage global readers.

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Latest Posts

  • What Is a Brand Style Guide — and Why Your Business Needs One Before Designing Anything
    Most new business owners design a logo, pick some colors… Read more: What Is a Brand Style Guide — and Why Your Business Needs One Before Designing Anything
  • Udyam (MSME) Registration — The Complete Free Step-by-Step Guide (2026)
    Of all the registrations a new business in India needs,… Read more: Udyam (MSME) Registration — The Complete Free Step-by-Step Guide (2026)
  • Trademark Registration in India — Complete Process, Cost & Timeline Guide (2026)
    Your brand name, logo, and tagline are among the most… Read more: Trademark Registration in India — Complete Process, Cost & Timeline Guide (2026)

Pages

  • Contact
  • Stories

Contact

Phone

+91 99301 50047

+91 8928598065

Email

medkonworks@gmail.com

Location

Malad West, Mumbai · 400095

Copyright 2026 — Medkon. All rights reserved. Medkon.in