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What You Need to Know About Food Expiration Dates

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You’ve Been There

You open the fridge, reach for the milk… and pause.

“Wait — it says Best By yesterday. Is this still safe?”

You’re not alone.
Millions of people throw out perfectly good food every year — not because it’s spoiled, but because they misunderstand what expiration labels actually mean.

The Truth

👉 Most dates on food packaging are not safety deadlines.
They’re about quality, not danger.

And thanks to confusing labels, the average American household wastes over $1,500 worth of food each year.

Let’s clear up the confusion once and for all — so you can eat safely, save money, and reduce waste.

Because real food safety isn’t about fear.
It’s about knowing what those dates really mean.

🔍 Why Expiration Dates Are So Confusing

In the U.S., food manufacturers use a variety of date labels — but none are federally regulated for most foods (except infant formula).

The result?
A patchwork of terms that sound serious but aren’t standardized.

Best if Used By
Indicates peak flavor and quality — not a safety warning.

Use By
Suggested last date for best quality (often used for perishables).

Sell By
For store inventory — tells retailers when to pull items from shelves.

Expires On
Rare; sometimes used on baby formula — indicates when nutrient levels may decline.

📌 Bottom line: None of these mean “toss after this date.”

The USDA and FDA agree: These labels are about quality, not safety.

🧠 How to Tell If Food Is Still Safe

Instead of relying on dates, trust your senses:

👃 Smell
Sour milk? Rotten eggs? Off odors = toss it.

👀 Look
Mold, discoloration, or cloudiness in liquids.

👐 Feel
Slimy texture on meat or fish? Dried-out or brittle produce?

🎯 Taste (if safe)
Try a tiny taste test — only if there are no signs of spoilage.

✅ When in doubt, throw it out — but don’t assume “expired” means unsafe.

✅ What’s Usually Safe After the Date?

Food How Long Past the Date Notes
Milk 5–7 days If refrigerated and smells fine
Yogurt & Cheese 1–2 weeks Cut off mold on hard cheese
Eggs 3–5 weeks Try the float test — fresh eggs sink
Canned Goods 1–5 years If undamaged and stored properly
Dry Pasta, Rice, Cereal 6–12 months Watch for bugs or off smells
Frozen Foods Indefinitely safe Quality dips after 6–12 months

 

💡 Freezing stops bacteria growth — so freeze leftovers before the date!

❌ When to Toss It Immediately

 

 

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