
Is Food Safe to Eat Beyond the Expiration Date? Here's What an Expert Told Me
An expiration date can be a source of stress and confusion, and that may be causing you to throw away perfectly edible food. Expiration dates are typically on the safe side, meaning your food isn't spoiled just because the date has come and gone.
While you shouldn't push the limits too far, on balance, we're all tossing out more food than we should be, and it's all leading to increased food scarcity and rising costs.
If you want to prevent food waste -- and keep more dollars in your pockets -- you'll want to better understand what these food expiration dates actually mean.
"I've seen statistics showing that consumers throw away up to $1,300 per year," says Christopher Greco, CEO of Storewise, a software platform for independent grocers who I spoke with about food expiration. In fact, Americans produce 325 pounds of food waste per person, per year. Much of that food waste can be blamed on tossing away food that may still be safe for consumption, but whose printed expiration date has passed.
Who decides food expiration dates?
Once the packaging seal is broken, best-by and expiration dates no longer apply.
CNET
"Expiration dates are an issue of both quality and safety," Greco says. On the one hand, producers and manufacturers want you to experience their products in the best possible condition for flavor and texture, and on the other, they want to mitigate the risk of any possible food-borne illnesses.
Read more: How to Store and Preserve Fresh Herbs
Some products, like dairy products, have relatively short shelf lives, and expiration dates that are swiftly approaching when you bring them home from the store. Others, such as canned and preserved products, can stay on store shelves or in your pantry or fridge for quite some time, maybe even years.
There's much nuance around food expiration
If the best-by date is several years ago, you'd be wise to send it packing.
Alina Bradford/CNET
There's a lot of nuance both in terms of quality and safety, respective to the expiration date, especially for those products that are less shelf stable in nature.
Greco walks us through a variety of scenarios given a common household product with a near-future expiration date, milk, where both storage and transportation variables can have an impact on its state, even after the expiration date has already been printed on the package. "You could have a different profile if that milk was dropped at the grocery store by the distributor, and it sat in the back unrefrigerated for even 20 or 30 minutes before it was put away," he says. "If you bought that milk in South Florida, where it's 100 degrees, and you drove 30 minutes home, that would have an impact on the quality as well."
Best-by, use-by, sell-by and freeze-by dates
You'll typically find the expiration dates for cans on the bottom.
CNET
Expiration dates may also be printed with different verbiage, which creates different considerations and may speak more to issues of quality rather than safety. According to the US Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service, these are the meanings behind the various labels:
A "Best if Used By/Before" date indicates when a product will be of the best flavor or quality. It is not a purchase or safety date.
date indicates when a product will be of the best flavor or quality. It is not a purchase or safety date. A "Sell-By" date tells the store how long to display the product for sale for inventory management. It is not a safety date.
date tells the store how long to display the product for sale for inventory management. It is not a safety date. A "Use-By" date is the last date recommended for the use of the product while at peak quality. It is not a safety date (except for when used on infant formula.)
date is the last date recommended for the use of the product while at peak quality. It is not a safety date (except for when used on infant formula.) A "Freeze-By" date indicates when a product should be frozen to maintain peak quality. It is not a purchase or safety date.
Several factors contribute to how long food stays safe to eat including storage, packaging and environment.
David Watsky/CNET
These phrases can be helpful guidelines for the consumer, but it is important to note that besides the case of infant formula, expiration dates are not required by federal law. As indicated above, none of these refer to a matter of safety where consumption is concerned. They might even confuse some consumers into believing that their food has gone to waste, even when it hasn't. In fact. California recently enacted a law that will go into effect in July 2026 banning the use of "sell-by" and "best before" labeling to reduce such confusion and minimize food waste.
In short, you're going to have to rely on your senses, including common sense, to determine whether food is safe to consume.
Use common sense and examine your food items
Some foods take longer than you'd think to expire but others expire faster. OIive oil, for instance, does not stay fresh for more than a few months after opening.
Daniel Harvey Gonzalez/In Pictures via Getty Images
"I think that a lot of consumers have a hard and fast rule when it comes to expiration dates, thinking that if it's now the 28th or 29th, and something expired on the 27th, then they must throw it away," says Greco, but that isn't always, or even usually the case. "You should at least smell it, and maybe taste it, and it might still be good."
On the other hand, it's an important habit to get into anyway, since even before the expiration date has passed you might have a suspicion that something has turned. Given a variety of transportation and storage scenarios, the expiration date can become meaningless, and as noted above, isn't reflective of any federal regulation.
Some items are very obviously spoiled, when they exhibit signs of mold or decay, or when the smell becomes off-putting. (Even if it exhibits some mold, you probably don't need to throw your cheese away.) Items that have a natural preservative quality, such as cheese, pickled products or those with a high vinegar content, or other preserved products such as jam, are much more likely to become unpalatable to you or bland in flavor before they become unsafe.
Proper handling and storage can make a difference
How you store your food can impact how quickly it goes bad, and proper handling may make your grocery items last beyond the listed expiration date.
As the USDA notes: "The quality of perishable products may deteriorate after the date passes; however, such products should still be safe if handled properly. Consumers must evaluate the quality of the product prior to its consumption to determine if the product shows signs of spoilage." You can handle foods properly by putting them away as soon as you get home, knowing where the coldest zones in your fridge are, keeping different types of foods separated, using appropriate storage containers, and not overfilling them to start.
I bought this chicken on March 11, but the sell-by date wasn't for another week.
David Watsky/CNET
Read more: Chicken Labels Are Confusing. Here's What They Do (and Don't) Mean
In-person shopping helps with expiration dates and food waste
Expired meat and seafood are more likely to cause problems than most other groceries.Greco notes that our shopping habits also play a role in terms of potentially throwing away unspoiled food. "Part of what also contributes to food waste is the lack of frequency in in-store shopping," he says. While bulk buying can help save money on some products, trying to menu plan or stock up for weeks or months at a time, rather than just a few days, tends to result in having too much food on hand that may be hard to use before it actually starts to turn, regardless of its expiration date.
If you're someone who still feels compelled to toss items out of an excess of caution based on the expiration date, visiting your local grocer more often can help you better keep groceries in your fridge, and money in your account.
Opt for composting over trashing expired foods
If you know you're dealing with expired food -- moldy, stale, discolored or curdled -- you can always use a countertop composter to keep organic waste out of the dump. But before you decide to trash it, brush up some skills to help discern when food is and isn't expired so you don't discard perfectly good eats.
FAQs
What are the different dates on a food product for?
The best-by, use-by, sell-by and freeze-by dates are important markers to indicate peak quality or manage inventory, and consumers still gain a lot of value from them being printed on a product. But none of these dates indicate food spoilage, and it's up to your common sense to decide when to throw something out.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Federal Reserve's Cuts May Not Lower Mortgage Rates, Analysts Warn
Key Takeaways Potential homebuyers and President Donald Trump have wanted the Federal Reserve to cut its influential interest rate in the hope that mortgage rates would fall in response. However, economists and analysts say that mortgage rates are unlikely to fall meaningfully below 6.5% in the near future because of the bond market's influence. Bond traders would likely help bring long-term rates down if they felt the economy was in danger of a downturn. Shop Top Mortgage Rates Personalized rates in minutes A quicker path to financial freedom Your Path to Homeownership Softer economic data make Federal Reserve interest rate cuts more likely, but that doesn't mean mortgage rates will follow them down. Homebuyers and those looking to refinance may have to wait longer for interest rates on 30-year mortgages to fall meaningfully below 6.5%, according to economists and market analysts. The bond market is propping up mortgage rates, as traders are betting the Fed may only lower rates a few times rather than undertake an aggressive cycle of rate cuts. If there were signs that tariff impacts would significantly damage the economy, the Fed would have more wiggle room to cut interest rates aggressively, and bond traders would likely help bring long-term rates down. Right now, analysts say, the economy doesn't seem to be weakening enough to warrant that type of action—if it even gets to that point at all in the coming months. 'For the foreseeable future, it really does feel like mortgage rates are going to be staying pretty close to where we are,' said Chen Zhao, head of economics research at Redfin. Mortgage rates could even rise if tariffs end up pushing up inflation substantially, Zhao said. If so, markets' expectations of Fed cuts would diminish, keeping rates elevated. One potential harbinger of that scenario came on Thursday, when new data on inflation for producers rose far more than expected, raising the prospect that businesses will pass on price increases to consumers. Fed Actions Only Have Indirect Impact Fed cuts would immediately make borrowing cheaper on credit cards and auto loans, since those products are based on the short-term interest rates the central bank heavily influences. Mortgages are a different story, however. Rates on a 30-year mortgage are based heavily on investors' expectations of the economy and inflation over the next decade, not on the Fed's near-term actions. While mortgage rates include other costs to process each loan, they rely heavily on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield—the interest rate that the U.S. government pays to issue debt over 10 years. A complex mix of factors helps determine 10-year yields, including economic growth forecasts, inflation, demographics, and U.S. fiscal deficits. 'By no means am I saying that a Fed rate move does not affect mortgage rates at all,' said David Gottlieb, a wealth manager at Savvy Advisors who focuses on real estate, but the central bank only has 'an indirect pressure' on long-term rates. It's a point that Fed Chair Jerome Powell—who's faced attacks from President Donald Trump for keeping interest rates high and dampening the mortgage market—made at his news conference last month. 'We don't set mortgage rates at the Fed,' Powell said. 'It's not that we don't have any effect. We do have an effect, but we're not the main effect.' Bond Market is Hard to Please Some Fed officials still seem hesitant about cutting rates in September, but markets are more or less viewing a rate cut next month as a slam dunk, analysts say. Some observers have suggested that the Fed could cut rates by 50 basis points rather than its usual quarter-point decrease. But a supersized rate cut could 'send a panic message,' Andrew Brenner, head of international fixed income at NatAlliance Securities, wrote in a note to clients. Last year, for example, the Fed opted for a 50 basis point cut after deciding inflation had ticked down enough from its post-COVID highs. Rather than also heading downward, the 10-year Treasury yield—and thus mortgage rate —rose sharply, he wrote. Bond investors 'pushed back hard against the Fed's easing because they correctly perceived that the economy and labor market were in better shape than feared by Fed officials,' Ed Yardeni, an economist and president of Yardeni Research, wrote in a note to clients. Bond vigilantes 'may be lurking' again, he wrote, referring to the term he coined to describe bond investors who protest potentially unwise policy actions by driving up interest rates. The Trump administration wants aggressive Fed action, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Wednesday calling for a 50 basis point rate cut in September and more after that. But long-term yields don't always move in the direction presidential administrations want them, Yardeni cautioned. 'The Trump administration is pushing for the Fed to cut the federal funds rate to reduce the long-term borrowing cost of the federal debt and to lower mortgage rates,' Yardeni wrote, but last year's experience 'serves as a cautionary tale.' Read the original article on Investopedia
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Intel stock surges on report Trump administration mulls taking stake in company
Shares of Intel (INTC) jumped more than 7% on Thursday following a report the US government is considering taking a stake in the struggling chipmaker. According to Bloomberg, the plan could see the government help Intel build out its planned chip complex in Ohio, which the company has had to delay as part of its ongoing turnaround effort. Intel announced the facility in 2022 with an initial investment of $20 billion that could grow to $100 billion over time. The report follows President Trump's meeting with Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan on Monday. The Ohio site was supposed to include two new manufacturing plants and start producing chips by 2025, but that's since been delayed into the 2030s. CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who took over when former CEO Pat Gelsinger was ousted by the company's board due to the slow turnaround in 2024, has since delayed the plant even further. The Trump administration is making a major push to reshore American chip manufacturing. Intel and rivals TSMC (TSM), Samsung, and others, have been working to build more chip fabricating plants in the US since the Biden administration signed the CHIPS Act in 2022. Part of Intel's plan under Gelsinger was to turn Intel into a contract chip manufacturer, similar to TSMC. But the gambit has run into trouble. So far, the foundry's main customer is still Intel, and the company is reportedly facing headwinds in getting its 18A chip technology up to the level needed to statisfy clients. Intel has signed agreements to build chips for Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT) using its chip designs. Trump initially called for Tan to resign as CEO of Intel due to his investments in Chinese tech firms, but backed away from the stance after meeting with him on Monday. Intel is still far away from making any meaningful headway in the AI space, ceding the market to both Nvidia and rival AMD. Earlier this week, the White House announced the US government will take a 15% cut of the sale of Nvidia and AMD chips shipped to China, an unconventional arrangement that highlights the government's increased focus on the semiconductor industry. Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@ Follow him on X/Twitter at @DanielHowley. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Buffett's Berkshire acquires 5 million shares in UnitedHealth
(Reuters) -Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has acquired 5 million shares in UnitedHealth Group, a regulatory filing showed on Thursday, sending the health insurer's stock up 7% in extended trading. Billionaire investor Buffett owned about 1.18 million shares in UnitedHealth between 2006 and 2009, before selling his entire stake in 2010 amid a broader retreat from health insurers. The investment comes as UnitedHealth faces soaring medical costs, federal investigations, the fallout of the killing of a top executive and a cyberattack last year. The healthcare conglomerate has signaled prolonged pain with a new, far lower profit forecast as it sees billions of additional costs in the upcoming quarters. Shares of the Dow component have slumped 46% so far this year. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data