
Health-conscious Americans embrace Yuka app to guide grocery shopping choices
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By Peter Burke
Published May 23, 2025
As health-conscious Americans look for ways to eat better, there is a mobile app that shoppers can use to guide them at the grocery store, sometimes with surprising outcomes.
Yuka is a free app that proponents of the Make America Healthy Again movement are embracing – even U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
"I use Yuka," Kennedy told Fox News Digital in April.
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Developed in France, Yuka expanded to the U.S. in 2022.
It has been gaining ground, with about 25,000 new users each day, co-founder Julie Chapon told Fox News Digital. (See the video at the top of this article.)
"I think consumers are really being more conscious now about what they want to eat – and there is really this need to have access to more transparent information," said Chapon from New York City. 'Results can be surprising'
Sam Stark, a public relations consultant in New York City, said she uses the app "about every other shopping trip, mostly when I'm considering adding something new to our meals."
"My husband and I eat as [healthfully] as possible with minimal processed foods, but we also want variety," she told Fox News Digital.
"It's become a regular part of my shopping routine when I'm browsing unfamiliar products."
Many times, Stark said, she'll avoid a food product that has scored poorly.
"I often use it to compare similar products, such as which granola is actually the healthiest option," she said.
"The results can be surprising."
"I've limited and given up foods I really enjoyed as well, like this blue cheese dressing I loved, after seeing the rating. Sometimes the app tells you what you need to hear to make better choices."
"Sometimes the app tells you what you need to hear to make better choices."
Stark also introduced her friend to Yuka.
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Cristina Cote, a New York-based real estate broker, told Fox News Digital that she uses the app every time she shops, "especially when exploring new products."
"I appreciate Yuka as a tool to be mindful and make healthy choices," Cote said.
She's also cut out products that score poorly on the app.
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"If I find out that a product I like is not well-rated, I will stop buying it and replace it with something healthier and [purer]," she said.
"It can be disheartening when you find out something you enjoy contains harmful ingredients." Users scan bar codes
Yuka lets users scan the bar codes of food products, generating a score from one to 100 based on three criteria: nutritional quality (60% of the rating), the presence of additives (30%) and whether the product is organic (10%), Chapon said.
AMERICAN NUTRITION A TOP PRIORITY FOR MAHA AS THE 'KNOWLEDGE DOC' WEIGHS IN
The scores are then color-coded into four different categories: excellent (dark green), good (light green), poor (orange) and bad (red).
"You also have access to a detailed information sheet on each product to understand why the rating is good or bad," Chapon said.
If an item receives a poor or bad rating, Yuka recommends similar products with a better ranking.
"The app is 100% independent," Chapon said. "We receive absolutely no money from brands or manufacturers to influence our evaluations or recommendations."
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Although Yuka isn't affiliated with MAHA, Chapon credits the increasingly popular movement for the app's ascent – and for challenging the food industry.
"I think the MAHA movement has also fueled this interest," Chapon said. 'Help people make better choices'
Yuka also has a feature that allows users to call out a food maker with a high-risk additive.
Since the feature launched in November, more than 600,000 callouts have been made, Chapon said.
"A lot of brands have received a lot of emails – and they are very mad," Chapon said. "But that's part of our mission and we know it's risky."
Among the brands that have had dialogue with Yuka are Tru drinks and Chobani, Chapon said.
For more Lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle
Both companies "were really interested in improving their ratings and understanding why they don't have good ratings."
Fox News Digital made multiple requests for comment to Tru drinks and Chobani about the app's rating system.
Ultimately, Chapon said she hopes the app will "help people make better choices for their health" and "push manufacturers to improve what they put in their products."
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"We have many brands starting to really pay attention and trying to understand how they can do better. Sometimes they just don't realize they are using very controversial ingredients."
"We are here to help them to improve," she added.
Ashley DiMella of Fox News Digital contributed reporting. Print Close
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https://www.foxnews.com/food-drink/health-conscious-americans-embrace-yuka-app-guide-grocery-shopping-choices
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He also appears to reference the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, calling such attacks 'counter-productive' because they would lose public support. 'Normies categorize him as an insane serial killer, focus on the act/atrocities themselves, and dismiss his ideas,' Mangione writes. 'And most importantly—- by committing indiscriminate atrocities he becomes a monster, which makes his ideas those of a monster, no matter how true. He crosses the line from revolutionary anarchist to terrorist-the worst thing a person can be.' Mangione's intentions to target the insurance industry were made clear by the writings, which prosecutors say prove that he committed first-degree murder in furtherance of terrorism, the Wednesday filing states. UnitedHealthcare became a symbol of the health insurance industry that Mangione aimed to abolish, prosecutors said. He was not insured by UnitedHealthcare from 2014 to 2024, prosecutors say, but at the time of his arrest, Mangione allegedly had a handwritten notebook that expressed 'hostility toward the health insurance industry and wealthy executives in particular,' according to a federal complaint. 'Having no business relationship with them, he chose UHC solely because they were the largest health insurance company and one of the country's largest companies by market cap,' the new filing said. Notably, three 9mm shell casings from the crime scene had the words 'delay,' 'deny' and 'depose' written on them, the NYPD has said, an apparent nod to a 2010 book critiquing insurance industry tactics. Mangione hoped the alleged killing would intimidate health insurance employees, cause the public to focus on greed in the health insurance industry and prevent investors and financial analysts from investing in the industry, according to the filing. 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Meanwhile, the company's call center received a slew of death threats, the filing said. 'You are gonna hang,' one caller said. 'That means that the killing of Brian Thompson was just a start. There are a lot more that are gonna be taken out. The only question is whether you're gonna be their collateral damage when its done or not.' Police were hired to protect the company's headquarters in Minnesota. Threats were also made to employees at the company's New York City office. Forty company executives received personal security, with one executive who received threats dying her hair and moving into another home out of fear for her safety, according to the filing. Other health insurance executives, including Emblem Health's CEO, were also targeted. Posters were put up outside the company's headquarters with the CEO's picture that read 'Health Care CEOs should not feel safe. Deny, Defend Depose.' The killing 'demonstrated his concerted effort to broadcast his message of ideological intimidation as broadly and loudly as possible,' prosecutors said. CNN's Kara Scannell, Zoe Sottile, Lauren del Valle and Michelle Watson contributed to this report.