Veg & Non-Veg Symbol Guidelines: Complete FSSAI Compliance Guide
By The Fair Labs — Food Testing, Nutrition Analysis & Regulatory Compliance Specialists
Of every symbol printed on an Indian food label, none gets read faster or trusted more automatically than the small green or brown mark on the front of the pack. For a large share of Indian consumers, the Veg and non veg logo on food labels is the single deciding factor in whether a product gets picked up off the shelf at all.
That instant trust is exactly why this small graphic carries more regulatory weight than its size on the package would suggest. These marks are not a design flourish — they are Mandatory food label symbols with specific rules on color, shape, size, and placement. FSSAI treats the implementation of the FSSAI veg symbol and the FSSAI non veg symbol as a culturally sensitive issue that cannot be waived or exempted. Getting it wrong isn't just a cosmetic mistake — it's a direct breach of consumer trust with real regulatory consequences.
This guide walks through exactly what the FSSAI labeling regulations require when it comes to the official Veg & Non-Veg Symbol Guidelines: design specifications, sizing rules, placement, how to correctly classify a product, the hidden ingredients that most often cause misclassification, and how to catch these issues before they reach print.
Not sure if your current artwork follows the latest compliance rules?
Request a Symbol Compliance Check →Why does a small printed mark carry this much weight? Instant visual identification — it allows consumers to assess a product's dietary category in under a second. Consumer trust — a large share of Indian consumers select food based on dietary practice, relying entirely on this mark. Regulatory significance — FSSAI enforces these classifications regardless of the proportion of the relevant ingredient used.
Table of Contents
- 1. What Are These Symbols?
- 2. Why FSSAI Enforces Them
- 3. FSSAI Regulations Governing The Symbols
- 4. FSSAI Veg Symbol Guidelines
- 5. FSSAI Non Veg Symbol Guidelines
- 6. How to Determine Product Classification
- 7. Common Ingredients That Change Classification
- 8. Rules for Size, Placement, and Visibility
- 9. Common Mistakes to Avoid
- 10. Compliance Checklist
- 11. Real-World Examples
- 12. Export Considerations
- 13. How The Fair Labs Supports Label Compliance
- FAQ Section
- Conclusion
1. What Are These Symbols?
The Veg & Non-Veg Symbol Guidelines dictate how food businesses in India must clearly display dietary classifications. These graphics declare whether the product's composition is vegetarian or non-vegetarian as defined under food safety law.
Definition and Purpose
Functionally, the symbol is a compressed version of an ingredient-level fact: does this product contain an ingredient of animal origin? The design standard ensures that the logo answers that question visually, in under a second.
The FSSAI Veg Symbol
According to the regulations, the FSSAI veg symbol consists of a green-filled circle inside a square with a green outline. The square's sides must be exactly double the diameter of the inner circle.
The FSSAI Non Veg Symbol
The FSSAI non veg symbol was updated in 2021 to its current design: a brown-filled triangle inside a square with a brown outline. The shape change helps consumers distinguish these Mandatory food label symbols by shape, not color alone.
Green-filled circle, green-outlined square
Brown-filled triangle, brown-outlined square
Still using the old brown circle? That violates current regulations.
Check Your Current Artwork →2. Why FSSAI Enforces Them
Consumer Rights
At its core, enforcing this rule protects a consumer's right to know what they're eating via easily recognized marks.
Dietary and Religious Considerations
Dietary practice in India is frequently tied to religious and cultural belief. Consuming non-vegetarian food unknowingly is a significant violation of practice, which is why adherence to this classification is non-negotiable.
Legal Compliance
Proper use of the Veg and non veg logo on food labels is a mandatory requirement under the Food Safety and Standards (Labelling and Display) Regulations, 2020.
3. FSSAI Regulations Governing The Symbols
The Governing Regulation
These rules are set out under the Food Safety and Standards (Labelling and Display) Regulations, 2020. The updated regulations officially shifted the non-vegetarian mark to a triangle format.
Mandatory Declaration Requirement
Every package of food must carry this declaration. Even small packages otherwise exempt from certain front-of-pack requirements are not exempt from it.
Enforcement Implications
Applying the green mark to a non-vegetarian product is a serious compliance failure under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.
4. FSSAI Veg Symbol Guidelines
Symbol Design
The vegetarian symbol must be a filled circle inside a square outline.
Green Color Requirements
The fill and outline must be a consistent, standardized green. Failing to use the right shade violates the standard.
Which Foods Qualify
A food qualifies as vegetarian if it does not contain any whole or part of an animal, bird, insect, freshwater or marine animal, or egg. Milk and milk products are explicitly excluded from the non-vegetarian definition.
5. FSSAI Non Veg Symbol Guidelines
Symbol Design
The non-vegetarian mark is a filled triangle inside a square outline, both in brown. This 2021 update makes the symbol distinguishable by shape.
Which Foods Qualify as Non-Vegetarian
A food must carry the brown symbol if it contains animal-derived ingredients, including eggs, gelatin, or carmine. Meeting the standard requires tracing all functional ingredients back to their source.
Classifying a product correctly protects consumer trust.
Request a Classification Review →6. How to Determine Product Classification
A reliable determination of whether to use the green or brown mark requires checking every layer of the formulation.
Step-by-Step Check
Review primary ingredients, check for egg, assess additives (like gelatin), trace flavorings back to their source, and examine processing enzymes. The law mandates that if any hidden ingredient is animal-derived (except milk), the product requires the brown indicator.
7. Common Ingredients That Change Classification
These ingredients often dictate which icon must be used:
Gelatin
Used in gummy confectionery, marshmallows, and capsule shells. It requires the brown shape.
Carmine
A red colorant derived from the cochineal insect. Its presence means the product cannot legally bear the green mark.
Animal Enzymes & Fish Oil
Rennet in cheese or fish oil in supplements firmly place a product into the non-vegetarian category.
8. Rules for Size, Placement, and Visibility
Minimum Size Requirements
The size of the mark is tied directly to the Principal Display Panel (PDP) area.
| Area of Principal Display Panel | Minimum Diameter of Inner Symbol | Minimum Square Side (2× diameter) |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 100 cm² | 3 mm | 6 mm |
| Above 100 cm² to 500 cm² | 4 mm | 8 mm |
| Above 500 cm² to 2500 cm² | 6 mm | 12 mm |
| Above 2500 cm² | 8 mm | 16 mm |
Placement Rules
The logo must appear on the principal display panel in close proximity to the product's name.
Calculating your PDP area and checking your graphic against the area chart prevents compliance risks.
Request a Symbol Sizing Check →9. Common Mistakes to Avoid
When applying this graphic, businesses frequently make the following mistakes:
- Wrong Symbol Color: Failing to use the standardized shades required by law.
- Incorrect Placement: Placing the icon on the back panel instead of the PDP.
- Outdated Symbol Design: Using the old brown circle instead of the triangle for the brown shape.
- Wrong Classification: Using the green circle when hidden animal-derived ingredients are present.
10. Compliance Checklist
Use this checklist to ensure your packaging complies:
11. Real-World Examples
Example 1: Compliant Vegetarian Product
Example 2: Compliant Non-Vegetarian Product
12. Export Considerations
These are specifically domestic marks. Export markets have no equivalent mandatory requirement, and the Indian logo must be evaluated against destination rules before international shipment.
13. How The Fair Labs Supports Label Compliance
We provide detailed reviews of your draft or existing label, ensuring your design, color, proportions, sizing, and placement strictly adhere to current regulations.
FAQ Section
1. Is this declaration mandatory?
Yes. Proper application is a mandatory requirement under FSSAI regulations.
2. What does the vegetarian symbol look like?
It is a green-filled circle inside a square with a green outline.
3. What does the non-vegetarian symbol look like?
It is a brown-filled triangle inside a square with a brown outline, making these Mandatory food label symbols distinguishable by shape.
4. Do trace amounts of animal ingredients trigger the brown symbol?
Yes. FSSAI states that any quantity of animal-derived ingredients (except milk) requires the non-veg mark.
5. Are there minimum sizing rules?
Yes, the size of the mark scales with the area of the Principal Display Panel.
Conclusion
Strict adherence is essential. The symbol acts as a fast, trusted, visual promise. Applying the correct classification requires tracing every ingredient back to its source to ensure the icon represents the truth.
Ensure your packaging perfectly aligns with all regulatory guidelines.
Contact The Fair Labs Today →Explore more in our complete Food Labeling Guide.