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Find your favorite Non-GMO Project Verified items in our Product Finder here. Look for the Butterfly label on packaging to ensure your product is Verified. The products listed below have been evaluated by a third-party technical administrator and meet the Non-GMO Project’s Standard for GMO avoidance.
Many people want to buy non-GMO foods. Here, learn the possible benefits and risks of GMOs, how to read GMO labeling and the most common types of non-GMO foods.
There are four other non-GMO flours that we’re currently aware of: Eden Foods, Arrowhead Mills, Bob’s Red Mill, and the “To Your Health” brand (sprouted GMO-free flours). Also bear in mind, any flour that carries the USDA Organic certification label is likewise GMO-free.
The Non-GMO Project is a nonprofit organization offering North America's most trusted third-party verification program for non-GMO food and products.
You'll see non-GMO labels on everything from bananas to water these days, but that doesn't mean much, seeing as there are only 13 different GMO crops available in the U.S. today. The Non-GMO Project has categorized 10 of these crops as "high-risk," as they are commercially available to consumers:
Since the 1990s, GMOs have entered the food supply without undergoing independent, long-term safety testing. Learn more about GMOs. The Non-GMO Project Standard Revision Process. The GMO High-Risk List: Apples. Non-GMO Snacks | Kate’s Real Food Non-GMO Project Verified Granola Bars. What's the Difference Between Non-GMO and Organic?
This is your one-stop-shop on how to eat non-GMO, what a non-GMO label means, the differences between non-GMO & organic, and how to avoid GMOs even when there’s no label, and when you dine out. General Guidelines: Avoid GMOs and Roundup Sprayed Food
There are now over 43,000 products that are Non-GMO Project Verified. You can find thousands of products with this label at your local Sprouts—just look for the butterfly! Visit the Non-GMO Project Verified website.
Visit the Non-GMO Shopping Guide website to help you identify and avoid foods with GMOs. Look for products (including organic products) that feature the Non-GMO Project Verified Seal to be sure that at-risk ingredients have been tested for GMO content.
Since 2008, the Non-GMO Project has verified more than 60,000 products from over 3,000 brands. Verification to the Non-GMO Project Standard represents best practices for GMO avoidance and may include testing of high-risk ingredients in product formulations.