The ‘Health Halo’: Foods That Aren’t as Good for You as They Look
Front-of-package buzzwords can make a processed food feel healthy. Here’s how to read past them.
You’re wandering the grocery store aisles filling your cart with what feel like healthy choices — a “high-protein” yogurt, an “organic” granola bar, a “natural” juice, a “whole grain” cracker. Though you feel like you’re making smart calls, it might also be the “health halo” at work. The health halo is what happens when one positive cue on a package convinces us the whole product is healthy — it’s a lasting trick in food marketing. Before you trust the health food buzzwords on the box, it helps to know what the “healthy” label is telling you (and what it isn’t).
What You Should Know About the Health Halo
Conventional wisdom says words like low-fat, organic, gluten-free, and natural mean healthier choices. But often a single health-food claim just masks what the rest of the label says.
This “halo effect” can take one good-sounding cue and make us assume the whole product is just as good-for-you. In actuality, plenty of foods wearing that halo are highly processed or carry added sugar or sodium. It doesn’t help that “natural” has no formal regulatory definition from the FDA, so it can mean almost anything a brand wants it to mean. The front of the package and the nutrition panel on the back often tell two different stories.
Going Deeper on the Health Halo Offenders
A few of the most common health-halo foods, and why they deserve a second look:

- Flavored yogurt has protein and probiotics, but it’s often stuffed with just as much added sugar as a dessert would have.
- Granola and snack bars contain oats and nuts, but those healthy ingredients are bound together with syrups and oils that push them closer to the candy category.
- Smoothies, juices, and vitamin waters do contain some healthful nutrients, but remove the fiber and you’re left with a hefty dose of sugar.
- Dried fruit is made via a drying process that concentrates the natural sugar, and some versions will add even more sugar on top of that.
- Protein bars and powders are often ultra-processed, and a 2025 Clean Label Project report found 47% of powders tested high for lead and other heavy metals, especially the plant-based and organic ones.
- Plant-based meat alternatives are genuinely helpful for some vegetarians and vegans, but they’re also often heavy on sodium and some are high in saturated fat.
None of this makes these foods “bad.” Some of these foods are actually essential — for instance, you absolutely need gluten-free products on the market if you have celiac disease. But just make sure to read the full label (back and front) before adding to your cart.
The Takeaway
Experts say the best move is to read the ingredient list and nutrition panel rather than just trusting the claim on the front of the package. Opt for whole or minimally processed foods when you can (the fewer the ingredients, the better, usually), and treat buzzwords as marketing until the nutrition numbers actually back them up.
Bottom Line
Health-food sales lingo on the front of a package can absolutely be misleading. But whether or not an item is right for you depends on individual context (like dietary restrictions). Convenience also has a place in your diet, and processed foods can really range from not-all-that-bad to glaring-red-flag. Our goal is to spread awareness around these halo foods (no guilt trips here). In our book, it’s imperative to read every label (buzzwords and nutrition facts alike) in order to make a truly “healthy” call.
Experts Who Contributed
- Lauren Keary, NASM-CNC, wrote this article.