The title of this post is misleading, the FDA has no legal or regulatory definition for a "clean" label, anyone can literally put that on their packaging. The generally accepted definition is it has minimally/naturally processed ingredients and no harmful additives. In the case of this product here, if the manufacturer is being honest about the ingredient list I would generally agree that the ingredients here are fairly "clean", natural flavors tends to be a bit of a murky area though.
The title of this post is misleading, the FDA has no legal or regulatory definition for a "clean" label, anyone can literally put that on their packaging. The generally accepted definition is it has minimally/naturally processed ingredients and no harmful additives. In the case of this product here, if the manufacturer is being honest about the ingredient list I would generally agree that the ingredients here are fairly "clean", natural flavors tends to be a bit of a murky area though.
Thank you for the additional information. Just noticing new labeling statements lately and thought using "Clean" was odd.