Published: 11 March 2026 The English Chronicle Desk The English Chronicle Online – UK News
The UK government’s long‑awaited ban on junk food advertising has been so diluted by industry lobbying that experts now fear it will be largely ineffective, covering only a fraction of the billions spent annually on promoting unhealthy products.
The restrictions, hailed by ministers as “world‑leading,” came into force on 5 January. They prohibit advertising foods high in fat, salt and sugar before 9pm on television and ban such adverts entirely online. The government claims the measures will remove 7.2bn calories from children’s diets each year.
But research by the innovation agency Nesta suggests the policy has been weakened to the point of irrelevance. After eight years of consultations and four delays, the final version of the ban covers just £190m of the £2.4bn spent annually on food and drink advertising. As companies shift spending to areas not covered—such as outdoor billboards and their own social media channels—the effective impact could fall to just £20m, or barely 1% of total advertising spend.
Nesta’s analysis highlights multiple loopholes. Brand advertising remains permitted, allowing companies to promote their logos and slogans even if their products are unhealthy. Entire categories of food, including chocolate spreads and toffee‑coated nuts, are exempt. More than 60% of consumer spending on products high in fat, salt or sugar is not covered by the ban.
John Barber, director of Nesta’s healthy life mission, described the policy as a “paper tiger.” He said: “Partly due to pressure from the industry, these delays and adjustments mean that the restrictions intended to keep us healthy are operating at a fraction of their potential. This policy is at risk of being a paper tiger.”
Nutrition experts have reacted with dismay. Dr Kawther Hashem of Action on Sugar said: “It is shocking that after nearly a decade of promises, eight consultations, four delays and constant lobbying, the UK could be left with unhealthy food advertising rules that affect as little as 1% of ad spend. While 1% of total ad spend is still a substantial amount in absolute terms, it falls far short of the bold action needed to truly protect children from relentless unhealthy food marketing.”
Campaigners argue that children remain surrounded by unhealthy food advertising every day, undermining efforts to tackle obesity. Studies show even brief exposure to junk food adverts increases consumption among young people.
The findings echo warnings from England’s chief medical officer, Prof Chris Whitty, who recently criticised the influence of “very strong lobbyists” in industries such as food. He said successive governments had been deterred from adopting effective public health policies by media portrayals of such measures as “nanny state.”
Whitty argued that lobbying tactics have slowed progress on obesity, despite evidence that restrictions on advertising are cheap, popular and effective.
Food companies have already begun shifting marketing budgets to areas not covered by the ban. Outdoor advertising, sponsorships and influencer campaigns on social media remain unrestricted. Campaigners say this undermines the policy’s intent, as children are still exposed to unhealthy food promotion in everyday environments.
D’Arcy Williams, chief executive of the youth campaign group Bite Back, said: “Junk food companies are as incredibly adept as they are sinister at finding loopholes, shifting their marketing into places where the rules don’t apply, while young people continue to be surrounded by unhealthy food advertising every day.”
The Department of Health and Social Care insists the policy is already delivering results. A spokesperson said: “We’re delivering on our pledge to restrict junk food advertising and are already seeing change—with up to 7.2bn calories set to be removed from UK children’s diets each year as a result. These restrictions are part of a wider package of action under our 10‑year health plan, including limiting volume price promotions on less healthy foods and introducing mandatory reporting on healthy food sales. We’re committed to monitoring the impact of these measures and expect industry to continue to adapt.”
The controversy reflects broader tensions in UK health policy: balancing public health priorities with business interests. While ministers argue the ban is a step forward, experts say it is far weaker than originally promised.
Campaigners are calling for stronger measures, including closing loopholes, banning brand advertising of unhealthy products, and extending restrictions to outdoor and sponsorship advertising. Without such steps, they warn, the UK risks missing its targets on childhood obesity.
The junk food ad ban was intended to be a landmark policy to protect children’s health. Instead, experts say it has been watered down to the point of ineffectiveness. With only 1% of advertising spend affected, the policy may prove symbolic rather than transformative.
As obesity rates continue to rise, the debate over the balance between public health and corporate influence is set to intensify. For campaigners, the message is clear: without stronger action, the UK will remain surrounded by junk food advertising—and children will continue to pay the price.



























































































