Quick Answer: No, you do not need FDA approval to sell tea online in the US. Tea is regulated as a food product, not a drug, and does not require pre-market approval. However, you must comply with FDA food labelling requirements, use only permitted food ingredients, and avoid making any medical claims. Rules differ in the UK, EU, and India — this guide covers all four markets.
Key Takeaways
- Tea is a food product in all major markets and does not require pre-market FDA (or equivalent) approval.
- US tea sellers must comply with FDA food labelling rules: ingredient list, net weight, allergen statements, and manufacturer/distributor details.
- Health claims are tightly regulated. “Supports relaxation” is permitted. “Treats anxiety” is not.
- Herbal teas with strong therapeutic claims may cross into supplement or drug territory — claim language is the key risk factor.
- UK, EU, and India each have their own food labelling frameworks that apply if you ship to those markets.
United States: What the FDA Requires for Tea Sellers
Is FDA approval required to sell tea online in the US?
No. Tea does not require pre-market approval from the US Food and Drug Administration. The FDA regulates tea as a food product under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act), which means tea must be safe to eat and labelled correctly — not approved in advance.Do I need to register with the FDA as a tea seller?
If you operate as a food facility (a business that manufactures, processes, packs, or holds food), you may be required to register with the FDA under the Bioterrorism Act. However, the FDA generally exempts facilities that hold food for personal consumption and certain small-scale operations.If you are running a dropshipping tea brand (you do not hold, pack, or process the tea yourself), the food facility registration requirement typically applies to your supplier, not to you as the brand owner. Confirm this with your supplier and, if in doubt, consult a food regulatory specialist.What labelling is required for tea sold in the US?
US food labelling requirements for tea include:- Product name: A clear statement of what the product is.
- Ingredient list: All ingredients listed in descending order of predominance by weight.
- Net quantity of contents: Weight or volume of product in the package (e.g., 50g or 1.76 oz).
- Name and address of manufacturer, packer, or distributor: This can be your brand’s name and address.
- Allergen statements: For any of the nine major allergens (milk, eggs, fish, shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, soybeans, sesame).
- Nutritional information: Required for most packaged foods. Small businesses with low annual revenue may qualify for an exemption — check the FDA’s Nutrition Facts label exemption criteria.
What claim language is permitted for tea in the US?
This is where most tea brand founders encounter compliance risk. The FDA draws a sharp line between food claims and drug claims.| Approved Language | Prohibited Language |
|---|---|
| Supports relaxation | Treats anxiety |
| Promotes a calming routine | Cures insomnia |
| Helps maintain digestive wellness | Treats irritable bowel syndrome |
| Traditionally associated with stress relief | Lowers cortisol |
| Supports hydration habits | Reverses dehydration |
| Part of a healthy daily routine | Prevents cancer |
United Kingdom: What Food Standards Agency (FSA) Requires
In the UK, tea sold to consumers is regulated under UK food law, overseen by the Food Standards Agency (FSA). Since Brexit, UK food law operates independently of EU regulations, though many requirements are similar.Labelling requirements for tea sold in the UK:
- Product name and description
- Ingredient list (descending order by weight)
- Net quantity
- Best before or use by date
- Name and address of business (UK or EU address for products sold in the UK)
- Country of origin (particularly relevant for single-origin teas)
- Allergen information (14 major allergens listed in UK food law must be declared)
- Storage instructions and any necessary preparation instructions
European Union: EU Food Law
If you ship tea to EU countries (France, Germany, Netherlands, Scandinavia, etc.), EU food labelling rules apply. The key regulation is EU Food Information Regulation No. 1169/2011.Key EU labelling requirements:
- Mandatory food information in an official EU language of the destination country
- Ingredient list and allergen highlighting (the 14 major EU allergens)
- Net quantity
- Date of minimum durability (“best before”)
- Name and address of food business operator
- Country of origin for certain food categories
- Nutrition declaration (energy, fat, saturates, carbohydrate, sugars, protein, salt)
India: FSSAI for Tea Sellers
If you are selling tea within India or importing tea-based products into India, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is the relevant regulatory body.FSSAI requirements for tea sellers in India:
- FSSAI registration or licence: Any food business operator (FBO) in India must register with FSSAI. Small businesses (annual turnover below ₹12 lakh) require basic registration. Larger businesses require a state or central licence.
- Labelling under FSS (Labelling and Display) Regulations: Product name, ingredient list, nutritional information, net quantity, manufacturer details, FSSAI licence number, best before date, and batch number.
- Export compliance: India-based tea exporters must comply with the Tea Board of India’s export regulations in addition to FSSAI requirements.
The Claim Language Rule That Applies in Every Market
Regardless of which market you are selling in, one rule applies universally:Tea is food. Food cannot be marketed as medicine.If your product page, social media content, email, or packaging says the product treats, cures, prevents, or diagnoses any health condition, you are making an illegal drug claim in most markets worldwide. The specific enforcement body differs (FDA, MHRA, EFSA, FSSAI), but the principle is consistent.Use the approved language framework:- Supports [wellness outcome]
- Promotes [lifestyle habit]
- Traditionally associated with [benefit]
- Helps maintain [healthy function]
- Part of a [routine/ritual/lifestyle]
Frequently Asked Questions
Does selling herbal tea require different approvals than regular tea?
Herbal teas are generally regulated as food products, the same as traditional tea. The compliance risk for herbal teas is almost entirely in the claim language, not the approval status. If you market an herbal tea as a medical treatment, it may be reclassified as a drug by regulators. If you market it as a food or wellness product using approved language, it is treated as food.What if my tea contains ingredients that are also used in supplements?
Adaptogen-containing teas (ashwagandha, rhodiola, lion’s mane) sit in a grey area in some markets. In the US, these ingredients are generally permitted as food ingredients when used at appropriate levels. The risk, again, lies in the claims. “Ashwagandha sleep tea that reduces cortisol by 28%” is a problem. “Ashwagandha tea that supports your body’s natural stress response” is generally acceptable.Can I import tea from India and sell it in the US or UK?
Yes. Tea is one of India’s most significant export categories. Your tea must comply with import requirements in the destination country (US: FDA import screening; UK: FSA import rules; EU: EFSA import requirements), and your packaging must meet the destination market’s labelling standards before sale.Do I need a lawyer to review my tea label?
Not necessarily at launch stage. Understanding the core rules — food labelling requirements and prohibited claim language — and applying them consistently is within reach for a careful founder. As your business grows and your claims become more specific, a food regulatory consultant (less expensive than a lawyer, highly specialised) is worth the investment.Get Compliance Right From Day One
Compliance is not just risk management. It is a competitive advantage. Brands that build compliant product pages, packaging, and marketing from the start face fewer platform issues, fewer ad disapprovals, and fewer customer disputes.The Tea Brand Blueprint Kit includes a compliance module covering approved claim language, labelling requirements, and the compliance checklist used across 280+ tea and wellness brand launches — for the US, UK, EU, and India markets.Get the Tea Brand Blueprint — use code BLUEPRINT15 for 15% off →nReady to start your tea brand? Read our complete guide: How to Start a Tea Brand with Brand Sewa — or explore the Tea Brand Blueprint Kit ($149) to get started today.