One in 5 restaurant calorie listings is off (2024)

One in 5 restaurant calorie listings is off (1)

Are fast food calorie counts accurate?

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Underestimated foods in study came from several restaurant chains
  • On average, the calorie counts were accurate
  • Some websites say, "Menu items are hand-prepared and caloric values may vary"

RELATED TOPICS

  • Diet and Nutrition
  • Olive Garden Italian Restaurants
  • Outback Steakhouse Inc.
  • Tufts University
  • Boston Market Corporation

(CNN) -- You think you're being smart when, in an effort to eat more healthfully, you check a restaurant's website to see how many calories are in a dish you plan to order.

It turns out perhaps that effort isn't worth as much as you think. A new study by Tufts University nutrition researchers shows nearly one out of five restaurant dishes has at least 100 more calories than what a restaurant states on its website.

The underestimated foods came from several restaurant chains, including Chipotle Mexican Grill, Olive Garden, Boston Market and Outback Steakhouse.

Time.com: Group identifies worst menu choices

"I think restaurants have a lot to answer for here," said Susan Roberts, senior author of the paper published in this week's Journal of the American Medical Association.

The study looked at 269 food items at 42 fast-food and sit-down restaurants in Massachusetts, Arkansas and Indiana between January and June 2010. Lead author Lorien Urban, then a Tufts graduate student, and others purchased the foods without telling the restaurants they were for a study. They brought the foods to the lab at Tufts, analyzed the calories and then compared them with the calories listed at that time on the restaurants' websites.

On average, the calorie counts were accurate. However, the lab analysis showed that 19% of the foods tested had 100 or more calories in excess of what was on the website.

"One food had more than 1,000 calories more than it was supposed to," Roberts said, referring to a side order of chips and salsa at On the Border Mexican Grill & Cantina. "It was just shocking."

Sit-down restaurants were more likely to have inaccurate readings. Roberts said she thinks this is because individual workers have some leeway in how they prepare the foods, whereas the process is more automated in fast food restaurants.

In fact, several restaurants have caveats such as the one on the Outback Steakhouse website, which states that "menu items are hand-prepared and caloric values may vary from the stated amount."

A new federal law will require calories to be stated on menus at large chain restaurants in the next year. Due to this new rule, the National Restaurant Association said, "Many restaurant chains are looking at tighter kitchen quality control standards."

The Tufts researchers looked at information on the restaurants' websites, which listed the number of calories absorbed by the body, which is different from the total number of calories in a dish. Using information from the restaurants' websites, the researchers estimated the total number of calories in the food and then tested the food in the lab and made a comparison.

According to the Tufts lab analysis, Chipotle's burrito bowl with rice, black beans, peppers, onions, lettuce, green tomatillo salsa and cheese had 703 total calories -- 249 more than what was expected based on information from the restaurant's website.

In a statement, Chipotle acknowledged there could be calorie differences between what's posted on its website and what's served to customers because of "the seasonality of ingredients, adherence to recipes, and cooking from scratch."

At Olive Garden, Tufts found the chicken and gnocchi soup had 529 calories, which was 246 more than what would be expected based on the restaurant's website.

Olive Garden told CNN the numbers on its website "are as accurate as they can be for dishes that are individually crafted by hand."

At Boston Market, three pieces of dark meat chicken (two drumsticks and a thigh) had 572 calories, according to the lab analysis -- 215 calories more than what would be expected from the restaurant's nutrition information. Boston Market did not respond to CNN's request for comment.

Some foods with the biggest discrepancies were lower-calorie items such as salads, which dieters would be more likely to choose. For example, the Tufts lab analysis showed the classic blue cheese wedge side salad at Outback Steakhouse contained 1,035 calories -- 659 calories more than what would be expected based on what was on the restaurant's website.

Joe Kadow, executive vice president of OSI Restaurant partners, which owns Outback Steakhouse, said he suspected the Tufts researchers tested an entrée-size salad rather than a side salad.

Urban said she's sure she ordered the side salad.

"Looking at it, I think the issue is they put on a lot of dressing -- more than they normally put," she added.

Roberts, author of "The 'I' Diet," said these discrepancies help explain why some people in her diet groups have had trouble losing weight even when they used a restaurant's website to select lower calorie dishes.

"If you have 100 calories more than you think (every day), that's something like 10 or 15 pounds of extra weight you gain over the course of the year," she said.

She advises dieters to order items such as dressing, cheese and sauce on the side, so they can have better control over calories.

CNN's Aaron Cooper and Sabriya Rice contributed to this report.

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One in 5 restaurant calorie listings is off (2024)

FAQs

How accurate are the calories on restaurant menus? ›

"We found that 20 percent of the foods we tested had 100 calories or more over what was stated on the menu," Lorien Urban, a postdoctoral associate in the energy metabolism lab at Tufts University and first author of the study, told ABC News. "We would consider that to be a considerable amount."

How accurate are calorie listings? ›

Nutrition labels can be inaccurate by up to 20% when it comes to listing calories, according to the FDA. This can be frustrating, but experts say it probably won't ruin an otherwise healthy diet. Sticking to whole, unprocessed foods can be a helpful strategy to avoid surprise calories in processed foods.

What is the law regarding calories on a menu? ›

Calorie count laws are a type of law that require restaurants (typically only larger restaurant chains) to post food energy and nutritional information on the food served on menus. Studies of consumer behavior have shown that for some fast-food chains consumers reduce calorie consumption but at other chains do not.

How to find out calories at a restaurant? ›

Use calorie counts on menus.

Having said that, some smaller restaurants will display their calorie counts online on their menu, so it's worth doing a little bit of pre-planning, and checking their website before you dine in so you know how many calories you'll likely be consuming later on.

Can I trust restaurant calories? ›

Bottom line. Nutrition numbers from chain restaurants were generally accurate in our tests. But watch out: The Cheesecake Factory's 36-ounce (more than 2 pounds) meatloaf dinner had up to 2,016 calories (the maximum number most people should have in a day) and up to 132 grams of fat (about twice as much).

Why are people against calories on menus? ›

Calories are not an indicator of nutrition

Putting calories on restaurant menus equates health with caloric consumption. This is a dangerous practice, as many people already falsely conflate thinness with health. Consuming a high number of calories doesn't make a person unhealthy.

Do restaurants under report calories? ›

The calorie count on restaurant menus is no less and no more accurate than the calorie counts on charts that can be purchased or downloaded from the Internet. That is, they give a rough estimate, but they aren't accurate.

What is the FDA regulation for calories? ›

FDA has finalized two rules requiring that calorie information be listed on menus and menu boards in chain restaurants and similar retail food establishments and vending machines. Americans eat and drink about one-third of their calories away from home.

Do restaurants have to tell you how many calories? ›

A regulation enacted in May of this year (2018) requires calorie labeling for restaurants and similar retail food establishments in the United States that are part of a chain of 20 or more locations. It covers vending machines as well.

What is the average calorie count for a restaurant meal? ›

Meals from non–chain restaurants contained 1,205±465 kcal energy, which is ~55% of the typical daily energy requirement of 2,000 kcal/day for an adult woman and ~44% of the typical daily energy requirement of 2,500 kcal/day for an adult man after accounting for typical energy losses in digestion.

Should calories be included in restaurant menus? ›

Labelling and displaying the calorie count of dishes on menu cards is mandatory as per The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India's (FSSAI) 2020 regulations. If you are someone who closely watches their daily calorie intake or is allergic to dairy or nuts, eating out can be quite inconvenient sometimes.

Why are restaurant meals so high in calories? ›

Restaurants tend to use more oils and fats, more sugar, and more salt in their food preparation. The reason is simple: if the food is yummy, you'll come back! But that tends to add up to a lot of extra calories you weren't counting on.

Are Applebee's calories accurate? ›

While we are committed to providing as accurate nutritional information as possible, there may be differences between the actual nutritional content of your freshly prepared menu item and the nutritional values provided in this document.

Is restaurant food higher in calories? ›

Restaurants tend to use more oils and fats, more sugar, and more salt in their food preparation. The reason is simple: if the food is yummy, you'll come back! But that tends to add up to a lot of extra calories you weren't counting on.

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