What is a NOVA score?
The NOVA score is a classification number from 1 to 4 that tells you how industrially processed a food is. It was developed by nutrition researcher Carlos Monteiro and his team at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, first published in 2009 and formalized in a 2016 paper in Public Health Nutrition.
The key idea: instead of asking "how many calories or grams of fat does this food have," NOVA asks "what was done to this food during manufacturing?" That turns out to matter for how your body handles it. A food can have a decent nutrition label and still be ultra-processed. The label does not capture what NOVA captures.
NOVA is not a nutrient score. It does not rate fat, fiber, or sugar content. It classifies the nature of the processing. A plain boiled egg and a protein isolate shake can both have similar protein content. NOVA puts the egg in Group 1 and the shake in Group 4.
For the research behind NOVA and why it predicts health outcomes differently from nutrient profiles, see Ultra-Processed Foods Explained. To dive deeper into the NOVA classification system itself, check out our comprehensive guide.
| Group | What it is | Quick examples |
|---|---|---|
| NOVA 1 | Unprocessed or minimally processed foods | Apples, eggs, oats, plain milk, dried lentils |
| NOVA 2 | Culinary ingredients | Olive oil, salt, sugar, butter, flour |
| NOVA 3 | Processed foods | Canned tomatoes, cheddar cheese, sourdough bread, cured ham |
| NOVA 4 | Ultra-processed industrial formulations | Soda, instant noodles, packaged cookies, most breakfast cereals |
Which foods are NOVA Group 1 (unprocessed and minimally processed)?
Which foods are NOVA Group 2 (culinary ingredients)?
Which foods are NOVA Group 3 (processed foods)?
Which foods are NOVA Group 4 (ultra-processed foods)?
Which packaged breads are NOVA 4?
Most packaged bread in supermarkets is NOVA 4, regardless of whether the grain is whole wheat or white. The processing grade depends on the ingredient list, not the grain type. A loaf marketed as "whole grain" or "multigrain" is still Group 4 if it contains dough conditioners and emulsifiers.
Three specific ingredients are the clearest NOVA 4 signals in bread:
DATEM (diacetyl tartaric acid esters of mono- and diglycerides): a dough conditioner that strengthens gluten structure without the time-intensive mixing that traditional bread requires. No home baker uses it. If DATEM appears, the bread is NOVA 4.
Azodicarbonamide: a bleaching and dough-maturing agent approved in the United States but banned in the European Union and Canada. Its presence alone places a bread in Group 4.
Mono- and diglycerides or soy lecithin: emulsifiers added to improve crumb softness and extend shelf life. Both are industrial processing aids without a home-kitchen equivalent.
Common NOVA 4 packaged breads: Wonder Bread, Pepperidge Farm Whole Grain, Nature's Own Honey Wheat, most supermarket-brand hamburger buns, most packaged English muffins, most store-brand bagels.
Breads that typically land in NOVA 3: sourdough from an artisan bakery (flour, water, salt, starter), traditional baguette (flour, water, yeast, salt), plain pita with no additives.
The practical test: read the ingredient list, not the front of the bag. "Whole grain" tells you about fiber. It does not tell you about industrial processing.
Are plant-based meat alternatives NOVA 4?
Yes, almost all of them. Products like Impossible Burger, Beyond Meat burger patties, and most commercial veggie burgers are NOVA 4. They contain multiple ingredients that define Group 4: pea protein isolate, soy protein concentrate, methylcellulose (a synthetic binder), and flavor compounds designed to approximate the taste of animal meat.
This surprises people who buy plant-based products for health reasons. NOVA does not rate environmental impact or animal welfare. It rates the industrial nature of processing. A product assembled from extracted and reconstructed protein fractions, with added binders, thickeners, and flavors, is Group 4 by definition, regardless of whether the source was an animal or a legume.
Monteiro et al., writing in Public Health Nutrition in 2019, identified the distinguishing feature of Group 4 as the use of substances derived from food processing combined with additives that have no culinary use. Pea protein isolate and methylcellulose both meet that definition. (Monteiro CA et al., 2019)
A few plant-based products do land in NOVA 3: plain tempeh (soybeans, water, starter culture), firm tofu made with just soybeans and a mineral coagulant, and shelled edamame. These use minimal processing with recognizable ingredients and no industrial additives.
If you are buying plant-based for personal health rather than environmental reasons, the ingredient list is the deciding factor. Fewer than five ingredients with no protein isolates or binders suggests NOVA 3. A long list with protein concentrates and binders is almost certainly Group 4.
Is flavored yogurt NOVA 4 even when it's low-fat?
Most flavored yogurts are NOVA 4, and low-fat versions often have a worse ingredient list than full-fat ones. When fat is removed, the texture suffers. Manufacturers add modified starches, pectin, gelatin, or carrageenan to restore mouthfeel. The result is a product with a longer and more industrial ingredient list than the version with fat left in.
Yoplait original strawberry lists modified corn starch, carmine (a color agent), and natural flavor alongside fruit. Dannon fruit-on-the-bottom lists modified corn starch and natural flavor. Most probiotic drinkable yogurts marketed as health snacks list multiple stabilizers.
The confusion is understandable. Flavored yogurt carries real nutritional merits: live cultures, calcium, protein. These claims are not wrong. But NOVA does not rate nutrients. It rates the nature of processing. A yogurt with three stabilizers, a color agent, and reconstructed fruit flavor is a different product from plain yogurt with a spoonful of real fruit stirred in, even if their macronutrient panels look similar.
What to look for:
Likely NOVA 3: milk (or skim milk), live active cultures, possibly real fruit or honey. No stabilizers, no "natural flavor" reconstruction agents.
Likely NOVA 4: modified corn starch, carrageenan, gelatin, "natural flavor" listed after fruit (signals flavor was partially reconstructed), added color agents, high-fructose corn syrup.
The simplest rule: if the ingredient list goes beyond milk, cultures, and possibly fruit, read every remaining ingredient. One stabilizer can push an otherwise simple product to Group 4.
What are the NOVA 4 ingredients to look for on a label?
No food in a grocery store is labeled with its NOVA group. The classification requires reading the ingredient list and applying the NOVA criteria yourself. Here is how to do it in under 30 seconds.
Step 1: Look at ingredient count. If a food has more than 5 ingredients, read each one. If it has 1 to 3 ingredients you recognize from a kitchen, it is probably Group 1 or 3. If the list is long and unfamiliar, keep reading.
Step 2: Flag industrial additives. These specific ingredients almost always indicate Group 4 because they are not used in home cooking:
- Emulsifiers: soy lecithin, mono- and diglycerides, carrageenan, DATEM, polysorbate 80, carboxymethylcellulose
- Modified starches: modified corn starch, modified tapioca starch, hydroxypropyl distarch phosphate
- Protein extracts: soy protein isolate, whey protein concentrate, hydrolyzed protein, casein
- Non-sugar sweeteners: aspartame, sucralose, acesulfame potassium, stevia extract in processed form
- Flavor compounds: "natural flavor" when used to reconstruct taste lost in processing, artificial flavors, yeast extract as a flavor enhancer
- Synthetic colorings: Red 40, Yellow 5, Blue 1 and similar FD&C dyes
- Hydrogenated and interesterified fats: partially hydrogenated oils, interesterified soybean oil
- Dough conditioners: DATEM, azodicarbonamide, ascorbic acid used as a conditioner (rather than as vitamin C)
Step 3: Ask the home-kitchen test. Could you make this at home using ingredients from Groups 1 and 2? If a recipe requires soy lecithin or carrageenan, you cannot buy those at a regular grocery store. That tells you something.
For a complete guide to reading an ingredient label, see Food Additives to Avoid: A Practical Reference, which covers the specific additives that push foods into Group 4 in more detail.
If you want to skip the label-reading entirely, the NoJunk app scans a barcode or takes a photo of any ingredient list and flags Group 4 signals automatically.
Is a high NOVA score always bad for you?
A NOVA score of 4 is the only group consistently linked to harm in research. Groups 1 through 3 are not associated with the health outcomes that Group 4 is.
That said, NOVA is a classification system, not a health verdict on individual foods. A few things worth understanding about its limits:
NOVA 4 is not uniform. A can of diet cola and a commercial protein shake are both Group 4. The specific harms may differ, and the research is clearest for overall dietary patterns, not single foods eaten occasionally. Eating one protein bar does not undo a diet otherwise built on Groups 1 through 3.
Dose and frequency matter. Large observational studies like NutriNet-Sante (France) and the UK Biobank show associations between high NOVA 4 dietary share and worse health outcomes. The risk increases as ultra-processed food makes up a larger proportion of total intake, not from occasional exposure.
NOVA does not replace nutrition labels. Some Group 3 foods are high in sodium (cured meats, most canned products). Some Group 1 foods are energy-dense (avocados, nuts). NOVA and nutrition information answer different questions. Use both.
NOVA is useful as a heuristic, not a law. The practical value is in shifting dietary patterns toward Groups 1 through 3 as a default. Not in achieving a perfect score or never eating anything from Group 4.
For the research on NOVA 4 specifically (including the Hall et al. controlled trial showing 500 extra calories per day on an ultra-processed diet), see Ultra-Processed Foods Explained.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about this ingredient.
What does a NOVA score of 4 mean?
NOVA 4 means a food is an ultra-processed industrial formulation. It typically has five or more ingredients including additives like emulsifiers, artificial flavors, sweeteners, hydrogenated oils, or protein isolates that you would not find in a home kitchen. Examples: soda, instant noodles, packaged cookies, most breakfast cereals, frozen pizza, chicken nuggets. A 2019 NIH controlled trial found people eating a Group 4-heavy diet consumed about 500 more calories per day compared to a minimally processed diet, even when both were matched for macronutrients.
Is bread NOVA 1, NOVA 3, or NOVA 4?
It depends on how the bread was made. Bread from a bakery using flour, water, yeast, and salt is NOVA 3. Sourdough from an artisan baker (flour, water, salt, starter) is NOVA 3. Most packaged supermarket bread is NOVA 4. Check the label for dough conditioners (DATEM, azodicarbonamide), emulsifiers (mono- and diglycerides, soy lecithin), added sweeteners, and preservatives. If these appear, the bread is Group 4 regardless of whether the grain is whole wheat or white.
Are eggs always NOVA 1?
Whole eggs in the shell are always NOVA 1 (unprocessed). Plain fresh eggs are one of the clearest examples of Group 1. Liquid egg whites in a carton with added preservatives or stabilizers move into NOVA 4. Flavored egg products or egg-based scrambles with added seasoning and anti-caking agents are also NOVA 4. The container and the ingredient list tell you more than the product name.
What is the difference between NOVA 3 and NOVA 4?
NOVA 3 foods are recognizable versions of whole foods preserved using simple methods: canning, salting, fermenting. Canned chickpeas (chickpeas, water, salt) are NOVA 3. Aged cheddar (milk, cultures, salt, rennet) is NOVA 3. Sourdough bread is NOVA 3. NOVA 4 foods are industrial reconstructions made from extracted and modified ingredients combined with additives you would not use at home. If you could reasonably make this at home from ingredients in a standard grocery store using standard cooking methods, it is probably Group 3. If it requires an emulsifier, protein isolate, or flavor compound from a manufacturing supplier, it is Group 4.
Is the NOVA classification used by any government?
Yes. Brazil and Uruguay formally reference NOVA in their national dietary guidelines. Ecuador's dietary guidelines recommend avoiding ultra-processed foods, and Israel's 2019 nutritional recommendations advise preferring minimally processed foods over ultra-processed foods. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization uses it in global nutrition and food system reports. Several countries in Latin America and Europe have used it to inform front-of-pack labeling policy discussions. Canada and the United States have not formally adopted NOVA in dietary guidelines, but Health Canada's revised food guide (2019) moved away from the older food groups model toward minimally processed whole foods as a foundation, which reflects similar thinking without explicitly using the NOVA framework.