Serving Size
generalA standardized amount of food used for nutrition labeling.
Definition
A standardized amount of food used for nutrition labeling. Represents a typical portion, not a recommended amount. All nutrient values on the label are based on this serving size.
What Is a Serving Size?
A serving size is a standardized amount of food used as a reference unit on nutrition labels. In the United States, the FDA requires that serving sizes on Nutrition Facts labels reflect amounts customarily consumed at one eating occasion — not necessarily the amount recommended for health. This distinction is important: a serving size is a measurement tool, not a dietary recommendation.
The FDA updated serving size regulations in 2016 (effective 2020) to better reflect current eating patterns. For example, a serving of ice cream was changed from half a cup to two-thirds of a cup, and a single-serve beverage container (under 12 oz) must now list the entire container as one serving.
Common Serving Sizes
- Bread: 1 slice (approximately 28–43 g)
- Cooked pasta or rice: 1 cup (approximately 140–186 g)
- Ready-to-eat cereal: typically 3/4–1 cup (varies by density)
- Milk or juice: 1 cup (240 mL)
- Meat, poultry, or fish: 3 oz (85 g)
- Salad greens: 2.5 oz (70 g)
Why Serving Size Accuracy Matters
Misreading serving sizes is one of the most common sources of error in dietary tracking. A bag of chips labeled "140 calories per serving" may contain 3.5 servings, meaning the full bag contains 490 calories. Comparing foods accurately requires using the same serving size basis — typically per 100 g — rather than the label serving, which varies by product. Digital kitchen scales improve accuracy significantly compared to volume measurements, particularly for calorie-dense foods like nuts, oils, and nut butters where small deviations meaningfully change calorie totals.