Swiss authorities and 21 companies have agreed to reduce sugar content in cereals, yoghurts and drinks by up to 10% by 2028, marking a significant step in public health policy.

"Yoghurts, serums, milk drinks, breakfast cereals and soft drinks now contain significantly less sugar than they did ten years ago."
"The interior ministry said it was pleased with progress."
The era of unchecked sweetness in Swiss supermarkets is officially ending. In a decisive move that prioritizes public health over corporate hesitation, Swiss authorities and 21 major companies have locked arms to slash sugar content across the board. This isn't a vague promise; it is a binding renewal of the Milan Declaration, signed in Bern this Thursday, setting a hard deadline of 2028. The message from the capital is crystal clear: the Swiss diet is undergoing a mandatory recalibration.
By renewing this pact, the government and the private sector are acknowledging a critical realityâvoluntary measures must have teeth. The coalition, which includes industry heavyweights, has committed to aggressively reformulating products that are staples on Swiss breakfast tables. This is a direct intervention into the daily lives of millions, aiming to curb the silent health crisis fueled by excessive sugar consumption. The clock is now ticking for food scientists and manufacturers to overhaul their recipes before the 2028 cutoff.
The new targets are precise, ambitious, and non-negotiable. Manufacturers must slash added sugar by a staggering 10% in breakfast cereals, milk-based drinks, and soft drinks. This is a massive logistical undertaking for the industry, requiring a complete re-engineering of flavor profiles that consumers have grown accustomed to. For yoghurts, the bar is set at a critical 5% reduction, a figure thatâwhile lowerâpresents its own unique chemical challenges in maintaining texture and taste.
These percentages represent tons of sugar being removed from the national supply chain. The scope covers everything from the morning 'serums' and milk drinks to the sodas consumed on the go. By explicitly targeting these high-consumption categories, the initiative strikes at the heart of hidden sugar intake. The 10% threshold serves as a bold benchmark, signaling that minor tweaks are no longer sufficient. The industry must now innovate or risk falling behind the new national standard for health.
This latest push is not a sudden impulse but the acceleration of a strategy initiated ten years ago. Since the Milan Declaration was first drawn up in 2015, the landscape of Swiss food production has shifted dramatically. The Interior Ministry reports that yoghurts and breakfast cereals today already contain significantly less sugar than they did a decade ago, proving that industrial reformulation is not only possible but effective.
The government's satisfaction with this progress has emboldened them to push further. The renewal of the declaration is a vote of confidence in the strategy of public-private partnership. However, it also serves as a warning against complacency. While the past ten years have laid the groundwork, the next three years to 2028 demand an even faster pace of change. The 'significant' reductions achieved so far are merely the baseline for the aggressive targets now in play.
While the war on sugar gains momentum, a second front has opened where resistance remains fierce: salt. The Interior Ministry is aggressively seeking a parallel agreement to lower salt content in processed foods, but the industry's response has been lukewarm at best. In a stark contrast to the 21-company coalition fighting sugar, only one major playerâAldi Switzerlandâis currently prepared to support the government's approach on salt reduction.
This isolation highlights a critical fracture in the industry's health commitments. While sugar reduction has become a marketable badge of honor, salt reduction remains a stumbling block, likely due to its essential role in preservation and flavor intensity. The government's struggle to rally support beyond Aldi suggests a looming regulatory battle. If voluntary measures fail to gain traction, the Swiss authorities may eventually be forced to abandon the handshake approach for the iron fist of legislation.