Global Issues: Warning Labels | Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
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Showing the truth, saving lives

Large, picture-based health warning labels on tobacco packages are an essential component of a national strategy to reduce tobacco use.

Tobacco companies depend on package design to build brand recognition and promote sales. Packaging establishes brand imagery that is often completely opposite to the realities and dangers associated with tobacco product use.

Control over tobacco packaging is critical to tobacco control efforts. Tobacco packs can effectively broadcast messages about the harmful impact of tobacco use.

Research shows that effective warning labels increase knowledge about risks associated with smoking and can influence future decisions about smoking. Large and pictorial health warning labels can motivate smokers to quit, discourage nonsmokers from starting, and keep ex-smokers from starting again.

Studies have also found that warning labels are most effective at communicating the health risks of tobacco use when they contain both pictures and words and are large and in color. Warning labels also must be rotated periodically to avoid over exposure.

Article 11 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) requires Parties to the treaty to adopt and implement large, clear, and rotating health warnings on all tobacco products within three years of FCTC ratification.

Health warnings on tobacco product packaging are critical to any effective tobacco control strategy. They increase public awareness of the serious health risks of tobacco use and help to ensure that the packaging tells the truth about the deadly product within.Showing the truth, saving lives: the case for pictorial health warnings, WHO 2009

Pictorial Health Warning Labels by Country/Jurisdiction by WHO Region

At least 126 countries/jurisdictions have finalized requirements for pictorial health warning labels printed on packages of cigarettes and, in some cases, other tobacco products (such as cigars, waterpipes, smokeless tobacco products, and loose tobacco).

AFRICA
Burkina Faso
Cameroon
Chad
Ethiopia
Gambia
Ghana
Kenya
Madagascar
Mauritius
Namibia
Nigeria
Senegal
Seychelles
Uganda

AMERICAS
Argentina
Barbados*
Bolivia
Brazil
Canada
Chile
Colombia
Costa Rica
Ecuador
El Salvador
Guyana*
Honduras
Jamaica
Mexico
Panama
Paraguay*
Peru
Saint Lucia*
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago*
Turks and Caicos Islands (UK)*
Uruguay
Venezuela

EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN 
Bahrain
Djibouti
Egypt
Iran
Jordan
Khartoum (Sudan)*
Kuwait
Oman
Pakistan
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates
Yemen

EUROPE
Armenia*
Austria*
Belarus*
Belgium
Bulgaria*
Croatia*
Cyprus*
Czech Republic*
Denmark
Estonia*
Finland*
France
Georgia*
Germany*
Greece*
Greenland (Denmark)*
Guernsey (UK)
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy*
Jersey (UK)
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Liechtenstein*
Lithuania*
Luxembourg*
Macedonia*
Malta
Moldova*
Montenegro*
Netherlands*
Norway
Poland*
Portugal*
Romania
Russia
Slovakia*
Slovenia*
Spain
Sweden*
Switzerland
Tajikistan*
Turkey
Turkmenistan*
Ukraine
United Kingdom

SOUTHEAST ASIA
Bangladesh
India
Indonesia
Maldives
Myanmar
Nepal
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Timor-Leste

WESTERN PACIFIC
Australia
Brunei Darussalam
Cambodia*
Cook Islands*
Fiji
Hong Kong, S.A.R. China
Lao PDR*
Macau, S.A.R. China
Malaysia
Mongolia
New Zealand
Philippines
Republic of Korea*
Samoa*
Singapore
Solomon Islands*
Vanuatu*
Vietnam

Notes
† This list is complete and correct to the best of our knowledge as of the date below.
‡ "Finalized" indicates that all requirements and specifications necessary for implementation have been developed and approved. For example: the images and accompanying text to be used; the size, color, and placement of the image and text to be printed on the package; and the number and rotation schedule of the warnings.
* Fact sheets in progress.

Reference - Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids Legal Website. Available at: www.tobaccocontrollaws.org

Last updated Aug. 2, 2021