EU Novel Food Status of Sacha Inchi: What Brands Need to Know
Published on May 18, 2026 · By Caleb Lim, Founder · Asia Eco Farm
The European Union Novel Food regulation is one of the most consequential compliance barriers for ingredient brands looking to expand into the EU's 450-million-consumer market. Unlike the US, where most plant-based food ingredients are self-affirmed GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe) and require no pre-market authorization, the EU requires a formal safety assessment and authorization before any ingredient that was not consumed to a significant degree in the EU before May 1997 can be sold as food or used in food supplements.
For Sacha Inchi, the regulatory situation is asymmetric: the oil is authorized, the protein powder is not. This creates a compliance trap that catches brands who assume "if the oil is approved, the protein must be too." It is not. This guide explains the regulation, what is and is not permitted, and how brands should adapt their EU formulation strategy.
What Is EU Novel Food Regulation?
Regulation (EU) 2015/2283 — the Novel Food Regulation — governs new foods in the EU. A "novel food" is defined as any food that was not consumed to a significant degree in the EU before 15 May 1997. Foods meeting this definition require authorization from the European Commission (via EFSA safety assessment) before they can be marketed in the EU. The authorized novel foods and their conditions of use are listed in the EU Novel Food Catalogue and the Union List.
The regulation applies to:
- Foods and food ingredients sold directly to consumers
- Food supplements (capsules, tablets, powders) sold in the EU
- Foods used as ingredients in composite food products sold in the EU
- Both domestic EU producers and importers bringing products into the EU
Critically, if a raw material is novel, using it as an ingredient in a finished product sold in the EU also requires the novel food authorization to be in place — the authorization is for the ingredient, not just for the standalone raw material.
Sacha Inchi Oil: Authorized
Sacha Inchi oil (from Plukenetia volubilis) is listed in the EU Union List of Novel Foods. The authorization permits its use as a food ingredient and in food supplements at specified maximum levels. The oil may be sold as a standalone supplement or used as a food ingredient across EU member states. Authorization applies regardless of geographic origin (Peru, Southeast Asia, or other regions).
The authorization for Sacha Inchi oil followed an EFSA (European Food Safety Authority) safety assessment that reviewed the oil's fatty acid composition, toxicological data, and history of use in non-EU markets. The assessment concluded that cold-pressed Sacha Inchi oil is safe for its intended uses at the authorized levels.
Key conditions of the authorization:
- The authorization covers cold-pressed oil from Plukenetia volubilis seeds
- Maximum use levels vary by food category (check current Union List for specific limits)
- Labelling must declare the presence of Sacha Inchi oil using its authorized name
- The oil must meet the specification parameters established during the authorization process
Sacha Inchi Protein Powder: Not Authorized
Sacha Inchi protein powder (defatted Sacha Inchi seed meal / protein concentrate) does not currently hold EU Novel Food authorization. It cannot legally be sold as a food ingredient, food supplement, or food component in the EU without an approved authorization. This applies regardless of the protein powder's origin or the certifications held by the supplier.
The distinction between oil and protein powder matters because they are processed differently from the same seed. The cold-pressing process that produces Sacha Inchi oil leaves behind a defatted seed cake that is further processed into protein powder. EFSA and the European Commission treat these as separate ingredients for Novel Food purposes — authorization for one does not automatically extend to the other.
As of the audit date (May 2026), no EU Novel Food authorization application for Sacha Inchi protein powder has reached the authorized status in the Union List. Brands should verify current status at the EFSA Novel Food Catalogue and the EU Novel Food Catalogue before making any commercial decisions.
What About Whole Seeds and Other Sacha Inchi Products?
| Sacha Inchi Product | EU Novel Food Status | EU Market |
|---|---|---|
| Cold-pressed Sacha Inchi oil | Authorized | Permitted |
| Sacha Inchi protein powder | Not authorized | Not permitted |
| Whole Sacha Inchi seeds (roasted/raw) | Not authorized | Not permitted |
| Sacha Inchi softgels (oil-filled) | Permitted (oil is authorized) | Permitted |
| Sacha Inchi flour (partial defatting) | Not clearly authorized — verify | Seek legal advice |
Practical Guidance for EU-Bound Brands
1. Oil-only EU products are straightforward
Brands formulating Sacha Inchi oil softgels, liquid supplements, functional oils, or cosmetics using Sacha Inchi oil as an ingredient can proceed for EU markets without Novel Food barriers. Ensure your supplier's Technical Data Sheet and Certificate of Analysis confirm the product is cold-pressed Sacha Inchi oil meeting the authorized specification.
2. Protein powder: use alternative plant proteins for EU formulations
For protein supplement brands selling in the EU, substitute Sacha Inchi protein with EU-authorized plant proteins — pea protein, brown rice protein, hemp protein, or soy protein are all fully permitted. You can maintain a Sacha Inchi brand positioning in EU-market marketing (highlighting the oil content, the sustainability story) while using compliant protein sources in the formulation.
3. Non-EU markets: no Novel Food barrier
The US (FDA), UK (ACNFP post-Brexit), Singapore (SFA), Malaysia (BKKM), Australia/NZ (FSANZ), Japan (MHLW), and South Korea do not apply the EU Novel Food framework. Sacha Inchi protein powder is a permitted food ingredient in all these markets and can be freely formulated and sold. Brands building global product lines can use Sacha Inchi protein across all non-EU SKUs while managing EU-specific formulations separately.
4. Monitor authorization progress
Novel Food authorization applications are publicly documented through EFSA's open-data system. If a market authorization application for Sacha Inchi protein powder is submitted and reaches the public consultation stage, it will appear in the EFSA Novel Food Catalogue. Brands with a long-term EU strategy should monitor this actively — if authorization is granted, the EU market opens immediately as a new revenue channel.
Market Access Summary by Region
| Market | Sacha Inchi Oil | Sacha Inchi Protein Powder |
|---|---|---|
| European Union (27 states) | Permitted (Novel Food authorized) | Not permitted (not authorized) |
| United States | Permitted | Permitted |
| United Kingdom | Permitted (retained EU authorization) | Check ACNFP status |
| Singapore | Permitted | Permitted |
| Malaysia | Permitted | Permitted |
| Australia / New Zealand | Permitted | Permitted |
| Japan | Permitted | Permitted (verify FOSHU if making health claims) |
| South Korea | Permitted | Permitted |
Note: This table is informational and reflects the regulatory situation as of May 2026. Regulations change. Always verify current status with qualified regulatory counsel in your target market before commercial launch.
Key Takeaway for Procurement Teams
When briefing a Sacha Inchi ingredient supplier for EU-market products, always specify the product form and intended use upfront. A supplier who confirms "yes, Sacha Inchi is Novel Food authorized in the EU" is technically correct — but only for oil. If your formulation includes protein powder and you are targeting EU consumers, you need an EU-compliant alternative for that component.
Asia Eco Farm supplies both Sacha Inchi oil (EU-authorized) and Sacha Inchi protein powder (non-EU markets only). Our team can help you structure multi-market formulations that leverage Sacha Inchi oil across all geographies while identifying compliant protein alternatives for your EU-specific SKUs. Contact our OEM team for a formulation consultation.
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