It's all about the sausage! Federal Court rules: The pellet no longer counts

Published on: May 09, 2025Categories: LegalReading time: 2 min.
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Nora Wölflick writes about interesting, current topics for the Love & Law Blog at Recht 24/7.

No more cheating sausages

What sounds like an absurd debate directly affects millions of consumers: how much sausage is really in the sausage? The Federal Administrative Court has now made a final decision - and the ruling is a tough one: inedible parts such as sausage skin, twine or metal clips may no longer be listed as part of the sales weight. In other words, only what you can actually eat may be listed on the packaging in future.

A real victory for anyone who has ever been annoyed by empty promises on the packaging. The consumer advice centers are rejoicing, the butcher's trade is trembling - and a new wind is blowing around the counter of the sausage industry.

The sausage that broke the camel's back

The story begins in 2019 in North Rhine-Westphalia. The Weights and Measures Office checks the specifications of a sausage manufacturer from the Warendorf district. The packet said: 130 grams. The contents: almost two to three grams less - because the pellet was also weighed. Consequence: sales ban.

The manufacturer sued, initially lost, but then surprisingly won before the Higher Administrative Court. Reasoning: The sausage casing was a "component of the product". The Weights and Measures Office did not like this - so the case went all the way to Leipzig, to the Federal Administrative Court.

And the decision was clear: what is not edible does not count. Period.

The effects: Who needs to change what now?

Consumer advocates celebrate the ruling as overdue. "Packaging material should not be part of the filling quantity," says Luise Hoffmann from the Thuringia consumer advice center. It's finally about "honest information" - just as people expect it.

The Federal Association of German Sausage & Ham Producers is relaxed about this: For pre-packaged products, implementation is "no problem". Recalculate the weight, adjust the labels - done. It's more complicated for traditional butchers. What about sausages that are sold fresh at the counter?

The situation here is still unclear. Thomas Trettwer from the German Butchers' Association warns that the ruling could also apply to craft businesses. Should this happen, he calls it "unworldly, but feasible". Translated, this means: annoying, but feasible.

Wurstgate is real - and long overdue

When manufacturers cheat with the sausage casing, it is nothing more than a hidden price increase. Anyone who buys 130 grams wants to be able to eat 130 grams - and not pay for two grams of plastic or string. The decision is a signal: an end to legalized packaging deception.

The fact that some butchers now dismiss this as "unworldly" only shows one thing: anyone who has worked with loopholes for decades will quickly find real transparency uncomfortable. Our suggestion: less complaining, more honesty - even at the sausage counter.

Get legal advice to understand the new regulations for the food industry. Make an appointment now and stay informed!

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