The news: The 2025-2030 US dietary guidelines revive the classic food pyramid (which was adopted in 1992 but phased out in 2011). The design is now inverted, giving greater prominence to meat and dairy at the wider top, while whole grains now occupy the smaller base.
- New recommendations call for three daily servings of full-fat dairy, replacing previous advice that favored low-fat or fat-free options.
- Protein recommendations are now 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight, compared with the 0.8 grams advised previously. For a 150-pound person, that translates to an increase from about 54 grams to a range of about 82 to 109 grams.
- Fruits and vegetables maintain their status as daily staples, with targets of three servings of vegetables and two servings of fruit.
- As part of the new guidance, the government has declared a "war on added sugar," advising zero added sugar for children under 10 and a major crackdown on highly processed foods.
- It also eliminates the previous suggested limit on alcoholic drinks of 1 to 2 per day, and simply recommends drinking less alcohol.
Why it matters: The new guidelines arrive amidst a broad consensus as medical professionals and parents alike demand a pivot away from processed foods.
Implications for healthcare providers and consumers: The revised dietary guidelines create new opportunities for healthcare providers to engage more in diet and nutrition conversations with patients.
While the AMA supports food-first prevention of chronic health conditions, physicians require more training to translate this guidance into actionable advice. Only 32% of healthcare providers say they had excellent or good nutrition education as part of their medical schooling, and three-quarters (74%) only occasionally learn about nutrition through continuing medical education, per a Sermo survey of global healthcare professionals in June.
For consumers, the mixed messaging may add to confusion about proper nutrition. The new guidance changes from prioritizing low-fat dairy to full-fat and fewer whole grains in conjunction with looser alcohol guidance and stricter limits on sugar will add even more pressure for doctors to get up to speed so they can confidently explain what the changes mean for families’ everyday food choices.