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Forkin

Food additive reference

Antioxidants (E-numbers)

Antioxidants (E300–E399, alongside acidity regulators) stop fats and oils going rancid and help protect colour. They include vitamin C (E300), tocopherols (E306–E309) and synthetic ones like BHA (E320) and BHT (E321).

37 additives in this class, grouped by regulatory level. Informational only — not medical or dietary advice; see the methodology.

Questions about antioxidants

What are antioxidants?
Antioxidants are food additives that act as antioxidant — used to stop fats and oils going rancid and to protect colour. In the EU they are identified by E-numbers and approved under Regulation (EC) No 1333/2008.
Which E-numbers are antioxidants?
Forkin tracks 37 antioxidants — for example Glucose oxidase (E1102), Calcium Disulphite (E225), Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C) (E300), Sodium Ascorbate (E301). The full list with each one's regulatory level is on this page.
Are antioxidants vegan?
It depends on the individual additive and its source — many can be produced from plant, mineral or animal-derived raw materials, and the label rarely says which. The Forkin app shows verified vegan and vegetarian status per product.

Check what's in your food with Forkin

Scan any barcode and Forkin flags the antioxidants and other additives a product contains, with each one's regulatory level. See how Forkin compares to other scanners or view pricing.

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