Source: The WISEcode Standard v1.0, Foreword and Sections 4.1–4.2.
The short answer
No. Some processing is fine — even helpful. The WISEcode Standard exists precisely because lumping all processed food together is too blunt to be useful. What matters is the kind of processing and the specific ingredients used.
What the Standard actually says
The Foreword of the Standard makes the case directly: most current approaches "penalize all processing rather than evaluating the micro-level quality of ingredients." The Standard rejects "category-level condemnation" in favor of ingredient-level science.
That's why the system has five tiers — Minimal, Light, Moderate, Ultra, and Super-Ultra — instead of a single "processed" bucket. It lets you tell a simple canned bean apart from a neon-colored breakfast cereal.
What "Minimal" and "Light" look like
- Minimal (Score 0–3): Whole foods, simple culinary ingredients, and at most a couple of slightly processed components. Plain rolled oats, frozen vegetables, and canned beans with just beans, water, and salt all qualify.
- Light (Score 4–6): Typically up to twelve ingredients with no more than two additives; some added sugar may be present. A basic whole-grain bread fits here.
These tiers exist because some processing is genuinely helpful — canning, freezing, pasteurizing, fortifying with vitamins, or adding minimal amounts of standard ingredients can extend shelf life and improve nutrition without making the product worse for you.
When processing becomes a problem
Per Section 4.2, an "Ultra-Processed" classification "does not inherently imply immediate toxicity" — but it does indicate a formulation pattern associated with industrial ultra-processing, with potential longer-term health risk from repeated consumption. The concern grows as products move into Ultra and Super-Ultra, especially when they contain ingredients on the UIC list.
A useful way to think about it
- Processing is not the enemy. Pasteurized milk is processed.
- Industrial reformulation with concerning ingredients is the concern. A "Bliss Point Trap" engineered with synthetic colors, novel sweeteners, and shelf-stable additives is.
- The Wc-UPF score lets you tell the difference.
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