McCormick Pepper Tin Controversy: When Packaging Misled Consumers

Whatโ€™s the Issue?

In 2015, Watkins Incorporated sued McCormick, claiming the spice-maker had quietly reduced the amount of black pepper in its tins by about 25%, while keeping the tin size and price the same. 
Watkins argued this practice โ€” known as โ€œslackโ€‘fillingโ€ โ€” misled shoppers. Customers saw familiar tins and assumed they held the same amount of pepper as before.

What McCormick Did

Instead of shrinking the tins, McCormick kept using the same container size. Then the company simply placed less pepper inside. The net weight was printed on the label, but the tinโ€™s identical look gave customers the false impression that nothing changed. 
McCormick defended the move. A spokesperson said the company had followed โ€œindustry standard procedures,โ€ updated UPC codes, and informed retailers about the change.

Legal Fallout & Consumer Reaction

Consumers and Watkins filed complaints under state and federal consumerโ€‘protection laws. They argued McCormickโ€™s tins violated regulations that prohibit nonfunctional slackโ€‘fill โ€” packaging that hides empty space and misleads buyers about quantity. 
In 2020, McCormick reached a classโ€‘action settlement worth US$2.5โ€ฏmillion related to underfilled pepper tins and grinders.

Why It Matters

The controversy shows how packaging can deceive โ€” even when labels appear accurate. Shoppers trusted the familiar tins. They expected the same product, at the same price. Instead, they got less pepper for the same money.

It also spotlighted larger issues in the spice industry: transparency, honest communication, and fair trade practices. When companies shrink quantity without obvious price or container changes, consumers lose trust.

Whatโ€™s Happened Since

In recent years, McCormick has updated its packaging in other product lines. For example, its โ€œredโ€‘capโ€ bottles got a fresh redesign with new SnapTight lids and recyclable materials โ€” changes aimed at freshness and sustainability. 
These moves suggest McCormick is responding to evolving consumer expectations around transparency, freshness, and environmental impact.


Posted

in

by

Tags:

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *