
A food recall involving yoghurt is unsettling. Greek yoghurt, particularly the vanilla variety sold at Marks & Spencer, has spent years promoting itself as the responsible option, not because yoghurt is particularly dangerous—under normal circumstances, it isn’t. the healthful choice. The goal you strive for in an effort to improve. On April 18, 2026, M&S discreetly announced a recall for their 500g Authentic Greek Yoghurt with Vanilla, which caused some awkwardness.
The Food Standards Agency has confirmed that gluten is the issue. In particular, gluten is present in a few pots but isn’t mentioned on the label. That may seem like a small administrative error to the majority of customers. It’s a completely different story for someone who has celiac disease or a severe gluten intolerance; it’s the kind of error that can result in actual, excruciating harm within hours of eating.
| Information Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Marks & Spencer (M&S) |
| Founded | 1884 |
| Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
| Type | Public Limited Company (PLC) |
| Product Recalled | Authentic Greek Yoghurt with Vanilla (500g) |
| Barcode Number | 29308750 |
| Affected Use-By Date | 12 May 2026 |
| Reason for Recall | Undeclared gluten not listed on packaging |
| Risk Group | People with gluten allergy, intolerance, or coeliac disease |
| Recall Announced | 18 April 2026 |
| Issuing Authority | Food Standards Agency (FSA) |
| Customer Helpline | 0333 301 4855 |
| Action Required | Do not consume; return to store for a full refund |
| Official Reference Website | Food Standards Agency – M&S Recall Notice |
M&S made good progress. Notices at the point of sale increased. The alert was posted by the FSA. Organizations that support allergies were contacted. “Customer safety is of paramount importance,” which is the typical language these circumstances tend to produce, was the company’s thoughtful and well-written statement. To their credit, only one particular batch—the 500g pot with barcode 29308750 and a use-by date of May 12, 2026—seems to be impacted. The company confirmed that there are no other M&S products involved.
Even so, it’s difficult to ignore how this recall stands out from the others. About 1 in 100 people in the UK have celiac disease, and for them, accurate labeling is a medical necessity rather than a choice. Anxiety tends to spread throughout celiac groups and forums when gluten appears somewhere it shouldn’t. Coeliac in East Anglia’s Facebook post went viral. It was broadcast on STV. The Irish Food Safety Authority and the Irish Mirror also did. The story had taken on the recognizable form of a supermarket food scare by the time it made it to NationalWorld and The Sun; it was swift, widespread, and a little frightening.
The larger pattern this incident fits into is what makes it worthwhile to pay more attention to. The Fishmonger Hot Smoked Salmon Fillets were recalled by Aldi this same week due to an incorrect use-by date. Walkers crisps before that. A meat product with a Listeria warning came before that. The FSA regularly reports supermarket recalls, so they are not uncommon occurrences. However, as the number of recalls rises, there is a feeling that the industry’s labeling accuracy needs more examination than it usually receives.
For its part, M&S holds a specific place in the British retail industry. Unlike Aldi or Lidl, it does not compete on price. Its food line has always been marketed based on quality and trust, with the premise that you are paying a little bit extra because the product is better, more meticulously prepared, and more accurately labeled. The implicit contract is that. Therefore, even a small and contained recall like this one undermines something less concrete than sales numbers. It undermines the narrative M&S presents about itself.
Customers who bought the yoghurt and have a gluten allergy or intolerance are advised not to eat it at all. Returning it is simple: bring it back to any M&S store to get a complete refund with no questions asked. The FSA hasn’t expressed any particular concerns for people who don’t have a gluten sensitivity, so most of the pots from this batch may be fine. However, recalls are frustrating because of precisely that kind of uncertainty. You have no idea which pots are impacted. You simply know that some are.
How exactly gluten got into a vanilla yoghurt that shouldn’t have any is still a mystery. One obvious possibility is manufacturing cross-contamination, which can occur from shared equipment, a nearby production line, or an error made upstream by an ingredient supplier. These incidents occur more frequently than most people realize, and they are typically discovered before they end up on shelves. Something slipped through this time, at least for this batch.
M&S apologized appropriately. The recall equipment functioned roughly as it should. Additionally, the impacted yoghurt is currently waiting to be returned while it is kept in refrigerators throughout the United Kingdom. It takes a little more time to discuss whether consumers trust the next pot they purchase.
