Europeans want to eat healthily and sustainably, but this FEAST survey of 27,000+ adults shows we are still far from the Planetary Health Diet goals. Our diets are shaped by more than personal choice—they are heavily influenced by what is available, affordable, and socially accepted in our daily environments.
To design effective policies, we must understand the drivers behind these choices. Key findings highlight a major gap between perception and reality: many believe they eat well, yet actual intake lags behind. While health awareness is growing, affordability and time pressures remain the ultimate barriers to change.
- What shapes our food choices?
Our decisions are a mix of:Food Environments & Access: Where people live, work, and shop determines their diet; healthy choices are only possible when sustainable options are both accessible and affordable.
The Perception Gap: Many people believe their diet is already healthy and sustainable, highlighting a need for clearer guidance on how to translate recommendations into everyday life.
Social & Cultural Roots: Food choices are deeply shaped by habits, traditions, and social norms that define what is desirable to eat.
- Barriers to Healthy Eating
Affordability: Even with high health awareness, cost remains the primary single barrier to adopting a sustainable diet.
Time Constraints: Busy lifestyles and irregular hours make planning and cooking healthy meals difficult.
Preferences & Habits: Long-standing food preferences and the difficulty of breaking old habits often outweigh personal health goals.
These results suggest that information alone is not enough: affordability and practical support tools are critical.
- Policy & Practice Implications
The findings highlight the need for coordinated action to support healthier and more sustainable diets across Europe:
- Improve access to affordable, healthy, and sustainable food options
- Address inequalities in food environments
- Support behaviour change through supportive policies, not just information
- Align food system policies with public health and sustainability goals
Creating healthier diets requires going beyond individual responsibility and addressing the broader systems that shape food choices.
How this survey was conducted
The FEAST EU Dietary Behaviour Survey collected data across 27 European countries to better understand how people eat and why.
- Large-scale survey covering diverse populations
- Analysis of dietary patterns and intake groups
- Examination of social, economic, and environmental drivers
- Focus on health and sustainability dimensions
For full methodological details, please consult the complete report.
The recommended daily intake (RDI, g/day) for each food group is sourced from the EAT-Lancet report (2019).
Scientific Publications
The Journal of Nutrition | September 2025 |Open access
Assessing Sustainable and Healthy Diets in Large-Scale Surveys: Validity and Applicability of a Dietary Index Based on a Brief Food Group Propensity Questionnaire Representing the EAT-Lancet Planetary Health Diet
European Journal of Nutrition | March 2026 | Open access
Are European diets healthy and sustainable? Evidence from nine countries using the planetary health diet framework
Project Deliverables
Healthy and sustainable dietary choices and their mediating factors across Europe | June 2025
Survey Lead Research Institution
Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies > Contact person: Anna Maria Murante
Data Visualization
open science for open societies - os4os > Yingxun Li