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Olive Oil & Quality Control

The olive oil fraud continues:
only 2 out of 12
tested oils met the standards

The Swedish Food Agency’s latest inspection shows how hard it can be to know what’s actually in the bottle. Here you learn the difference between extra virgin olive oil, virgin olive oil, and seed oil - and why analysis values matter.

ArcticMed · April 2026

Imagine buying an olive oil labeled extra virgin - but the analysis shows it actually holds a lower quality.

You pay for premium. You believe you’re buying the highest grade. But the bottle may contain something completely different.

That’s exactly what the Swedish Food Agency’s inspection from 2024, published in 2026, showed: of twelve selected oils labeled as extra virgin, only two met the standards.

The inspection targeted products where defects were already suspected. But the result still shows something important:

As a consumer, you can’t always trust the label. You need to know what to look for.

It’s not an isolated problem. It’s a recurring pattern.

Olive oil is one of the world’s most vulnerable food raw materials when it comes to mislabeling, quality defects, and in some cases, forgery.

That doesn’t mean all olive oil is bad.

But that means the difference between a truly high-quality extra virgin olive oil and an oil that just looks good on the label can be huge.

And that difference rarely shows on the front of the bottle.

The chronology of olive oil fraud

Inspection after inspection shows why transparency and analysis values are crucial.

2016
60 Minutes highlights Agromafia USA / Italy

CBS News and 60 Minutes highlighted how organized crime in Italy was linked to the olive oil industry. The report showed how large values, global supply chains, and lack of transparency made olive oil an attractive product for manipulation.

2018
Swedish Food Agency: 9 out of 10 oils fail Sweden

In a Swedish inspection, only one out of ten tested olive oils labeled as extra virgin met the standards.

2019
Swedish Food Agency: 8 out of 11 oils fail Sweden

The following year, the same pattern continued. Of eleven tested oils, only three met the standards.

2026
Only 2 out of 12 met the standards Sweden

The latest inspection, conducted in 2024 and highlighted in 2026, showed that only two out of twelve selected oils labeled as extra virgin met the standards.

The words “extra virgin” on the label are not enough. It’s the analysis values that tell you what you’re really buying.

Three grades - three different products

The label on the bottle doesn’t always tell the whole truth. But if you understand the quality grades, it becomes easier to see what you’re actually paying for.

Lowest Grade
Seed Oil

Fake oil, or lampante olive oil, has clear defects or chemical values that mean it may not be sold directly as food without refining.

May not be sold directly as food
Middle class
Virgin olive oil

Virgin olive oil is mechanically produced but has sensory or chemical defects that mean it does not meet the requirements for extra virgin olive oil.

Approved but lower quality
Highest class
Extra virgin olive oil

Extra virgin olive oil must be free from sensory defects, meet strict chemical requirements, and have an acidity below 0.8%.

Highest quality class

Results from the latest inspection

The Swedish Food Agency's latest inspection showed that 10 of 12 selected oils labeled as extra virgin olive oil did not live up to that labeling.

  • 5 oils were assessed as virgin oil
  • 4 oils were classified as fake oil
  • 1 oil was found to be blended with another vegetable oil
  • Only 2 oils met the requirements

This does not mean that all olive oil in stores is bad. But it shows how difficult it is for an ordinary consumer to know what is actually in the bottle.

Controlled oil What the analysis showed
Oil 1 The labeling was correct
Oil 2 Assessed as virgin oil
Oil 3 Blended with another vegetable oil
Oil 4 Assessed as virgin oil
Oil 5 Assessed as virgin oil
Oil 6 The labeling was correct
Oil 7 Classified as fake oil
Oil 8 Classified as fake oil
Oil 9 Assessed as virgin oil
Oil 10 Classified as fake oil
Oil 11 Classified as fake oil
Oil 12 Assessed as virgin oil

Source: Swedish Food Agency's inspection 2024, noted by among others Råd & Rön and Äkta vara in April 2026. Brand names are anonymized here.

What most people don't know about polyphenols

Many olive oils are marketed with words like "polyphenols," "antioxidants," and "extra virgin."

But not all polyphenol claims are equally relevant.

The important thing is not just that an oil has a high general polyphenol value. The important thing is which phenolic substances are actually in the oil - and if they are documented in sufficient amounts.

Three levels of polyphenol information

From broad marketing to documented EFSA basis.

1
Total polyphenols

A broad marketing claim. It may sound impressive but does not always show if the oil meets the requirements for the EU's approved health claim.

2
Bio-phenols

More relevant for olive oil. ArcticMed's batch 26030A contains 412 mg/kg bio-phenols.

3
Hydroxytyrosol and derivatives

The decisive factor for EFSA's approved health claim. ArcticMed's batch 26030A contains 284 mg/kg EFSA-relevant secoiridoids.

What does EFSA-approved health claim mean?

The EU has approved a specific health claim for the polyphenols in olive oil:

The polyphenols in olive oil help protect blood lipids from oxidative stress.

For this claim to be used, the oil must contain at least 5 mg of hydroxytyrosol and its derivatives per 20 g of olive oil.

This means that it is not enough for an oil to be called extra virgin oil. It is also not enough for it to be marketed as "rich in polyphenols."

The crucial factor is whether the relevant substances are actually analyzed and documented.

ArcticMed's analysis results – batch 26030A

ArcticMed Extra Virgin Olive Oil batch 26030A is analyzed and documented.

This is the difference between marketing and documentation.

Laboratory analysis – ArcticMed Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Batch 26030A
Origin Andalusia, Spain
Cultivation altitude 400+ meters above sea level
Harvest type Early harvest, mechanical extraction
Acidity 0,13 %
Limit for extra virgin olive oil Max 0.8%
Peroxide value 3.6 mEq O₂/kg
Rancimat at 100 °C 67.7 hours
Bio-phenols 412 mg/kg
EFSA-relevant secoiridoids 284 mg/kg ✓
Oleocanthal about 50 mg/kg
Oleacein about 95 mg/kg
Squalene 7,150 mg/kg
Pesticides 300+ analyzed substances

Acidity value – a clear sign of quality

The acidity value tells a lot about how the olives have been treated from harvest to pressing.

Free fatty acids form when olives are damaged, stored too long, or handled carelessly.

For extra virgin olive oil, the limit is max 0.8%. ArcticMed's batch 26030A is at 0,13 %.

It is a very low value – and not a number you get by chance.

Rancimat – the oil's resistance to oxidation

The Rancimat test measures how long an oil resists oxidation under accelerated conditions.

It is a way to assess the oil's oxidative stability – that is, how robust the oil is over time.

ArcticMed's batch 26030A has a Rancimat value of 67.7 hours at 100 °C.

It is a very high value for an extra virgin olive oil and shows that the oil has strong natural resistance to oxidation.

That is why we use the same olive oil in ArcticMed Omega-3 Premium

Omega-3 fatty acids like EPA and DHA are sensitive to oxidation.

That is why we do not use just any olive oil in ArcticMed Omega-3 Premium.

We use the same polyphenol-rich extra virgin olive oil that we sell separately - with documented analysis values.

The purpose is to contribute to the product's oxidative stability while adding olive oil polyphenols that meet the requirements for the EU's approved health claims.

Not just omega-3. Not just olive oil. But a well-thought-out combination of natural fish oil and documented extra virgin olive oil.

This is how ArcticMed works with quality

We work with olive oil the same way we work with omega-3: through analysis, documentation, and transparency.

We analyze every batch We test, among other things, acidity, peroxide value, oxidative stability, bio-phenols, and EFSA-relevant secoiridoids.
We demand documented values We are not satisfied with words like premium, extra virgin, or high quality. We want to see numbers.
We visit the producers Mikael Marcko, founder of ArcticMed, personally visits the plantations in Andalusia several times a year.
We publish analysis results We believe consumers should be able to verify what the product actually contains.

Five things you should check before buying olive oil

The taste should have character. A good extra virgin oil often has fruitiness, bitterness, and a peppery sensation in the throat.
Look for acidity. Extra virgin oil may have a maximum of 0.8%, but truly well-made oils often have significantly lower levels.
Avoid unclear origin. Terms like “EU olive oil” say very little about quality.
Choose a dark glass bottle. Light and oxygen negatively affect the oil.
Ask for analysis values. Request acidity, peroxide value, polyphenols, and preferably EFSA-relevant hydroxytyrosol derivatives.

Choose an olive oil with documented quality

ArcticMed Extra Virgin Olive Oil is not just chosen for taste.

It is chosen for its analysis values. It is chosen for its low acidity. It is chosen for its oxidative stability. It is chosen for its content of bio-phenols and EFSA-relevant secoiridoids.

And it is chosen because we ourselves use it in ArcticMed Omega-3 Premium.

That might be the best quality proof we can give.

Choose an olive oil you can actually verify

Laboratory tested per batch. Documented bio-phenol content. Meets EFSA's requirements for the approved health claim on protecting blood lipids from oxidative stress.

Order ArcticMed Extra Virgin Olive Oil →
Sources & further reading:
Swedish Food Agency - Olive oil sampling results 2022-2024: livsmedelsverket.se
Swedish Food Agency - Olive oil sampling results 2018-2023: livsmedelsverket.se
SVT News - Swedish Food Agency: 17 of 21 olive oils mislabeled: svt.se
Äkta vara - Ten of twelve oils did not meet the standard: aktavara.org
Råd & Rön - Only two of twelve tested olive oils meet the requirements: radron.se
EFSA Journal 2011;9(4):2033 - Scientific Opinion on olive oil polyphenols: efsa.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
EU Register on nutrition and health claims - Olive oil polyphenols: ec.europa.eu
ArcticMed analysis results and certificates: arcticmed.com/certifikat
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