Why expiration date on bottled water?

Some bottled water has an expiration date on it

why

does water go bad

or is it a law that all foodstuffs much have an expiration date, except honey of course:smack::smack::smack::smack:

Here, let me Google that for you:

http://www.fda.gov/Food/FoodSafety/Product-SpecificInformation/BottledWaterCarbonatedSoftDrinks/ucm077079.htm

You might want to familiarize yourself with the GQ Rules, Askance. Rule #5 states in part:

[QUOTE=GQ Rules]
By the same token, we aren’t interested in hearing about how stupid the question was because a search could have answered the question. Nor are we interested in hearing how simple it was for another poster to find the answer in a search engine. If it’s that simple to find the answer, go ahead and post the answer.
[/QUOTE]

Just a reminder. No warning issued.

[quote=“Gary “Wombat” Robson, post:4, topic:612676”]

You might want to familiarize yourself with the GQ Rules, Askance. Rule #5 states in part:

Just a reminder. No warning issued.
[/QUOTE]

I think we should be more concerned with the fact that his answer appears to be wrong, at least according to my cite from the FDA.

Maybe it’s not that easy to come up with the correct answer in Google after all? :wink:

PET bottles will tend to soften and lose their shape over time, especially the very thin and light bottles some manufacturers have started using. That aesthetic difference has caused at least one producer to lower their best before date from two years (the maximum in my jurisdiction) to eighteen months.

Actually, that’s incorrect. Apart from baby formula and infant foods, the FDA does not require or regulate expiration dates and any expiration dates are purely voluntary, put on by the manufacturer.

Producers probably don’t want to be bothered with guaranteeing your bottled water for 5 years. Who knows what might happen in that time. Or, they want you to throw it away so you’ll have to buy more.