Community Guidelines
Last updated: April 7, 2026
MealSwipe exists to help people cook, share meals, and find inspiration. We want the community to feel like a
neighborhood kitchen where everyone's welcome — where a beginner cook can share their first curry without getting
piled on, and where a practiced cook can trade tips on how to get the crust right.
That only works if we all agree on a few ground rules. These Community Guidelines explain what's welcome on
MealSwipe and what isn't. They apply to everything you post — photos, captions, recipes, comments, reactions, and
usernames — whether the content is new or has been on the platform for years.
If you see something that breaks these rules, tap the Report button on the post or email
report@mealswiped.com. We review every report within 24 hours.
Keep it about food
1. Stay on topic. MealSwipe is a cooking community. Posts should be about food you've cooked,
ingredients you're working with, or the process of making a meal. Unrelated content — vacation selfies, pet photos,
product promotions, news commentary — belongs on other platforms.
2. Be honest about what you made. Don't post a photo of someone else's food and claim it as yours.
Don't post stock photography. Don't post AI-generated images of dishes you didn't actually cook. If you adapted a
recipe, say so — cooks learn from each other's variations.
Food safety is non-negotiable
3. Don't post recipes you know are unsafe. This includes:
- Intentionally undercooked poultry, pork, ground meat, or seafood below USDA-safe internal temperatures
- Home canning methods that don't follow USDA or National Center for Home Food Preservation guidelines (botulism risk)
- Raw milk recipes intended for infants, young children, pregnant people, elderly people, or immunocompromised people
- Recipes using foraged mushrooms or plants without identification guidance
- Preparations involving ingredients that are known toxins without appropriate preparation (e.g., ackee, bitter almonds, raw kidney beans)
4. List the allergens. If your recipe contains nuts, dairy, gluten, shellfish, eggs, soy, sesame, or
fish, say so clearly in the recipe or caption. Missing allergen info can seriously hurt someone.
5. Don't make medical or health claims. MealSwipe is not a medical app. You can share that a recipe
is low-sugar or high-protein — but don't claim a recipe cures, prevents, or treats any disease or condition. We're
not the FDA; neither are you.
Be kind
6. Don't harass, bully, or threaten anyone. That includes:
- Targeting someone based on their cooking skill, body, appearance, diet, or background
- Pile-on comments on a single user's post
- Threats of violence, even as a joke
- Encouraging others to harass a specific person
- Repeatedly contacting someone who has asked you to stop
7. No hate speech. Content that attacks or dehumanizes people based on race, ethnicity, national
origin, religion, caste, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability, or medical condition has no place on
MealSwipe. This applies to jokes, "just asking questions," and "ironic" posts too — we apply the rule based on
impact, not intent.
8. Respect cultural dishes. MealSwipe includes recipes from all over the world. You can post your
own spin on any cuisine and share what you cooked — but don't mock, degrade, or make racist generalizations about a
culture based on its food. "Fusion" is welcome; contempt is not.
Respect privacy and property
9. Don't share other people's private information. That includes phone numbers, addresses, work
locations, real names (if the person posts under a username), and photos of strangers. If a photo incidentally shows
someone in the background, that's fine. If they're the subject of the photo without their consent, it's not.
10. Don't post images of children in unsafe or exploitative situations. Cooking with your kids is
wonderful — post it. Photographs that sexualize, endanger, or otherwise exploit minors are not allowed and will be
reported to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) as required by law.
11. Respect copyright. Don't copy recipes word-for-word from cookbooks, magazines, or other
websites. A recipe's list of ingredients is generally not copyrightable, but the written instructions, headnote,
and photographs often are. If you're inspired by someone else's recipe, credit them and write the instructions in
your own words. If you see copyright-infringing content on MealSwipe, you can file a DMCA notice at
legal@mealswiped.com.
Play fair
12. No spam or promotional content. Don't post the same content repeatedly. Don't promote external
products, services, or websites in your posts or captions. Don't create multiple accounts to inflate your own
reaction counts. Don't use MealSwipe to drive traffic somewhere else.
13. Don't impersonate anyone. Don't pretend to be a celebrity chef, a restaurant, another user, or
a brand you're not affiliated with. Parody and fan accounts are okay if they're clearly labeled.
14. Don't abuse the report system. The Report button is for content that actually violates these
Guidelines. Filing false reports to harass someone is itself a violation and can get your account suspended.
What's not allowed, period
15. No illegal content. This includes recipes or imagery involving illegal drugs, regulated
substances sold without proper authorization, trafficked wildlife, endangered species, or any activity that's illegal
where you live.
16. No sexual content or nudity. MealSwipe is a family-friendly app available on the App Store
with a rating that does not permit adult content. Keep posts appropriate for all audiences.
17. No content promoting self-harm or dangerous eating behaviors. Including content that promotes
eating disorders, extreme fasting, or dangerous dietary practices. If you or someone you know is struggling with an
eating disorder, please contact the National Eating Disorders Association helpline at 1-800-931-2237 or
nationaleatingdisorders.org.
What happens if you break the rules
When a post is reported or we otherwise become aware of a violation, we review it. Depending on the severity and
your history on MealSwipe, we may:
- Remove the specific post, photo, or comment
- Send you a warning with a link to the relevant rule
- Temporarily suspend your ability to post
- Permanently ban your account from the Services
- For illegal content: report you to the appropriate authorities
For serious violations — child safety, credible threats of violence, or clearly illegal content — we skip straight
to permanent bans and legal reporting. For minor first-time violations — a post that accidentally omits an allergen,
for example — we'll usually just ask you to fix it.
Reporting content
To report a post, tap the ••• menu on the post and choose Report. You'll be asked
to pick a category:
- Harassment, bullying, or hate speech
- Unsafe recipe or food safety concern
- Missing or incorrect allergen information
- Spam or scam
- Sexual content, nudity, or content involving minors
- Impersonation
- Privacy violation (personal information, photos of others without consent)
- Copyright infringement (a separate DMCA process handles these — see Section 12 of our Terms of Service)
- Medical or health misinformation
- Something else
If you can't reach the Report button or you need to report something urgent, email
report@mealswiped.com. For imminent threats to someone's safety, contact your
local emergency services first.
Appeals
If your content was removed or your account was suspended and you believe we got it wrong, you can appeal by
emailing report@mealswiped.com with the subject line "Appeal" and a brief
explanation. We review appeals within 7 days. If your appeal is granted, we restore the content or account and
the incident is removed from your history.
Contact
Questions about these Community Guidelines? Email hello@mealswiped.com.
These Community Guidelines are incorporated by reference into our
Terms of Service and should be read alongside them.
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