Introducing Allergens Safely & In Order: The Complete Guide for Hong Kong Parents (6m+)

Introducing Allergens Safely & In Order: The Complete Guide for Hong Kong Parents (6m+)

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🌿 Baby Feeding 101 · Evidence-Based Guide

Introducing Allergens Safely & In Order

The science has changed. Early introduction — from 6 months — now reduces allergy risk. Here is exactly what to introduce, when, and how.

👶 6 months+ Educational Guide · Non-Recipe FHS + AAP + NHS Cited

For years, parents were told to delay allergens — peanuts until age three, eggs until one, fish "just to be safe". That guidance has been reversed by two decades of clinical evidence. The question for Hong Kong parents in 2026 is no longer whether to introduce allergens, but how to do it safely and in the right order.

This guide covers the top 9 allergens recognised by the Hong Kong Department of Health (FHS), the right introduction timeline, fish safety facts, the allergen trial method, and seven common myths — all grounded in real evidence. No guesswork.

86%
reduction in peanut allergy
with early introduction
(LEAP trial)
79%
reduction in egg allergy
from 6m introduction
(PETIT study)
6m
start allergens with
other solids, from
FHS / BFHIHKA
The Top 9 Allergens

What Are the Major Allergens?

The Hong Kong Department of Health (FHS) identifies nine major food allergens. All can be introduced from 6 months — one at a time, with 2–4 days between each new one so you can monitor for reactions.

🥚
Egg
6m+
🥜
Peanut
6m+
🌳
Tree Nuts
6m+
🐟
Fish
6m+
🦐
Shellfish
6m+
🌾
Wheat / Gluten
6m+
🫘
Soy
6m+
🌿
Sesame
6m+
🥛
Dairy / Milk
6m+ as food*

* Dairy as an ingredient in food (yogurt, cheese, cooked milk in recipes) from 6m+. Whole cow's milk as a drink only from 12 months+.

Introduction Timeline

When to Introduce Each Allergen

According to the Hong Kong FHS (updated March 2025) and the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative Hong Kong Association (BFHIHKA), allergens should be introduced alongside other complementary foods — from around 6 months, without deliberate delay. Dr. Agnes S.Y. Leung of CUHK states: "In regions where the prevalence of food allergy is not high, including Hong Kong, allergenic solids should be introduced without delay (under 12 months old)."

Around 6 Months — Start Solids

Begin with iron-rich foods and soft vegetables. You can introduce allergens at the same time — there is no need to wait for a "safe foods only" period first.

Egg (well-cooked) Wheat Fish (fully cooked) Peanut (thinned)
One New Allergen at a Time

Introduce each new allergen in isolation, in the morning or at midday (not at dinner — so you can monitor reactions during waking hours). Wait 2–4 days before trying the next. FHS advises this spacing so that if a reaction occurs, you can identify the exact cause.

Once Tolerated — Keep It Regular

This is critical and often overlooked: once a food is tolerated, keep it in the diet regularly. The NHS and BFHIHKA both emphasise that consistency of exposure is what maintains tolerance. Stopping after introduction can allow sensitivity to redevelop.

Babies with Severe Eczema — Specialist First

If your baby has severe eczema, consult a paediatrician or allergist before introducing high-risk allergens like peanut and egg. BFHIHKA / Dr. Leung recommends specialist referral for this group. The goal is still early introduction — but under medical guidance.

Fish Safety Spotlight

Mercury & Fish: What Parents Actually Need to Know

The mercury concern is real — but it applies to a small number of large apex-predator fish. Most commonly eaten fish are completely safe for babies from 6 months, and the FDA/EPA have a clear tiered system to guide families.

The key rule: choose species from the FDA "Best Choice" or "Good Choice" tiers, and avoid the "Choices to Avoid" tier (shark, swordfish, king mackerel, bigeye tuna, tilefish). Fish is recommended by FHS for infants for its DHA and Vitamin D content.

Close-up of perfectly cooked, fully flaked white fish fillet on a ceramic baby plate — no translucency, flesh separates easily — with a small soft-tipped baby fork beside it on a calm blue-grey background
Cook fish until it flakes easily and there is no translucency — this is the doneness test every parent should know.
FDA Best Choice
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FDA Good Choice
🐠
Atlantic Ocean Wild Caught Toothfish
FDA "Good Choice" tier — suitable up to 1 serving per week for children. Excellent protein and omega-3. Rich, buttery texture babies accept readily. Safe from 6 months+ at normal frequency.
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Low Mercury
🐡
Australia Wild Caught Barramundi Fillet
Wild-caught barramundi is a non-apex predator with low-to-moderate mercury — safe as a varied protein from 6 months+. Alternate with salmon as your primary weekly fish for variety.
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Safety Rule — Fish & Egg Doneness

Cook fish completely through until the flesh flakes easily and there is no translucency — never serve undercooked fish to an infant. Remove ALL bones before serving; run your fingers along every piece. For eggs: cook fully until both the white and yolk are completely set — no runny yolk, no soft white.

The Allergen Trial Method

How to Try Each Allergen Safely

This is the FHS-recommended approach for introducing every new allergen. Follow it every single time, regardless of whether the food is "high risk" — consistency is what catches problems early.

Step 1 — When to Offer

Offer the new allergen at breakfast or lunch, never at dinner. If a reaction occurs, you want your baby awake and you alert — not asleep at 11pm. Introduce on a day when you are home and can observe for 2 hours after.

Step 2 — How Much

Start with a tiny amount — a quarter teaspoon of smooth thinned peanut butter mixed into porridge, one flake of cooked fish, a pea-sized piece of well-cooked egg. For peanut specifically: always use smooth peanut butter thinned with water or breast milk — never offer whole nuts (choking hazard).

Step 3 — Watch for 2–4 Days

FHS recommends waiting 2–4 days before introducing the next new allergen. This spacing — not 7 days — gives you enough time to spot a delayed reaction (rash, hives, vomiting) and attribute it clearly to the new food. You can keep offering tolerated foods while waiting.

Step 4 — Know What to Watch For

Mild reactions (skin redness, a small hive, mild runny nose): note the food, contact your doctor, do not reintroduce without guidance — but this is not necessarily a permanent ban. Serious reactions (swelling of lips/face/throat, vomiting, difficulty breathing, pale/blue skin): call 999 immediately.

No Salt · No Sugar · No Honey under 12 months

Never add salt or sugar to baby food under 12 months. Honey specifically carries the risk of infant botulism — a rare but serious bacterial illness — and must never be given to a baby under 12 months old under any circumstances.

Red Flags & When to Act

When to See a Doctor

🚨 Call 999 Immediately
  • Swelling of lips, face, tongue, or throat
  • Difficulty breathing or wheezing
  • Sudden vomiting and/or collapse
  • Pale, blue, or floppy skin tone
  • Loss of consciousness
These are signs of anaphylaxis. Call emergency services first.
📞 Contact Your Doctor (Non-Emergency)
  • Hives or skin redness limited to a small area
  • Mild runny nose or watery eyes after eating
  • Loose stools 24–48 hours after a new food
  • Persistent eczema flare after introduction
  • Gagging that is frequent or worsening
Do not re-introduce the food until you have spoken to your doctor.

Mild reaction does not mean permanent ban. Many mild reactions are transient sensitivities that can be managed with medical guidance. Your paediatrician will advise whether to try again and how. Do not make the decision to permanently avoid a food on your own.

Myth vs Fact

7 Allergen Myths — Busted

Myth 1Delay allergens to protect your baby from allergy.
FactThe opposite is true. The LEAP trial showed an 86% reduction in peanut allergy with early introduction from around 6 months. NHS and AAP now both advise against deliberate delay. Avoidance was the old guideline — it has been reversed by evidence.
Myth 2You must wait 7 days between each new food.
FactFHS recommends 2–4 days — not 7. Waiting 7 days between foods slows the allergen introduction process without safety benefit. Two to four days is enough to identify a reaction while keeping progress moving.
Myth 3All fish is dangerous because of mercury.
FactMercury risk applies mainly to large apex-predator fish (shark, swordfish, king mackerel). Salmon is FDA "Best Choice" — the lowest mercury tier. Toothfish is "Good Choice." Wild barramundi is a low-mercury non-apex predator. FHS recommends fish for infant DHA and Vitamin D. The health benefits of introducing fish far outweigh the risk from safe species.
Myth 4Once there was a reaction, always avoid that food forever.
FactMild reactions (localised hives, slight redness) do not automatically mean a lifelong allergy. Consult your paediatrician — many mild reactions are manageable and a medically supervised re-introduction may be appropriate. Permanent avoidance without expert assessment can mean missing important nutrients unnecessarily.
Myth 5Eczema babies must avoid all allergens.
FactAvoidance in eczema babies may actually worsen long-term allergy risk. For mild-to-moderate eczema, early allergen introduction is still the goal. For severe eczema, refer to a specialist first — the aim is still early, medically guided introduction, not avoidance. (BFHIHKA / Dr. Agnes S.Y. Leung, CUHK)
Myth 6Egg white is too risky before 1 year — only yolk is safe.
FactWhole cooked egg — both white and yolk — can be introduced from 6 months. The PETIT study found a 79% reduction in egg allergy with early introduction from 6 months. The key requirement: cook eggs fully until both the white and yolk are completely set. No runny yolk, no soft white for infants under 12 months.
Myth 7Peanuts should not be given before age 3.
FactThis was the pre-2015 guideline. It was reversed after the LEAP trial demonstrated that early introduction (from ~6 months) dramatically reduces peanut allergy risk. For babies without severe eczema or known egg allergy, peanut can be introduced from 6 months in an age-appropriate form: smooth peanut butter thinned into porridge or yogurt. Never whole peanuts — these are a choking hazard at any age under 5.
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References & Resources

Sources Cited in This Guide

  • Hong Kong Department of Health, Family Health Service (FHS) — Infant Feeding 6–12 Months Guide (Updated 03/2025): fhs.gov.hk
  • Hong Kong Department of Health, FHS — Food Allergy Professional Newsletter: fhs.gov.hk
  • Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative Hong Kong Association (BFHIHKA) / Dr. Agnes S.Y. Leung, CUHK — Allergen Prevention Guidance (Dec 2023): babyfriendly.org.hk
  • American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) / Dr. Scott Sicherer MD FAAP — Early Introduction of Peanut-Based Foods to Prevent Allergies: healthychildren.org
  • NHS UK — Food Allergies in Babies and Young Children (Updated Mar 2026): nhs.uk
  • FDA / EPA — Advice About Eating Fish (2024): fda.gov
  • MamiDaily HK — Baby Food Allergies: The 11 Major Allergens (2026): mamidaily.com
  • LEAP Trial (Learning Early About Peanut Allergy) — 86% peanut allergy reduction with early introduction.
  • PETIT Study (Prevention of Egg Allergy with Tiny Amount Intake) — 79% egg allergy reduction from 6-month introduction.

Last reviewed: June 2026. This article is for informational purposes only and does not substitute advice from your doctor, paediatrician, or registered dietitian. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for individualised medical guidance.

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