Monday, February 23, 2026

Maryland law leaves McDonald's large fries lovers holding the bag

Maryland McDonald's customers ordering medium and large french fries are finding out Ronald has a brand new bag. Instead of the iconic red cardboard medium and large fry containers, those orders are now being handed out in paper bags, at least at some Golden Arches locations in Montgomery County. Some customers say the weight and portion size of the bagged fries are less than those served in the cardboard containers. But it's not simply a shrinkflation attempt alone by McDonald's. It turns out that Maryland passed a law in 2024 that mandated the retirement of cardboard fry sleeves forever.


The George "Walter" Taylor act was presented to the public as a bill almost no one would oppose. It would ban the sale and use of firefighting foam that contained "forever chemicals." This would reduce health risks and impacts for firefighters, and who could disagree with that? Well, it turns out another provision was hidden in the bill, one that applied a similar restriction to food packaging. Cardboard fry containers often are lined with a chemical coating that resists grease, and that supposedly contained a forever chemical. Cardboard was out, and the bill was signed into law by former Governor Larry Hogan.

I found the fry transition has been underway in a few other nanny states for at least a couple of years. Like so many nutty laws paased by the Maryland legislature and Montgomery County Council, this was yet another plagiarized from the great state of California. Now, thanks to both local legislative bodies, we not only have paper straws that melt and ruin the taste of your drink, but potentially smaller fry portions for the same high price.

McDonald's swears that the portion size is the same. Fast food packaging experts have noted that the shape difference, and dimensions of the opening of the new bag, together make it more difficult to stuff the same amount of fries into the bag as filled the cardboard. The jury is out. Your mileage may vary. And it will be something to watch in the coming weeks and months - please share your experience in the comments below.

33 comments:

Anonymous said...

Keeping their eye on the ball, MD has very important things to concentrate on. Just ignore crime and don't cooperate with federal agencies.

Anonymous said...

bro is mad about his mcdonalds fries container

Anonymous said...

The last time I got fries at McDonald's, the kid at the counter reminded me of a square, chocolate flavored cakey dessert. But the attitude on him! My god. I get my underpacked fries in their paper vessel, and I'm not ashamed to say I'm a little petty. I go to leave, defeated. But the perfect line hits me, right as I push open the door. I swivel around, look him dead in the face, and say...

Heckuva job, Brownie!

JAC said...

Red states versus Blue. I can't wait to enjoy a cold ice tea at Chick-fil-A in a wonderful styrofoam cup which keeps it cold for hours in their home of Atlanta. And their signature waffle fries, always piping hot and fresh, served in a rigid box. Ah!

JAC Enjoyer said...

Classic "Maryland Madness"! Good riddance to the castle-in-the-clouds politicians who want to reshape the world through ridiculous legislation! Lesson to learn here is that good governance demands well-rooted understanding of the common good and trade-offs to avoid ridiculous self-defeating legislation.

Anonymous said...

There are two different issues here: the change from the sleeve to a bag, and the apparent shrinkage of content.
I don't see what's wrong with the government's trying to protect consumers from potentially dangerous chemicals, but if McDonald's is taking this opportunity to short customers on fries, that's on them, not on state legislators or regulators.
A truly good reporter would actually follow up, by comparing the amounts of fries served by sleeve (in McDonald's outlets that still do that) with those served by bag.
But I would be the last to characterize Robert Dyer as a fry-weight journalist.

JAC said...

7:31 - No wonder former Texas governor, Rick Perry, would pick up the phone and welcome Maryland businesses to move to Texas where regulation is low, the climate is pro business and the attitude is to let people live their lives without the heavy foot of govt on the neck of the citizenry. The bag thing is the dumbest I've ever seen. Go to paper if your want but don't charge people. That money really goes to Save the Bay? Nobody actually believes that.

Anonymous said...

7:06am - QSR news isn't important?

Anonymous said...

Love the SN, LOL!

Anonymous said...

You:
Cardboard fry containers often are lined with a chemical coating that resists grease, and that supposedly contained a forever chemical.

Also You:
Nanny State!!!

You really want forever chemicals in your body (given the hormonal imbalances that they have been linked to)? Your Karen-ish stances on all of these "nanny state" issues is incredible. Companies should evolve towards safety if their products or the containers for their products are actively causing harm to customers. That is actually a functional use of government rather than assuming that all customers know about forever chemicals and are able to adapt.

JAC said...

9:05 - Your point is well taken about chemicals. There's a great solution to that problem, stop eating at McDonald's. Eating out in general isn't that healthy either because of inflammatory oils, salt, sugar and who knows what else they put in the food you order.

Anonymous said...

Complain about the shrinkflation, sure. But are you seriously getting your nose out of joint because legislation banned a few hazardous-to-your-health chemicals from food packaging? "The state is preventing McDonalds [and others] from poisoning me or exposing me to cancer quite as fast! The interventionist NERVE!"

Next.

Anonymous said...

Of course avoiding McDonalds makes the most sense...but until that day comes, I rather prefer my Government spend its time protecting us from unhealthy chemicals and pollutants that most people have no clue they are exposed to.

Anonymous said...

It’s not PROVEN! it’s “claimed by the Stateof California.” No proof, just conjecture.

Anonymous said...

You are weird.

Anonymous said...

Oh my god, why isn't McDonald's allowed to give me cancer anymore?! This is probably the worst thing that could have possibly happened.

Anonymous said...

LEARN

TO

COOK

Anonymous said...

11:17am indeed ..very difficult to eat out if trying to watch your sugar and sodium intake. Many restaurants focus on "calories" which doesn't tell the whole story.

But we should support good local restaurants. "Cook at home" means all our restaurants close.

Anonymous said...

In Robert's defense for not fielding a study on fry capacity, it doesn't involve much science to see that a container is smaller and / or better or worse suited to hold particularly sized items: it should be no surprise to today's consumer that most all, if not all, food merchants seek to reduce the amount of product in their packaging. It's an excellent opportunity for McDonald's to take advantage of what sounds like a benefit to the consumer, and difficult to disagree with. All win-win for McD's.

Anonymous said...

@6:59 - Do you know anything about how scientific research works? Have you ever even set foot on a college campus?

Anonymous said...

@ 7:58 - And look where that got him.

Anonymous said...

EAT

THE

CHANGE!

Anonymous said...

How's the water down there from the Potable Potomac Interceptor? Just asking.

JAC said...

9:51 - Yeah, that's definitely true. You have to order like an entitled, elite Hollywood celebrity which many shows/movies have made light of over the years. But it's true, you have to ask what goes on/into your food. Thankfully, the better restaurants, are well used to fielding those questions. Lastly, I just learned this morning that Chick-Fil-A puts MSG in their famous chicken sandwhich. Terrific! I don't eat there much anymore but if I do, I get grilled the sandwhich or grilled nuggets and fruit or salad. Eating out is tough and so is eating healthy.

Anonymous said...

I don't go to McDonald's daily, but the weight of a sandwich and fries is noticably less now with the fries sack vs before with the cardboard sleeve.

Big difference compared to z burger where are "regular" fry is more than enough for two people.

Momo said...

The thing I love most about living in FL rather than the DMV is I don’t have to dread getting a traffic ticket in the mail every month.

Anonymous said...

2:25, I agree Z burger gives out more fries, but my issue with them is how in nearby Tenleytown DC, they use homeless to illegally post illegal signage (near CVS at top of hill). The 'cat In the hat' guy there puts the signage up everyday, and usually remotest every night, he's ostensibly paid by z burger and invites more of such behavior

Anonymous said...

I’ve never received a traffic ticket in the mail, let alone one “every month”. You need to exercise situational awareness and self-control when driving. And consider yourself lucky that you did not receive any points for those violations - otherwise you would have had your license revoked a long time ago.

I fear for your fellow drivers in Florida.

Big Daddy Goob said...

There is absolutely no way the amount of fries is the same as it used to be. What a scam.

Anonymous said...

7:14. Methinks 5:08 was lamenting that we have many cameras that apparently are more for revenue generation than purely for public safety. One might infer that we need those funds to offset expensive local government programs that Florida state wisely choose to not invoke on themselves.

Momo said...

Thanks 259, you are correct. By the way, 714, I am an extremely safe driver, and have not had an actual ticket (non-camera) in over 20 years. I got one while I was up there visiting last summer at the bottom of an underpass on K St., NW where there were no pedestrians or crossings. Pure revenue generator for the DC kleptocracy.

A said...

My god dude you and the other boomers here will whine about anything

Momo said...

You could have kept your mouth shut. But didn’t. So who’s “whining” now?