After surging 10.17 per cent to Rs 7,000 in intra-day trade, shares of the company finally ended at Rs 6,831.95, up 7.53 per cent on the BSE.
At the NSE, the stock soared 7.67 per cent to settle at Rs 6,838.35.
Following the rally in the scrip, the company's market valuation surged Rs 4,614.74 crore to Rs 65,870.74 crore.
"CFTRI - an FSSAI approved laboratory has found samples of Nestle's Maggi safe and in compliance with the country's food safety standards. The stock was seen up by more than 10 per cent on this news after being battered in the recent past owing to ban on the company's leading product," said Hiren Dhakan, Associate Fund manager, Bonanza Portfolio.
"CFTRI finding shows that samples are in compliance with the food safety standards as per the Food Safety and Standards Rules, 2011," Goa FDA Director Salim A Veljee told PTI.
Goa FDA sent the samples to Mysore-based CFTRI for retesting after FSSAI expressed apprehensions on state FDA's initial report, which had found lead within permissible limits.
In June this year, Nestle had to take Maggi off the shelves, after few states decided to ban the noodles. FSSAI had also banned the snack terming it "unsafe and hazardous" for human consumption.
However, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) on Wednesday said it had not given any clean chit to Nestle's banned Maggi noodles, as it rubbished all-clear reports from two of its own empanelled labs, saying there were lapses in the tests. Food safety watchdog FSSAI, in a press statement, rejected findings of the Food & Drugs Laboratory of Goa and CFTRI, Mysore, over test discrepancies. It also cast doubts over clean chits to Maggi noodles by UK and Singapore labs saying the Swiss food giant has not shared details of foreign test reports.