Running a food business
Your responsibilities
A food business is any business that:
- sells food
- cooks food
- stores or handles food
- prepares food
- distributes food
This guide is also available in Welsh (Cymraeg).
Your responsibilities as a food business
If your business deals in food, you must:
- make sure food is safe
- register with your local authority
- train all your staff and make sure they follow good personal hygiene practices
- have a system for managing food safety
- manage the risk of food allergies
- manage the risk of all chemical and physical hazards to food
- manage the risk of microbiological hazards in ready-to-eat food
- make sure you do not add, remove or treat food in a way that makes it harmful
- label, advertise and market food accurately - do not mislead people about the quality, ingredients or processes used
- keep records of your suppliers and every business you supply - these are known as traceability records
- withdraw or recall unsafe food, report the incident and tell people why the food has been withdrawn or recalled
- only use approved additives and do not exceed the maximum permitted level
- check whether you need to apply for regulated product authorisation
Register with your local authority
You must register with your local authority wherever you trade from, including your home, a van or a stall. You might need to register if you are a charity or community group that distributes food.
Food safety inspections and ratings
Your food business will be inspected regularly to make sure you comply with food safety laws. You’ll be given a food hygiene rating based on the inspection.
In Wales and Northern Ireland it’s mandatory to display your rating sticker so it’s clearly visible to customers. This is voluntary in England.