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Centre Eases Food Business Compliance Norms with FSSAI Rule Changes

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has amended FSSAI regulations to exempt non-manufacturing food businesses from record-keeping and stock rotation requirements. The changes apply only to food manufacturers, who must still follow FIFO/FEFO principles. The move is expected to reduce the compliance burden on retailers and small enterprises. The amendments align with NITI Aayog's recommendations for regulatory reforms.

Centre eases compliance norms for food businesses through FSSAI rule changes

New Delhi, June 26

In a move aimed at improving the ease of doing business and reducing regulatory burdens on the food sector, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare on Friday notified amendments to the Food Safety and Standards Regulations, 2011.

The changes exempt non-manufacturing food businesses from certain record-keeping and stock rotation requirements while retaining key food safety controls for manufacturers.

Under the earlier regulatory framework, all licensed food businesses were required to maintain records and follow stock rotation practices based on the First In First Out (FIFO) or First Expiry First Out (FEFO) principles.

Following the latest amendments, these requirements will now apply only to food manufacturing businesses, where such measures are considered essential for maintaining food safety, quality assurance and product traceability.

The revised norms exempt non-manufacturing food businesses, including retailers and similar entities, from these obligations. The move is expected to significantly reduce the compliance burden on food business operators, particularly small and medium enterprises, while ensuring that food safety oversight remains robust in areas where such controls are necessary.

The ministry said the amendments form part of a broader regulatory reform agenda aimed at improving the ease of doing business and promoting risk-based and outcome-oriented regulation in the food sector.

Over the past few years, the government has introduced several measures to simplify compliance requirements for food businesses. These include the provision of perpetual licences and registrations, revision of turnover thresholds, removal of dual compliance requirements for street food vendors and the implementation of a risk-based inspection system.

According to the ministry, the latest reforms were finalised after extensive consultations with states, Union Territories and stakeholders across the food business ecosystem. The amendments are also aligned with the recommendations of the high-level committee on non-financial regulatory reforms constituted by NITI Aayog, which had emphasised reducing unnecessary regulatory burdens while maintaining effective regulatory oversight.

The ministry reiterated its commitment to strengthening India's food safety framework through science-based regulations, stakeholder consultations and continued efforts to simplify compliance requirements for businesses.

— IANS

Reader Comments

James A

As someone working in food compliance in Mumbai, this is a welcome change. The FIFO/FEFO record-keeping was a nightmare for small chai shops and pani puri vendors. But I'm curious how they'll ensure accountability in the supply chain without these logs.

Priya S

Good initiative for ease of business 👏 But I have a concern: Street food vendors already get away with poor hygiene. Without strict FIFO rules for retailers, how will we ensure expired products don't reach consumers? We need more inspectors, not fewer rules.

Ravi K

This is smart - risk-based regulation makes sense. Manufacturers still have to follow FIFO, which is where it matters most for safety. Small retailers in tier-2 cities like my shop in Lucknow will breathe easier. Ek kaam aur karein: simplify the license renewal process too!

Sarah B

As a consumer, I'm a bit uneasy. Removing record-keeping for retailers means less transparency. I trust our local shops, but the big chains? Not so much. Hope FSSAI has enough teeth to catch violators through surprise checks.

Aman W

Great step by the ministry! As a small restaurant owner in Delhi, I can tell you compliance burden was killing us. But please ensure the risk-based inspection system is actually implemented properly - current inspections are often just formality.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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