Guidance for food businesses on providing allergen information and best practice for handling allergens
Food business operators in the retail and catering sector are required to provide allergen information and follow labelling rules as set out in food law.
This means that food business operators must:
Food businesses must make sure that staff receive training on allergens. Staff can complete our free food allergy training. Managers can also share our allergen checklist with staff for tips on food allergy best-practice.
14 allergens
Food businesses need to tell customers if any food they provide contain any of the listed allergens as an ingredient.
Consumers may be allergic or have intolerance to other ingredients, but only the 14 allergens are required to be declared as allergens by food law.
The 14 allergens are: celery, cereals containing gluten (such as barley and oats), crustaceans (such as prawns, crabs and lobsters), eggs, fish, lupin, milk, molluscs (such as mussels and oysters), mustard, peanuts, sesame, soybeans, sulphur dioxide and sulphites (if they are at a concentration of more than ten parts per million) and tree nuts (such as almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, brazil nuts, cashews, pecans, pistachios and macadamia nuts).
This also applies to additives, processing aids and any other substances which are present in the final product.
Allergen labelling for different types of food:
There are a number of ways in which allergen information can be provided to your customers. You will need to choose the method which is best for your business and the type of food you serve.
Prepacked foods refer to any food put into packaging before being placed on sale, while non-prepacked food (loose food) is unpackaged food. Different allergen labelling rules apply depending on how the food is provided.
Prepacked
Prepacked products refer to any food put into packaging before being placed on sale. Food is prepacked when it:
Prepacked food must have an ingredients list present on the packaging. Allergens present in the product must be emphasised each time they appear in the ingredients list.
Prepacked for direct sale
Prepacked for direct sale products are foods that have been packed on the same premises from which they are being sold.
Common foods that can fall into this category include sandwiches, salads and pies made and sold from the premises in which they are made. It is expected that the customer is able to speak with the person who made or packed the product to ask about ingredients.
Currently, allergen information can be provided in the same way as for non-prepacked (loose) foods.
Non-prepacked (loose) foods
If you provide non-prepacked foods, you must supply allergen information for every item that contains any of the 14 allergens.
Non-prepacked allergen information requirements can apply to loose items sold at a delicatessen counter, a bakery, a butcher’s, as well as meals served in a restaurant, and food from a takeaway.
Free-from, gluten-free and vegan claims:
Making free-from claims for foods requires strict controls of ingredients, how they are handled and how they are prepared. A free-from claim is a guarantee that the food is suitable for all with an allergy or intolerance.
For example, if you are handling wheat flour in a kitchen and you cannot remove the risk of cross-contamination through segregation by time and space, you should let the customer know. You should not make any gluten-free or wheat-free claims.
The Food and Drink Federation provides specific information and guidance on free-from and gluten-free claims.
Customers sometimes assume that vegan meals are free-from animal-based allergens (egg, fish, crustaceans, molluscs, milk). This is not always the case as low-level cross-contamination from these ingredients can occur during the production process. You need to be clear about this risk in the food you provide.
Allergen information for different types of food businesses:
How you provide allergen information to customers will depend on the type of food business. Food business staff can learn more about providing allergen information by completing our free food allergy training and by using our allergen checklist.
Food businesses
You must provide allergen information in writing if you sell or provide food to your customers directly. This could be either:
When allergen information is provided as part of a conversation with a customer, this can be backed up by written information. This would ensure that it is accurate and consistent.
You can display this allergy and intolerance sign to tell customers how they can find allergy information, or create your own.
Buffets
If you offer food in the form of a buffet, you need to provide allergen information for each food item separately. You should not provide it for the buffet as a whole.
You can provide this information by labelling the allergens contained in individual dishes, or by displaying a sign directing customers to ask staff for allergen information.
This information must be visible, clearly legible and easily accessible to the customer.
Food delivery and takeaway food
If food is sold online or by phone through distance selling, allergen information must be provided at two stages in the order process.
You must provide allergen information:
Allergen information should be available to a customer in written form at a point between a customer placing the order and taking delivery of it.
Takeaway meals should be labelled clearly so customers know which dishes are suitable for those with an allergy.
Allergen requirements and best-practice for food businesses:
It is important to manage allergens effectively in your food business to ensure food is safe for customers with food allergies.
This involves including allergen information when menu planning and having good food preparation and hygiene practices in place to avoid cross-contamination in your kitchen.
Allergen ingredient recording:
You need to make sure that you know what is in the food you provide. You can do this by recording allergen ingredient information in a written format. Allergen ingredients information should be:
Avoiding allergen cross-contamination:
It is important for food businesses to take steps to avoid cross-contamination in food preparation to protect customers with a food allergy.
There are a number of actions you can take to prevent cross-contamination with allergens. These include:
If you can’t avoid cross-contamination in food preparation, you should inform customers that you can’t provide an allergen-free dish.
Enforcement and penalties:
Apart from the possibility of making a customer seriously ill, you could also face the risk of financial and reputational damage to your food business if you fail to comply with allergen information requirements.
Local authorities enforce allergen information regulations. Failure to comply can result in action from the local authority.
If you fail to act on advice given by the local authority, an improvement notice may be issued. If you do not meet the requirements of this notice, you will be issued with a penalty.
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