With growing consumer demand for food transparency, the FDA has introduced new traceability regulations to ensure food safety across supply chains that will go into effect in 2026. In a recent webinar featuring Food Safety expert Erik Kurdelak, we provided a comprehensive look at what food industry stakeholders need to know and implement under the FDA's Food Traceability Rule (FTR).
The Food Traceability Rule mandates specific traceability records for certain high-risk foods. These include soft cheeses, seafood, and certain produce. For food manufacturers, compliance involves managing detailed records across every stage of production and distribution.
During the session, Erik covered many key definitions within the rule. The two biggest definitions to understand are Critical Tracking Events and Key Data Elements.
Together, CTEs and KDEs create a chain of data that traces the product's journey, enabling faster recalls and better risk management in the case of contamination.
If you process any foods on the Food Traceability List, you must have a plan you can share with the FDA, and they will ask for it as part of the audit process.
During the session, Erik outlined the five key points that each plan needs to capture:
Implementing and executing will involve three critical focus points:
Regardless of what route you take (paper or electronic data capture), the end result must be a sortable spreadsheet you can provide the FDA within 24 hours.
With the FDA requiring 24-turnaround on all food traceability records, every organization must ask themselves, will all records need 24-hour turnaround? Will other governing bodies begin implementing similar requirements? Are paper and manual spreadsheets scalable?
Food manufacturers have 15 months to prepare for full FTR compliance. In those next 15 months you need to:
For more insights, listen to the entire session from Erik. It’s 37 minutes that can give you and your team a strong head start and make this complex process much easier to digest.
Erik has devoted over 25 years to learning, applying, teaching, and consulting on the principles of food science. He regularly develops and provides technical training at food industry events and has done extensive work with Purdue University Food Science. In addition to serving as the State of Indiana’s Subject Matter Expert for Food Protection Division | Special Processes, Erik is also a Founding Board Member of The Central Indiana Food Hub & Sustainability Center, an Indiana Non-profit Organization in early stages of development.