NATIONAL STANDARDS

UK Food Regulations

Clarify Food Standards Agency (FSA), DEFRA, & Nation Compliance.

Maintaining compliance with UK food safety regulations is critical for commercial kitchen operators. Providing precise consumer information – from allergen reporting on non-prepacked food to clear transparent pricing guidelines – secures your legal status and avoids severe local authority enforcement measures.

Below, explore the core national statutes and campaign standards governing food businesses across Great Britain, featuring detailed, expandible compliance breakdowns.

Professional kitchen environment in Great Britain

UK Food Regulations

Legislative Milestones & Compliance Standards

2026 Schools

Benedict’s Law (School Allergy Safety Bill)

Introduces a statutory school allergen management system across English schools, requiring localised care plans, emergency auto-injectors, and drills. Click to view details.

  • Allergen Management System: Guides schools in England in establishing a localised allergy safety policy and detailed care pathways.
  • On-Site Emergency Care: Outlines the physical presence of functional spare adrenaline auto-injectors (AAIs) in dining spaces.
  • Staff Support: Establishes certified allergy emergency drills and awareness sessions for catering and teaching networks.
2026 Nutrition

UK School Food Standards (Updated 2026)

Guides educational dining with nutritional directives designed to support wholegrains and fibers while standardising healthy beverage choices. Click to view details.

  • Wholegrains & Fiber: Recommends a minimum of 50% brown rice/pasta on menus, with bread served as a high-fiber source.
  • HFSS & Frying Guidelines: Optimises menu choices by focusing on baked and grilled alternatives, managing high fat, sugar, and salt items.
  • Review & Transparency: Supports transparent online menu publishing alongside governor-led reviews to maintain nutritional standards.
2025 DMCCA

DMCCA Regulations (April 2025 Mandate)

Establishes digital pricing transparency standards for online ordering and booking, requiring upfront fee structures and reviews. Click to view details.

  • Pricing Transparency: Online food delivery apps and booking portals display total costs clearly from the first step.
  • Review Authenticity: Directs platforms to support genuine customer reviews, mitigating misleading marketing entries.
  • Contract Support: Simplifies compliance steps for consumer subscription systems and online dining agreements.
2025 Menus

Owen’s Law (March 2025 FSA Update)

Advocates providing clear written allergen information directly on menus to support consumer dining safety. Click to view details.

  • Menu Allergen Listing: Advocates for restaurants to print details of the 14 major allergens directly on dining menus.
  • Clear Documentation: Minimises reliance on verbal checks by supporting physical written allergy matrices.
  • FSA Best Practice: Aligns with the Food Standards Agency’s best practice advice on providing physical allergen matrices.
2022 kcal

Calorie Labelling (April 2022 Mandate)

Outlines nutritional expectations for out-of-home operations with 250 or more employees to display kcal values on menus. Click to view details.

  • Scope of Operations: Applies to large food businesses with 250 or more employees to display kcal values.
  • Menu Declarations: Displays portion sizes, calorie counts (kcal), and standard daily energy intake benchmarks.
  • Standard Audit Alignment: Environmental Health Officers (EHOs) review nutritional declarations during standard reviews.
2021 PPDS

Natasha’s Law (October 2021 Mandate)

Requires complete ingredient lists and bold allergen highlights on packaging for foods prepared and packed on-site. Click to view details.

  • On-Site PPDS Packaging: Direct labelling applicable if food is packaged on-premises before a customer orders.
  • Ingredient Transparency: Complete ingredient lists required on labels with the 14 major allergens highlighted in bold.
  • Uniform Application: Standard applies to bakeries, cafes, and delis to protect consumers, with no business size cutoff.
2021 Sourcing

UK Procurement Act 2021 (Public Sector GBS Framework)

Guides public sector dining contracts (schools, hospitals) in alignment with DEFRA’s Government Buying Standards. Click to view details.

  • Sourcing Standards: Encourages public sector contracts (hospitals, schools, prisons) to focus on nutritious and sustainable food.
  • Local Farming Networks: Supports engagement with regional food networks, routing larger contracts to local producers.
  • Quality Benchmarks: Supports high animal welfare benchmarks and sustainable seafood sourcing.
2014 FIR 2014

Food Information Regulations 2014

Brings into effect localised enforcement of allergen information rules requiring food operators to declare the 14 key substances. Click to view details.

  • 14 Key Substances: Enforces the absolute duty to disclose gluten, dairy, nuts, celery, mustard, sesame, and other major allergens.
  • Loose & Menu Signage: Requires clear written pointers guiding customers to accurate verbal or written allergen lynchpins on request.
  • Enforcement Notices: Empowers local Environmental Health Officers (EHOs) to inspect matrices and issue immediate penalties.
1990 FSA 1990

Food Safety Act 1990

The primary statutory benchmark protecting UK consumers by outlawing the sale of food unfit for human consumption. Click to view details.

  • Consumer Protection: Prohibits the inclusion of any ingredients harmful to consumer health or substandard modifications.
  • Commercial Inspection: Serves as the legislative base for local authority inspections and environmental health mandates.
  • Traceability Standards: Mandates that kitchens maintain record-keeping to trace the origin of all ingredients.

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