Specifications for Traded Products

Aligned with BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9 – Clause 5.3: Requirements for Traded Products

Requirement Overview

BRCGS Clause 5.3 requires that all traded products (i.e., products not manufactured on-site but sold under the site’s name or brand) be fully compliant with applicable safety, quality, and legal requirements. This includes maintaining up-to-date specifications, supplier assurance, and ensuring appropriate traceability and labeling controls.

Clause 5.3.1: “The company shall have a procedure for the approval and monitoring of suppliers of traded food products to ensure that traded food products are safe, comply with legal requirements and are manufactured in accordance with any defined product specifications.”

Specifications for traded products serve as the foundation for supplier approval, product verification, and label compliance—ensuring the same rigor is applied to outsourced items as those made in-house.

Aligned with BRCGS for Storage & Distribution Issue 4 – Clause 4.3.1 & 4.3.3

Requirement Overview

BRCGS for Storage & Distribution requires that products moved via cross-docking are traceable and controlled at all times, even when they are not held in storage for extended periods.

Clause 4.3.1: “The company shall ensure that traceability is maintained at all stages, including during cross-docking operations.”
Clause 4.3.3: “Procedures shall be in place to ensure that all products handled, including those not stored on-site, remain under control and are not subject to contamination or substitution.”

Cross-docking operations must not compromise product traceability, safety, or integrity. Even with minimal handling and temporary presence, each product must be accurately identified, documented, and protected.

Key Compliance Objectives

  • Ensure all traded products meet food safety, legal, and quality standards

    Maintain up-to-date specifications for all traded products

    Verify label compliance and allergen declarations

    Support traceability and supplier accountability

Step-by-Step Compliance Implementation

1. Establish Supplier Approval for Traded Products

  • Approval Process Should Include:

    • Risk-based assessment of the traded product supplier

      Verification of supplier certifications (e.g., GFSI-recognized schemes)

      Quality and food safety history review

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Supplier approval procedure

      Copies of third-party certifications or audits

      Supplier performance records

2. Maintain Accurate Product Specifications

  • Specifications Must Include:

    • Product description and composition

      Packaging, storage, and shelf life information

      Country of origin

      Allergen content and control measures

      Microbiological, chemical, and physical standards (if applicable)

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Signed and dated product specification sheets

      Specification review/change history

      Supplier-validated product data

3. Verify Labelling and Legal Compliance

  • Controls to Implement:

    • Ensure traded product labels meet local regulatory requirements

      Validate allergen declarations and claims

      Confirm label accuracy against product specs

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Approved label proofs and translations

      Label compliance checklist

      Internal or third-party review documentation

4. Review and Update Regularly

  • Update Triggers Include:

    • Changes to formulation, packaging, or supplier

      Regulatory changes impacting labels or allergens

      Internal findings or audit results

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Annual specification review log

      Version-controlled specification archives

      Change control records with impact assessment

Common Audit Findings & Recommended Fixes

Audit Finding Recommended Action
No specification available for traded product Request signed specs from supplier and file centrally
Outdated supplier certifications Implement renewal tracking system for supplier documents
Label non-compliance (e.g., missing allergen info) Add internal label verification step before product approval
No evidence of specification review Maintain dated review logs and responsible personnel records

Auditor Verification Checklist

During a BRCGS audit, expect to show:

  • Supplier approval documentation for each traded product

    Product specifications (signed and current)

    Label verification records

    Evidence of periodic review and updates

Implementation Roadmap

Build Your Framework

  • Develop a supplier approval and monitoring SOP

    Assign responsibility for traded product review

Standardize Specifications

  • Use consistent templates for all traded product specs

    Ensure allergen and regulatory data are included

Monitor and Verify

  • Track supplier documentation and spec updates

    Perform internal label compliance checks

Review and Improve

  • Set annual review cycles for traded product specs

    Implement change control for product updates

Why This Matters?

  • Ensures traded products meet the same safety and quality standards as manufactured items

    Prevents regulatory issues from mislabeling or non-compliant sourcing

    Protects your brand and builds supplier accountability

    Demonstrates proactive compliance during BRCGS audits

Support Tools Available

Food Safety Systems provides:

  • Supplier approval SOPs and checklists

    Editable traded product specification templates

    Label review tools for allergen and regulatory compliance

    Record tracking logs for updates and approvals