NEW DELHI — In a major step toward reducing the regulatory burden on small and medium enterprises, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has officially notified the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Businesses) Amendment Regulations, 2026.
The updated mandate fundamentally alters the compliance landscape under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, by exempting non-manufacturing food entities from rigid daily operational tracking systems while preserving critical safety protocols at the production stage.
Key Policy Shift: Targeted Stock Rotation and Records
The core of the 2026 amendment focuses on rationalizing the traditional mandate for inventory management and documentation, distinguishing between manufacturers and distributors:
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Exemption for Non-Manufacturers: Retailers, distributors, and similar non-manufacturing food businesses are now entirely exempted from the mandatory upkeep of complex stock records and strict First In First Out (FIFO) / First Expiry First Out (FEFO) stock rotation tracking.
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Retention for Manufacturers: These rigorous traceability controls remain strictly compulsory for food manufacturing units, where precise tracking is essential for product recall, quality assurance, and biological food safety.
By removing these compliance bottlenecks for the retail sector, the government aims to drastically cut administrative overhead costs for local shopkeepers and mid-tier retail chains without compromising public health.
Aligned with NITI Aayog’s De-regulation Blueprint
The design of these new rules follows extensive pan-India consultations with state governments, union territories, and commercial food ecosystem stakeholders. Furthermore, the amendments directly incorporate the core recommendations of NITI Aayog’s High-Level Committee on Non-Financial Regulatory Reforms, which advocated for risk-based, outcome-oriented regulation.
This update integrates into a broader, ongoing series of food sector liberalizations enacted by the ministry over recent years, including:
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The rollout of perpetual FSSAI licenses and registrations to eliminate annual renewal friction.
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Upward revisions of statutory business turnover thresholds.
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The elimination of dual-compliance mandates for street food vendors.
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The transition to a fully digitized, risk-based food safety inspection system.
Through these combined legislative simplifications, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare continues to refine India’s food safety architecture, aligning strict science-based safety oversight with a practical, friction-free business ecosystem.

