What Food-Safety Certifications Really Mean for Your Eggs
From farm to packing line, a certified system is about preventing problems before they happen—and proving it with data.

ISO 22000 in a nutshell

ISO 22000 is an international framework for Food Safety Management Systems. In practice it means:

  • Documented processes from feed to packaging.
  • Defined roles, training, and SOPs.
  • Continuous verification, internal audits, and corrective actions.

HACCP: the practical backbone

Hazard Analysis & Critical Control Points identifies where risk could occur (e.g., contamination, temperature abuse) and sets critical limits (like max storage temperatures) with monitoring and records.
For eggs, typical CCPs include:

  • Collection frequency (reduces time in warm zones).
  • Sorting & candling to remove cracks/defects.
  • Cold-chain thresholds from packing to dispatch.

Why it matters to buyers

  • Consistency: The same grade, weight, and shell integrity—batch after batch.
  • Traceability: Each tray links back to a farm lot and date.
  • Audit-readiness: Retail and HORECA partners can review procedures and logs.
  • Fewer surprises: Preventive controls catch issues early.

What to ask a supplier

  1. Which certifications are current (ISO 22000, HACCP)?
  2. How do you monitor cold chain (temps, GPS, alerts)?
  3. Can you share lot traceability and mock recall results?
  4. What’s your corrective action workflow?