The food manufacturing landscape is entering a new era of food safety expectations. With the publication of ISO 22002-100:2025 and ISO 22002-1:2025, prerequisite programmes (PRPs) — the foundation of effective food safety systems — are being modernised, harmonised, and elevated. For food manufacturers preparing for certification, audit readiness, or competitive supply chain positioning, understanding these changes is essential. ISO 22002 Consulting Services Malaysia can help companies interpret these updates and act with confidence.
ISO 22002 standards specify prerequisite programmes — essential conditions and operational controls that help prevent food safety hazards before they become critical risks in production. The 2025 revisions introduce a new central PRP framework (ISO 22002-100:2025) and a revised food manufacturing sector standard (ISO 22002-1:2025) tailored specifically for food manufacturers.
These updates matter now because regulators, certification bodies, and buyers expect a harmonised approach to food safety fundamentals — not piecemeal or outdated controls. With changing audit focus and stronger global food safety expectations, manufacturers without aligned PRPs may face audit challenges, compliance gaps, or lost business opportunities.
ISO 22002-100:2025 introduces a consolidated set of prerequisite requirements that apply across the food, feed, and packaging supply chain. This harmonised structure simplifies implementation and reduces duplication between sector-specific standards like ISO 22002-1:2025.
The updated PRPs emphasise contamination reduction through:
Defined microbial zoning and segregation
Enhanced allergen control and sequencing
Physical contamination prevention (e.g., brittle materials, inspection devices)
Chemical handling and storage requirements
These focus areas reflect increasing expectations from auditors and customers for robust preventive measures.
The new standards align more closely with ISO 22000 and the 2023 Codex HACCP revision, incorporating elements such as sustainability, traceability, and food defence into core PRP requirements. This integration reflects the broader trend toward preventive, risk-based food safety systems.
Transitioning to ISO 22002-100 and ISO 22002-1 requires review of existing processes, training, and documentation. Early investment in gap assessments and training typically reduces costly corrective actions and non-conformities later.
Auditors will now assess PRP implementation against both the new common baseline (Part 100) and food manufacturing-specific controls (Part 1). Inconsistent or outdated PRPs increase the risk of major nonconformities.
Many multinational buyers and regulatory bodies are tightening supplier requirements. Demonstrating compliance with the modernised PRP framework strengthens eligibility for contracts, especially in export-oriented supply chains.
Enhanced PRP controls — including allergen management, hygiene behaviour, and contamination prevention — directly support safer products and fewer recalls. This builds stronger confidence with customers, retailers, and auditors.
Manufacturers with harmonised, auditable PRPs are better positioned to adapt to future food safety trends, regulatory shifts, and certification changes (e.g., FSSC 22000 updates).
Some manufacturers may delay reviewing PRPs because transition timelines are still being finalised. However, early adaptation reduces audit risk and aligns systems with evolving global expectations.
Failing to integrate both ISO 22002-100 (common PRPs) and ISO 22002-1 (sector-specific controls) leads to partial compliance and gaps in hygiene or contamination controls.
Updating procedures without strengthening practical implementation (e.g., zoning, allergen sequencing, inspection systems) leaves systems vulnerable to findings during audits. Operational controls must be evidence-based and consistent.
To prepare effectively for the new PRP landscape in 2025:
Conduct a PRP gap assessment against ISO 22002-100 and ISO 22002-1 requirements.
Update PRP procedures and documentation, including hygiene, zoning, waste, allergen, and contamination controls.
Provide targeted training for staff on new expectations for behaviour, sanitation, and monitoring.
Enhance monitoring, verification, and environmental control systems to meet audit scrutiny.
Engage with certification bodies or ISO 22002 Consulting Services Malaysia early to plan transition timelines and readiness strategies.
This practical, phased approach makes compliance more achievable and reduces disruption during certification audits.
ISO 22002-100:2025 and ISO 22002-1:2025 represent more than technical updates — they reflect the global food industry’s shift toward stronger, harmonised prerequisite programmes that support effective food safety management systems. Manufacturers that act early to align with these standards improve compliance readiness, strengthen customer trust, and protect their competitive position.
For food manufacturers unsure how their current PRPs align with the new 2025 requirements, structured assessment, awareness training, and consultancy support can provide clarity and direction.
Partnering with experienced ISO 22002 Consulting Services Malaysia helps ensure your PRPs are audit-ready, operationally effective, and aligned with evolving industry expectations.
Philippines