FDA registration is often treated as a one-time administrative step. In practice, it is the starting point of a set of ongoing legal obligations and the specific regulations that apply to your facility depend entirely on what you process, handle, or store.
Under the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), domestic and foreign facilities that manufacture, process, pack, or hold food for human or animal consumption in the United States must register with the FDA. This requirement stems from Section 415 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act), as amended by FSMA.
Registration gives FDA visibility into who is operating in the food supply, where facilities are located, what they handle, and whether their registration is current and active. It also provides FDA with a mechanism to suspend registration in cases of serious public health risk, which effectively halts a facility’s ability to distribute food into US commerce.
What registration does not do is confirm that your facility is compliant. It does not signal FDA approval of your processes, your products, or your food safety plan. It is simply the entry point into the regulatory framework, after which your facility is expected to meet the specific rules that apply to your sector and activities.
“We export food products to the United States. Our facility is registered with the FDA. Does FDA require us to obtain a health certificate for our products before they can be imported?”
FDA does not require health certificates as a condition of importing food into the United States.
What FDA requires is that food entering US commerce complies with applicable regulations, and that prior notice
is submitted to FDA before the shipment arrives. The agency may request
documentation during import examination or inspection, but a health
certificate is not among the standard requirements for food products.
There are specific exceptions, certain fishery products, for
example, may be subject to additional documentation under specific
agreements or equivalence arrangements, but as a general rule, registration plus regulatory compliance plus prior notice is the framework, not certificate-based trade documentation.
Once registered, a facility has two fundamental obligations that apply regardless of sector: compliance with the regulations applicable to its specific food sector and activities, and compliance with the FDA prior notice requirement for any food imported into the United States.
Anyone importing food into the United States must submit prior notice to FDA before the shipment arrives. This applies to all food for human and animal consumption, including dietary supplements and infant formula.
Obligation 2 — Compliance with Sector-Specific Regulations. Beyond prior notice, each registered facility must comply with the specific FDA regulations that apply to its food sector, scale of operations, and activities. This is where the regulatory framework becomes critical to understand and where many companies, particularly those new to the US market, underestimate the depth of what is required.
The graphic below maps the key regulatory frameworks to the facility types most commonly subject to them. This is not exhaustive as the FDA regulations are detailed, and specific activities may trigger additional requirements, but it provides a clear starting point for understanding where your obligations sit.
Registration triggers compliance obligations. The specific regulations that apply depend on the food sector, the nature of the activity, and the facility’s size.
FDA registration is the starting point for a set of ongoing obligations: maintaining an active registration, renewing it biennially, complying with the sector-specific regulations that apply to your facility, and ensuring prior notice for any food you import into the United States.
For companies new to the US market, or those expanding from a domestically regulated context into US commerce, the transition often surfaces important questions about which regulations apply, what documentation is required, what a food safety plan must contain, and how FDA’s framework compares to the regulatory systems they already operate under.
These are not simple questions, and the answers are not one-size-fits-all. The regulations are detailed, the expectations differ by sector, and the consequences of non-compliance, import refusals, warning letters, facility registration suspension, are significant.
Beyond the Preventive Controls rule — which requires a Preventive Controls Qualified Individual (PCQI) to develop and oversee a written Food Safety Plan — two other FSMA rules may also apply to your registered facility depending on your sector and activities: the Intentional Adulteration rule and the Food Traceability Rule. See our guide for a detailed breakdown of who is covered under those rules, by business type, size, and applicable exemptions: Does a Specific FSMA Rule Apply to Your Business? →
If you have questions about what FDA registration means for your facility, which regulations apply to your operation, or how to build a compliant food safety system for the US market, DFK Safe Food Environment provides regulatory consulting, FSPCA training, and FSMA compliance support for domestic and international food businesses.