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How to Legally Launch a Food Product in Australia
Have you ever Googled, “How do I legally launch a new food product in Australia?” or, “What do I need to put on my food label?” If so, you’re far from alone. Whether your kitchen experiment turns into a full-scale business or you’re expanding into a new category, legal compliance is the secret ingredient you can’t skip. As Maggie Beer puts it, “The quality of a food product starts from its source and ends in its honesty with the consumer.” Making sure your legal foundations are honest, robust and clear is key to your product’s success.
Legal Issues for Food Start-Ups
Every product and food business is a little different, but these are the core legal steps and issues that almost every new launch faces.
Business Registration & Licensing
Get an ABN and register your food business with the local council—essential before making, importing, or packing food.
Check if you need extra licences for interstate sales, importing, or exporting.
Confirm that any contract manufacturer or filler is also compliant and registered.
Food Standards Code & Labelling Laws
Use only approved ingredients, source food hygienically, and keep records for your supply chain.
Your packaging needs a clear product name, ingredient list, nutrition panel, allergen warnings, manufacturer details, batch codes, date marks and correct country-of-origin claims.
If using contract fillers or importing ingredients, ensure extra compliance checks are up-to-date.
IP and Brand Protection
Did you know you can register your brand name as a trade mark in Australia? Beyond just the name, you can often register logos, unique packaging shapes, or striking colours. Why does this matter? It keeps others from riding on your brand’s reputation, helps your business grow securely, and avoids messy disputes.
Also, contracts with suppliers, fillers and manufacturers should neatly lock in who owns the IP, who handles risk, and what happens with insurance and food safety if trouble hits. Good contracts are your best defence against confusion, surprise costs—or worse.
Weights, Measurement & Safety
Net quantity must be shown (e.g. “350g”) and meet Australian standards.
Packaging must be properly certified as food-grade, including for squeezable bottles or new pack types.
Keep fill weights accurate—regular checks are part of compliance.
Product Recalls & Traceability
Australian law requires food businesses to have strong batch coding, supplier records, and a written recall plan. If safety issues crop up—mislabelled allergens, contamination, or packaging defects—you need to show where every batch was made, filled, and sold. The authorities can move quickly so having solid records (and a response plan) is crucial.
Importing & Exporting
If you’re importing ingredients or packaging, clear Australian customs and biosecurity, and double-check overseas standards. Exporting? Every destination country may have its own rules for food safety and labels—get advice early.
How Sharon Givoni Consulting Can Help
Review food labels and packaging for compliance.
Draft and negotiate contracts for manufacturing, supply, or filling.
Advise on comprehensive IP strategy (trade marks, designs, protection from lookalikes).
Useful FAQs
What are the main things to check before selling a food product?
Check basic business setup, registration, contract details, and whether your label covers all legal requirements.
Do I need to register my brand or packaging as a trade mark?
Every situation is different, but brand and packaging protection is worth considering to prevent competitors from confusing your customers.
If I use an overseas bottler, do I need extra checks?
Yes, food safety records and packaging compliance should be reviewed before launch.
How do food recalls usually work?
If regulators flag a safety risk, you need batch records, traceability, and a clear response plan to act quickly.
Can any claim about my product get me in trouble?
Yes, even small words like “natural”, “Australian-made”, or “healthy” need careful review.
Further Reading:
Australian Food Standards Code
https://www.foodstandards.gov.au/food-standards-code
Food Labelling Laws | NSW Food Authority
https://www.foodauthority.nsw.gov.au/food-labelling/labels-law/labelling-laws
Labelling Your Products | Business.gov.au
https://business.gov.au/products-and-services/product-labelling/labelling-your-products
Australian Food Labelling Laws Made Easy | Sharon Givoni Consulting
https://sharongivoni.com.au/australian-food-labelling-laws/
Protect Your Business Idea and Stop Others from Copying You | Sharon Givoni Consulting
https://sharongivoni.com.au/first-to-market-heres-how-to-stop-others-from-copying-your-idea/
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Please note the above article is general in nature and does not constitute legal advice.
Please email us info@iplegal.com.au if you need legal advice about your brand or another legal matter in this area generally.

