Skip to content

Free HACCP Plan Template for Food Businesses

Last Updated: June 2026 | 15 min read

πŸ“‹ Free Resource: Download our comprehensive HACCP plan template and implement a robust food safety management system for your business. This page includes the complete template structure, 7 principles explained, and India-specific HACCP certification guidance.

What is HACCP?

Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) is a systematic, science-based approach to food safety that identifies, evaluates, and controls hazards that are significant for food safety. Developed in the 1960s by NASA and Pillsbury to ensure safe food for astronauts, HACCP has become the global gold standard for food safety management.

Unlike reactive approaches (end-product testing), HACCP is preventiveβ€”it identifies potential hazards before they occur and establishes control measures at critical points in the production process. It is endorsed by the Codex Alimentarius Commission, WHO, FAO, and is mandatory under FSSAI’s Schedule 4 requirements in India.

Why Your Food Business Needs HACCP

  • Regulatory Compliance: FSSAI requires all licensed food manufacturers to implement a Food Safety Management System based on HACCP principles
  • Customer Trust: Demonstrates your commitment to producing safe food and builds brand credibility
  • Export Readiness: HACCP certification is a prerequisite for exporting food to the EU, US (FDA FSMA), Japan, and most international markets
  • Cost Reduction: Prevents costly recalls, rejections, and food waste by catching hazards early
  • Legal Protection: Documented HACCP plans serve as due diligence evidence in case of food safety incidents
  • Third-Party Audit Success: Essential for passing FSSAI audits, BRC, FSSC 22000, and ISO 22000 certifications

7 Principles of HACCP

The HACCP system is built on seven core principles as defined by the Codex Alimentarius. Every HACCP plan must systematically address each principle:

Principle 1: Conduct a Hazard Analysis

Identify all biological, chemical, and physical hazards associated with each step of your production processβ€”from raw material receipt to finished product dispatch. Evaluate the likelihood and severity of each hazard. Document all identified hazards and the control measures to prevent, eliminate, or reduce them to acceptable levels.

Principle 2: Determine Critical Control Points (CCPs)

A CCP is a step where control can be applied and is essential to prevent, eliminate, or reduce a food safety hazard to an acceptable level. Use a CCP Decision Tree (see template below) to systematically determine which process steps are CCPs. Common CCPs include cooking, chilling, metal detection, and pasteurization.

Principle 3: Establish Critical Limits

For each CCP, define measurable critical limitsβ€”maximum or minimum values that separate acceptable from unacceptable product. Critical limits must be based on scientific evidence or regulatory standards. Examples: internal cooking temperature β‰₯ 74Β°C, cold storage temperature ≀ 4Β°C, metal detector sensitivity ≀ 2.0mm ferrous.

Principle 4: Establish Monitoring Procedures

Define how, when, and by whom each CCP will be monitored to ensure critical limits are consistently met. Monitoring must be continuous or at sufficient frequency to guarantee control. Specify monitoring equipment, frequency, responsible personnel, and recording methods. Examples: temperature log every 2 hours, metal detector check every 30 minutes.

Principle 5: Establish Corrective Actions

Pre-determine what actions to take when monitoring indicates a deviation from a critical limit. Corrective actions must: (a) identify and correct the cause of the deviation, (b) determine the disposition of affected product, and (c) prevent recurrence. All corrective actions must be documented. Examples: re-cook product, quarantine and test, adjust equipment settings.

Principle 6: Establish Verification Procedures

Validate that the HACCP plan is scientifically sound and verify that it is operating as intended. Verification activities include: calibration of monitoring equipment, review of monitoring and corrective action records, internal audits, product testing, and periodic review of the HACCP plan (at least annually). Verification confirms the system works.

Principle 7: Establish Record-Keeping and Documentation Procedures

Maintain comprehensive records that demonstrate the HACCP plan is being implemented and monitored effectively. Records must be accurate, signed, dated, and retained for a minimum period (typically 2 years or shelf-life of product + 6 months, whichever is longer). Records serve as evidence during audits and investigations.

Download Our Free HACCP Template

Below is the complete structure of our HACCP plan template. Copy these sections into your document management system, spreadsheet, or use them as a guide to build your own HACCP plan. Each section is designed to align with Codex Alimentarius guidelines and FSSAI requirements.

πŸ“₯ Ready to Use This Template?

Our complete HACCP template package includes fillable worksheets in Excel & PDF format for all 7 sections below. Free instant download.

πŸ“„ Download HACCP Template (Excel + PDF)

HACCP Plan Template Structure

Every HACCP plan follows a standard structure. Below are the 7 essential sections with templates and examples for each. Fill these out for your specific product and process.


Section 1: Product Description

Begin your HACCP plan by defining exactly what you are producing. A clear product description sets the foundation for hazard identification.

Field Your Entry Example
Product Name [Enter product name] Frozen Chicken Tikka
Product Description [Brief description] Marinated, pre-cooked chicken pieces, IQF frozen
Ingredients [List all ingredients] Chicken, yogurt, spices, salt, vegetable oil, lemon juice, ginger-garlic paste
Packaging [Type/material] Food-grade LDPE pouches, 500g pack, secondary corrugated box
Storage Conditions [Temperature/environment] Frozen storage at -18Β°C or below
Shelf Life [Duration] 12 months from date of manufacture at -18Β°C
Intended Use [How consumer will use] Ready to cookβ€”heat to 74Β°C internal temperature before consumption
Target Consumer [Who will consume] General population; not for infants or immunocompromised
Labeling Requirements [Regulatory info] FSSAI license number, ingredients, allergen declaration, net weight, cooking instructions, veg/non-veg logo
Distribution [How distributed] Frozen supply chain to retail stores

Section 2: Process Flow Diagram

Create a visual map of your production process from start to finish. A process flow diagram helps identify where hazards can be introduced. Draw boxes for each process step and connect them with arrows showing the flow direction.

[Template: List your process steps in sequence]

Step 1: Receiving Raw Materials
└── Check: Temperature, packaging integrity, supplier COA

Step 2: Raw Material Storage
└── Check: Temperature control, FIFO rotation

Step 3: Preparation (Weighing/Thawing/Sorting)
└── Check: Time-temperature control, cross-contamination

Step 4: Processing (Cooking/Mixing/Blending)
└── Check: Time-temperature, equipment sanitation

Step 5: Cooling/Chilling
└── Check: Cooling rate, final temperature

Step 6: Packaging/Labeling
└── Check: Package seal integrity, label accuracy, metal detection

Step 7: Finished Product Storage
└── Check: Storage temperature, segregation, FIFO

Step 8: Dispatch/Distribution
└── Check: Vehicle temperature, cleanliness, loading conditions

Note: Walk through your actual production floor and verify the flow diagram against reality. Update if processes change. Sign and date the final diagram.


Section 3: Hazard Analysis Worksheet

This is the most critical section of your HACCP plan. For each process step, identify ALL potential hazards and determine their significance.

Process Step Hazard Category (B/C/P) Hazard Description Likelihood (Low/Med/High) Severity (Low/Med/High) Significant? (Y/N) Control Measure Is This a CCP? (Y/N)
Receiving Raw Chicken B Salmonella, Campylobacter Medium High Y Approved supplier program; temperature check ≀ 4Β°C at receipt; COA N (Controlled by supplier program)
Cooking B Survival of pathogens (Salmonella, Listeria) Medium High Y Cook to internal temp β‰₯ 74Β°C; validated cook schedule Y (CCP-1)
Metal Detection P Metal fragments from equipment wear Low High Y In-line metal detector: reject ferrous β‰₯ 2.0mm, non-ferrous β‰₯ 2.5mm, SS β‰₯ 3.0mm Y (CCP-2)
Cold Storage B Pathogen growth due to temperature abuse Low Medium Y Continuous temperature monitoring with alarms; ≀ 4Β°C Y (CCP-3)

Hazard Type Key: B = Biological (bacteria, viruses, parasites, molds) | C = Chemical (allergens, cleaning residues, pesticides, heavy metals) | P = Physical (metal, glass, plastic, stones, bone, wood)


Section 4: CCP Decision Tree

Use the following decision tree for each significant hazard to determine if the process step is a Critical Control Point (CCP). A CCP is where loss of control would result in an unacceptable food safety risk.

β”Œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”
β”‚ Q1: Is there a control measure for this     β”‚
β”‚     hazard at this process step?             β”‚
β”œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”¬β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”¬β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€
β”‚   YES    β”‚  NO   β”‚ Modify step or process    β”‚
β”‚    ↓      β”‚       β”‚ (Not a CCP β€” return)      β”‚
β”‚ Q1a: Is  β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚ control  β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚ at this  β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚ step     β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚ NECES-   β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚ SARY?    β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”¬β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚YES β”‚ NO  β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚ ↓  β”‚  ↓  β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚Q2  β”‚Not  β”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”‚    β”‚a CCPβ”‚       β”‚                           β”‚
β”œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”΄β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”΄β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”΄β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€
β”‚ Q2: Is this step SPECIFICALLY designed to   β”‚
β”‚     eliminate or reduce the hazard to an     β”‚
β”‚     acceptable level?                        β”‚
β”œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”¬β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€
β”‚   YES    β”‚   NO                              β”‚
β”‚   ↓      β”‚    ↓                              β”‚
β”‚  CCP     β”‚   Q3: Could contamination occur  β”‚
β”‚          β”‚       or increase to unacceptable β”‚
β”‚          β”‚       levels at this step?         β”‚
β”‚          β”œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”¬β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€
β”‚          β”‚   YES    β”‚   NO                   β”‚
β”‚          β”‚    ↓     β”‚    ↓                   β”‚
β”‚          β”‚  Q4: Willβ”‚  Not a CCP             β”‚
β”‚          β”‚  a sub-  β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚  sequent β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚  step    β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚  elimi-  β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚  nate?   β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”œβ”€β”€β”€β”€β”¬β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚YES β”‚ NO  β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚ ↓  β”‚  ↓  β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚Not β”‚ CCP β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚a   β”‚     β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β”‚CCP β”‚     β”‚                        β”‚
β”‚          β””β”€β”€β”€β”€β”΄β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”˜                        β”‚
β””β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”€β”˜

Codex Alimentarius CCP Decision Tree β€” Apply to each significant hazard at each process step


Section 5: HACCP Control Chart

The HACCP Control Chart (also called the HACCP Plan Summary Table) consolidates all CCPs with their critical limits, monitoring procedures, corrective actions, verification, and records in one master document.

CCP # Process Step Hazard Critical Limit Monitoring Frequency Who Corrective Action Verification Records
CCP-1 Cooking Pathogen survival Core temp β‰₯ 74Β°C for minimum 2 minutes Probe thermometer (calibrated) Every batch Production Operator Continue cooking until β‰₯ 74Β°C reached; if product quality compromised, quarantine and assess Daily supervisor review of records; monthly probe calibration; quarterly micro testing Cooking Temperature Log
CCP-2 Metal Detection Metal fragments Ferrous ≀ 2.0mm, Non-Ferrous ≀ 2.5mm, SS ≀ 3.0mm Ferrous, non-ferrous, & SS test sticks Every 30 minutes + start/end of shift QC Inspector Stop line; isolate all product since last good check; re-screen; investigate source Daily record review; weekly test piece check Metal Detector Check Log
CCP-3 Cold Storage Pathogen growth Storage temp ≀ 4Β°C Digital thermometer with data logger Continuous + manual check every 2 hours Store Keeper If > 4Β°C: move product to backup chiller; assess product safety; repair unit Daily temp log review; monthly equipment calibration Cold Storage Temperature Log

Note: Add as many rows as you have CCPs. A simple process like baked goods may have 2-3 CCPs; a complex ready-to-eat meal factory may have 8-12 CCPs.


Section 6: Verification Schedule

Verification confirms that your HACCP system is working effectively. It goes beyond routine monitoring and asks: “Is the plan scientifically sound, and is it being followed correctly?”

Verification Activity Frequency Responsible Person Method Record
Review monitoring records (all CCPs) Daily Production Supervisor Check all logs for completeness, signatures, and critical limit compliance Daily Record Review Form
Calibrate monitoring equipment (thermometers, metal detectors) Monthly QC Manager / External Service Use certified reference standards; document calibration results Equipment Calibration Log
Internal HACCP audit Quarterly HACCP Team Leader / Internal Auditor Walk through facility, observe CCP monitoring, review records, interview operators Internal Audit Report
End-product microbiological testing Monthly (per product) NABL-accredited lab Test for indicator organisms and pathogens per FSSAI standards Lab Test Reports
Review entire HACCP plan Annually (or when process changes) HACCP Team Re-validate all CCPs, hazard analysis, and critical limits; check for new regulations HACCP Plan Review Meeting Minutes
Mock recall exercise Annually HACCP Team + Management Simulate a product recall; test traceability from raw material to finished product dispatch Mock Recall Report

Section 7: Record Keeping Log

Comprehensive record-keeping is the backbone of HACCP compliance. During an FSSAI inspection or third-party audit, your records prove that your food safety system is actively managed.

Record Type Examples Retention Period Storage
CCP Monitoring Records Temperature logs, metal detector check sheets, cooking records 2 years + current year Production office / Cloud DMS
Corrective Action Records Deviation reports, product disposition forms, root cause analysis 2 years + current year QA department
Verification Records Calibration certificates, internal audit reports, lab test results 3 years QA department / Cloud DMS
Training Records HACCP training attendance, operator competency assessments, refresher training Duration of employment + 2 years HR / QA department
Supplier Records Approved supplier list, supplier COAs, supplier audit reports 3 years Procurement / QA department
Traceability Records Batch traceability logs, raw material lot tracking, dispatch records Shelf life + 6 months Production / Logistics
Water Testing Records 6-monthly water test reports from NABL lab, daily chlorination logs 3 years QA department
Pest Control Records Pest control service reports, bait station maps, pest sighting logs 2 years Facility Manager

How to Use This HACCP Template

Step 1: Assemble Your HACCP Team

Form a multi-disciplinary team with expertise in production, quality control, engineering, and microbiology. Appoint a HACCP Team Leader. The team must have documented HACCP training (minimum Level 3).

Step 2: Define Product & Scope

Complete Section 1 (Product Description) for each product or product group. Define the scope of your HACCP study β€” from which step to which step your plan will apply.

Step 3: Draw the Process Flow

Using Section 2 (Process Flow Diagram), map every step from receiving to dispatch. Walk the floor and verify the diagram matches reality. Get sign-off from the person who operates each step.

Step 4: Identify Hazards

Complete Section 3 (Hazard Analysis Worksheet) for every process step. Consider biological, chemical, physical, and allergen hazards. Assess likelihood and severity. Document control measures for each significant hazard.

Step 5: Determine CCPs

Use Section 4 (CCP Decision Tree) for each significant hazard at each step. Each hazard that passes through Q1β†’Q2β†’Q3β†’Q4 and reaches the “CCP” box must be included in your HACCP Control Chart.

Step 6: Build the Control Chart

Complete Section 5 (HACCP Control Chart) with critical limits, monitoring procedures, corrective actions, verification, and records for each CCP.

Step 7: Set Verification & Records

Complete Section 6 (Verification Schedule) and Section 7 (Record Keeping Log). Implement the plan, train all staff, and begin maintaining records immediately.

Step 8: Review & Improve

HACCP is a living system. Review your plan at least annually, or whenever there are changes in: raw materials, product formulation, processing methods, equipment, packaging, or regulations.

HACCP Certification in India

While FSSAI does not issue a standalone “HACCP certificate,” HACCP compliance is embedded in India’s food regulatory framework. Here’s how HACCP translates to compliance in India:

Certification/Standard Issuing Body Relevance Mandatory?
FSSAI Schedule 4 Compliance FSSAI (through State Food Safety Officers) Requires all FBOs to implement FSMS based on HACCP principles βœ… Yes β€” for all licensed FBOs
ISO 22000:2018 NABCB-accredited certification bodies International FSMS standard incorporating HACCP + PRPs; preferred by importers ❌ Voluntary (but common requirement for exports)
FSSC 22000 GFSI-recognized certification bodies Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) benchmarked; required by many multinational buyers ❌ Voluntary (but increasingly demanded by global retailers)
BRCGS Food Safety BRCGS-certified bodies British Retail Consortium standard; mandatory for supplying UK/EU retailers ❌ Voluntary (export-specific)
FSSAI FoSTaC Training FSSAI-empaneled training partners Food Safety Training and Certification (FoSTaC) β€” required for Food Safety Supervisors βœ… Yes β€” all FBOs must have at least 1 trained supervisor

HACCP Implementation Timeline for Indian FBOs

  1. Month 1: Form HACCP team + conduct gap analysis against Schedule 4
  2. Month 2: Complete HACCP training for team members
  3. Month 2–3: Develop HACCP plan using this template (Sections 1–7)
  4. Month 3–4: Implement monitoring systems, train all operators, begin record-keeping
  5. Month 4–6: Conduct first internal audit + verification; correct non-conformities
  6. Month 6–12: Apply for third-party certification (ISO 22000 / FSSC 22000) if desired
  7. Ongoing: Monthly reviews, quarterly audits, annual plan re-validation

🀝 Need Help Implementing HACCP?

FoodTechPro’s food safety consultants have helped 500+ Indian food businesses build and implement HACCP plans. From gap analysis to certification, we handle it end-to-end.

πŸ“ž Book a Free HACCP Consultation β†’

Includes free gap analysis report worth β‚Ή15,000

Related: Definitive FSSAI Guide 2026 | Food Safety Management System Guide | ISO 22000 Certification in India

Stay Updated with Food Industry Insights

Get the latest food technology news, research, and industry trends delivered to your inbox.