Initial audit frequency
Following successful verification, the appropriate enforcement agency is responsible for:
Arranging audits
Food businesses are responsible for organising their own regulatory food safety audits within the specified audit frequency. Audits must be conducted by a regulatory food safety auditor approved by the Department of Health. View the list of approved regulatory food safety auditors.
Enforcement agencies should monitor food businesses to ensure audits are being undertaking at the required frequency. If a food business fails to undertake audits at the required frequency, the enforcement agency should take action to ensure the business is aware that the audit is overdue and take compliance and enforcement action if necessary.
Follow up after regulatory food safety audit
Following a regulatory food safety audit, the auditor is required to send an audit report to the enforcement agency within 21 days of the completion of the audit (audits are considered complete within 14 days or earlier from the beginning of audit activities), or within 24 hours of the audit for reporting critical non-compliances.
The enforcement agency is responsible for responding to audit findings where they require a compliance and/or enforcement response (i.e. where issues have been identified that relate to non-compliance with the Code).
The enforcement agency must also review changes to audit frequencies determined by auditors (this will be in the audit report) and notify the food business of any change to audit frequency. A checklist for enforcement agencies of information to be checked on receipt of the regulatory food safety audit report is available in the Food Safety Auditing – Guidelines for Enforcement Agencies (PDF 383 KB).