FSMA 204 Compliance: Does It Apply to Indian Food Exporters?
| Question | Quick Answer |
|---|---|
| What is FSMA 204? | A US FDA rule requiring enhanced traceability records for specific high-risk foods |
| Current compliance deadline | July 20, 2028 (extended from the original January 20, 2026 date) |
| Does it apply to Indian exporters? | Only if you export specific high-risk foods on the FDA's Food Traceability List to the US |
| Should the delay change your plans? | No — FDA has said the rule itself is unchanged, only the enforcement date moved |
An exporter we spoke with last year had already restructured part of their packing line to capture lot-level data ahead of what was then a January 2026 deadline. A few months later, that deadline moved. This is roughly where most food exporters find themselves right now with FSMA 204: partway through preparation, watching a regulation that keeps shifting its timeline without changing its substance.
If you export food products to the United States, FSMA 204 is one of those regulations that quietly changes how your supply chain needs to operate, even if your product itself doesn't change at all. It's part of the FDA's Food Safety Modernization Act, and it specifically targets traceability, not formulation or safety testing.
What Is FSMA 204?
FSMA 204 refers to Section 204 of the Food Safety Modernization Act, the law Congress passed in 2011 to shift US food safety policy from reacting to contamination after the fact toward preventing it and, when prevention fails, tracing it fast. The specific rule that came out of Section 204 is the Food Traceability Rule, finalised by the FDA in November 2022 after a federal court order forced the agency's hand following years of delay.
The reasoning behind it is straightforward even if the paperwork isn't: when a foodborne illness outbreak happens, investigators currently spend days or weeks tracing a contaminated product back through distributors, processors, and growers, often relying on inconsistent paper records kept differently by every company in the chain. The Food Traceability Rule standardises what data gets captured and where, so that trace-back that used to take weeks can, in theory, take hours.
What Is The Current FSMA 204 Compliance Deadline?
This is the part that trips up a lot of exporters right now, because most guidance written before March 2025 still references the original January 20, 2026 compliance date. That date no longer applies. In March 2025, the FDA announced it would extend the deadline by 30 months, and in August 2025 it formalised that extension in the Federal Register. Congress then reinforced this through the Continuing Appropriations Act of 2026, directing the FDA not to enforce the rule before July 20, 2028.
The FDA's own stated reasoning is worth reading carefully, because it explains why this isn't really a reprieve. The agency said that even companies well positioned to comply by 2026 were concerned about relying on accurate data from supply chain partners who weren't equally prepared. Since the rule only delivers its full public health benefit when every entity in a chain is compliant simultaneously, a partial rollout wasn't going to work. The rule's requirements themselves were not changed for FSMA 204 compliance purposes. Only the enforcement timeline moved.
What this means practically: if you've already started building traceability systems, keep going. If you were waiting to see whether the rule would survive in its current form, it has, and the extra time is best used for testing your systems with real supply chain partners rather than treating July 2028 as a reason to start later.
Does FSMA 204 Apply To Indian Exporters?
It applies only if two conditions are both true: your product is on the FDA's Food Traceability List (FTL), and you're exporting it to the United States. There's no blanket rule that covers all Indian food exports, so confirming whether a specific product line is actually in scope is the first step before building out any traceability system that might not even be necessary.
Which Foods Are Covered Under The Food Traceability Rule?
FSMA 204 doesn't apply to every food export, and this is the single most common misunderstanding we see. The rule applies specifically to foods on the FTL, a defined set of higher-risk categories that includes items like soft cheeses, shell eggs, certain fresh and fresh-cut fruits and vegetables, fresh herbs, melons, sprouts, nut butters, ready-to-eat deli salads, and specific seafood categories including finfish and molluscan shellfish such as oysters, clams, and mussels.
Are Shrimp Exporters Covered Under FSMA 204?
Generally, no. This is the detail that catches Indian exporters off guard most often, since the seafood coverage under FSMA 204 is narrower than people assume. Molluscan bivalve shellfish are on the list; shrimp and other crustaceans generally are not, even though shrimp is one of India's largest food export categories to the US. That doesn't mean shrimp exporters have nothing to track under US rules, separate FDA seafood HACCP requirements still apply, but it does mean FSMA 204 specifically isn't the relevant rule for most shrimp shipments. Because the FTL has been updated before and could be again, the only reliable way to confirm whether your specific product is covered is to check the current list directly on the FDA's website rather than relying on a static summary, including this one.
What FSMA 204 Compliance Actually Involves
Three terms come up constantly in FSMA 204 compliance documentation, and they're worth understanding in plain language rather than FDA phrasing.
- Critical Tracking Events (CTEs) are the specific points where a covered food changes hands or form, such as harvesting, cooling, initial packing, transformation through processing, and shipping. Each CTE requires its own record.
- Key Data Elements (KDEs) are the specific pieces of information required at each CTE, things like the date, location, quantity, and the Traceability Lot Code of the product involved. The exact KDEs differ depending on which CTE you're recording.
- Traceability Lot Codes (TLCs) are unique identifiers assigned to a batch of product, carried through every CTE so the same lot can be traced consistently across the entire chain, not just within one company's own records.
In practice, this means a business handling a covered food needs a system, whether that's dedicated software or a disciplined manual process, that captures the right KDEs at every CTE and can hand over a complete traceability record to the FDA within 24 hours of a request. That last part is often underestimated: the requirement isn't just to keep records, it's to retrieve them fast, under audit pressure, possibly mid-recall.
Will FSMA 204 Be Delayed Again?
Because the deadline moved once already, some exporters have started treating FSMA 204 as a rule that will probably get delayed again or watered down before it actually bites. That's a risky assumption to build a business plan around. The FDA has been explicit that the rule's substance hasn't changed and that it remains committed to the requirements as written. The delay was about giving the entire supply chain, including upstream growers and downstream US distributors, time to coordinate, not about reconsidering whether traceability records are necessary.
The more useful way to think about July 2028 is as a longer runway, not a smaller mountain. Building a working traceability system that coordinates correctly with US importers and distributors takes real testing time, catching format mismatches and data gaps before they show up during an actual FDA request rather than during it.
How Long Does It Take To Become FSMA 204 Compliant?
For a small to mid-sized exporter shipping one or two covered categories, the initial gap analysis and system setup, mapping your specific CTEs, choosing how you'll capture and store KDEs, and testing data exchange with your US-side partners, typically takes six to twelve weeks of focused work. The bigger cost driver isn't software, it's coordination: getting your freight forwarder, US importer, and any co-packers to agree on a consistent TLC format and data handoff process before you're relying on it during a real recall.
Businesses already running decent batch and lot tracking internally usually find the FSMA 204 layer is an extension of what they're doing, not a rebuild. Businesses still relying on paper records or disconnected spreadsheets typically face a more significant transition, since integrating traceability data across the supply chain can require substantial process changes.