Mục lục
- What are the 7 HACCP principles?
- The 7 HACCP principles at a glance
- The seven principles in detail
- Principle 1: Hazard Analysis
- Principle 2: Determine the Critical Control Points (CCPs)
- Principle 3: Establish Critical Limits
- Principle 4: Establish a Monitoring System
- Principle 5: Establish Corrective Actions
- Principle 6: Establish Verification Procedures
- Principle 7: Establish Record-Keeping Procedures
- Why the 7 HACCP principles matter
- Related articles
- Frequently asked questions about the 7 HACCP principles
- Contact and plastic pallet advice from ICD
The 7 HACCP principles are a logical, systematic sequence of steps that help food businesses identify, evaluate and control hazards so the final product is always safe for consumers. They run from hazard analysis and critical control points through to monitoring, corrective actions, verification and record-keeping. This guide explains each of the seven principles in turn, with practical examples including hygiene control for the plastic pallets used in food and pharmaceutical lines.
What are the 7 HACCP principles?
The 7 HACCP principles form a structured framework for preventing food safety risks rather than catching them after the fact. They move a producer from spotting potential hazards to building documented, repeatable controls that auditors and regulators can verify.
Following these seven principles strictly does more than meet legal requirements: it protects the brand, reduces the risk of product recalls and strengthens consumer trust in product quality on the market.
The 7 HACCP principles at a glance
| No. | Principle | What it requires |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hazard Analysis | Identify all biological, chemical and physical hazards in the process |
| 2 | Critical Control Points (CCPs) | Pinpoint the steps where control eliminates or reduces a hazard to an acceptable level |
| 3 | Critical Limits | Set measurable limits (temperature, time, pH, concentration) for each CCP |
| 4 | Monitoring Procedures | Establish a system to check that each CCP stays within its critical limits |
| 5 | Corrective Actions | Define the response when a CCP falls outside its critical limit |
| 6 | Verification Procedures | Confirm periodically that the whole HACCP system is working effectively |
| 7 | Record-Keeping | Document and retain all HACCP information as evidence of compliance |
The seven principles in detail
Principle 1: Hazard Analysis
This is the first and most important step. The business identifies every potential hazard that could harm consumer health across the production process.
These hazards fall into three groups: biological (bacteria, viruses, parasites), chemical (cleaning agents, pesticides, heavy metals) and physical (glass fragments, metal, wood splinters from low-quality pallets). For plastic pallets used in the food industry, a hazard may be the use of unsafe recycled plastic or a contaminated pallet surface.
Principle 2: Determine the Critical Control Points (CCPs)
Once hazards are analysed, the team identifies the CCPs: the points in the process where control can eliminate or reduce a hazard to an acceptable level.
Cooking temperature, or washing and sanitising plastic pallets before use, can each be a CCP. Strong control at these points is critical, because they are the last reliable barrier against the hazard reaching the consumer.
Principle 3: Establish Critical Limits
Each CCP needs one or more critical limits. These are the values (temperature, time, pH, chemical concentration) that, if exceeded, mean the hazard is no longer controlled effectively.
A critical limit is the boundary between safe and unsafe. For instance, the minimum temperature required to sanitise a pallet is a critical limit that must be met every time.
Principle 4: Establish a Monitoring System
This principle requires procedures to monitor each CCP and confirm it stays within its defined critical limits. Monitoring can be manual measurement or automated.
Continuous monitoring catches deviations early. For plastic pallets, periodic checks of cleanliness and surface integrity are part of the monitoring routine.
Principle 5: Establish Corrective Actions
When monitoring shows a CCP outside its critical limit, corrective action must follow immediately. This covers controlling the affected product and fixing the process to prevent the problem recurring.
For example, if a pallet fails the hygiene standard, the corrective action may be to remove it from the line and either re-clean it thoroughly or replace it.
Principle 6: Establish Verification Procedures
Verification is the periodic check confirming the HACCP system is working as intended. It includes reviewing records, calibrating and inspecting equipment, and sampling and testing the final product.
Verification keeps the whole HACCP system maintained and continuously improved. It is the step that confirms the benefits the system is meant to deliver.
Principle 7: Establish Record-Keeping Procedures
Finally, all information related to the HACCP system must be recorded and retained in full. These records include the hazard analysis, CCPs, critical limits, monitoring results, corrective actions and verification procedures.
Records are the evidence of compliance with the HACCP standard, supporting traceability and inspection by the competent authorities.
Why the 7 HACCP principles matter
Applying all seven principles fully and accurately does more than satisfy regulations. It protects the brand, reduces the risk of product recalls and builds consumer confidence.
From our experience supplying food and pharmaceutical operations, the seven principles are best treated as the guiding framework for every production and handling activity. It is the most sustainable way to keep a product safe, and pairing it with the right hygienic equipment, such as food-grade plastic pallets, makes the controls easier to maintain.
Related articles
| What is HACCP and why it matters in logistics | Plastic pallets in pharma and food production |
Frequently asked questions about the 7 HACCP principles
1. What are the 7 HACCP principles?
They are hazard analysis, determining critical control points, establishing critical limits, monitoring, corrective actions, verification and record-keeping. Together they form a systematic framework for controlling food safety hazards.
2. Which HACCP principle comes first?
Hazard analysis comes first. The business identifies all biological, chemical and physical hazards across the process before deciding where and how to control them.
3. What is a critical control point (CCP)?
A CCP is a point in the process where control can eliminate or reduce a hazard to an acceptable level, such as a cooking temperature or the sanitising of pallets before use.
4. What is the difference between a critical limit and monitoring?
A critical limit is the measurable value (such as a minimum temperature) that separates safe from unsafe. Monitoring is the procedure that checks each CCP stays within that limit.
5. Why is record-keeping a HACCP principle?
Records are the documented evidence that the system was followed. They cover the hazard analysis, CCPs, limits, monitoring, corrective actions and verification, and they support traceability and regulatory inspection.
6. How do plastic pallets relate to HACCP?
Pallets can introduce physical and biological hazards, so washing and sanitising them is often a CCP, and checking their cleanliness and surface integrity is part of monitoring. Food-grade plastic pallets make these controls easier to maintain.
Contact and plastic pallet advice from ICD
ICD Viet Nam Industrial Production Company Limited
North: Floor 3, Thang Long A1 Building, Bau Hamlet, Thien Loc Commune, Hanoi - 0983 797 186 / 090 345 9186 / 090 5859 186
South: 551/212 Le Van Khuong, Tan Thoi Hiep, District 12, Ho Chi Minh City - 098 6784 186
Email: sales@icdvietnam.com.vn · Zalo: Chat on Zalo now
For advice on the 7 HACCP principles or selecting food-grade plastic pallets for your line, contact the ICD Viet Nam team and we will respond right away.
