South Australia Act
Food Act 2001 (SA)
Food Act 2001 sets local food safety and enforcement rules in South Australia.
Plain-English explainers, not legal advice. Check the linked official source before you rely on a specific section, and get advice for your situation.
Get legal helpStart here
Quick read
- Food Act 2001 is the local food safety law for South Australia.
- It sits beside the Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code and local council requirements.
Likely relevant if
- Food businesses operating in South Australia
- Cafes, restaurants, caterers, food trucks, dark kitchens and takeaway stores
- Food manufacturers, importers, wholesalers and online food sellers
Check first
- Check whether the food activity needs registration, notification, approval or a food safety program.
- Keep food handling, temperature control, cleaning, allergen and contamination controls documented.
- Train and supervise staff so food safety procedures are followed in practice.
What happens if you get it wrong
Penalties & enforcement
Food law breaches can lead to improvement notices, prohibition or closure orders, fines, prosecution, product recalls, licence problems and reputational damage.
Enforced by SA Health and local councils
When this shows up in real life
- 1
Opening a cafe or restaurant
Check council registration, premises fitout, food safety supervisors, temperature logs, cleaning schedules and allergen processes before opening.
- 2
Selling packaged food online
Review labelling, storage, delivery temperature, allergen declarations and local registration or notification requirements.
- 3
Receiving a food safety notice
Treat the deadline as urgent, document corrective action and avoid reopening or continuing the affected process until the issue is controlled.
Plain-English glossary
- Food business
- A business or activity involving handling, selling, manufacturing, processing, storing or transporting food, depending on the local Act.
- Food safety program
- A documented system for identifying, controlling and monitoring food safety hazards where required.
- Improvement notice
- A regulator notice requiring a food business to fix a compliance issue within a specified timeframe.
Common questions
Is this enough to know my food obligations?
No. Food businesses usually need to check the local Act, the Food Standards Code, council registration or notification rules and any licence conditions.
Does this apply to online food businesses?
It can. Selling food online does not remove food safety, storage, labelling or local registration issues.