Foundation FSSC has confirmed that FSSC 22000 Version 7 launches on May 15, 2026. From that date, a 12-month transition period begins, and all audits conducted on or after May 15, 2027 must follow the new version. Version 6 certificates remain valid during transition, but the countdown starts the day V7 is published.
This is not a cosmetic update. The prerequisite program architecture is being rebuilt, GFSI 2024 expectations are being absorbed into the scheme, sustainability is getting more operational weight, and retail and wholesale move into a clearer certification path.
If your team waits until the first half of 2027 to take Version 7 seriously, the audit is likely to become the moment you discover how many structural updates were never turned into working evidence.
Why Version 7 Exists
Three forces collided to make Version 7 necessary: the ISO 22002 series was restructured, GFSI updated its benchmarking requirements, and sustainability expectations stopped being something schemes could politely gesture at without operational consequences.
The ISO 22002 series was rebuilt
The old ISO/TS 22002 structure has been replaced by a redesigned ISO 22002:2025 architecture, including the new cross-sector foundation in ISO 22002-100:2025.
GFSI 2024 raised the benchmark
FSSC 22000 needs to stay aligned with the latest GFSI benchmarking expectations to remain commercially meaningful for major food buyers and retailers.
Sustainability moved into the scheme
Version 7 strengthens the expectation that food safety systems reflect sustainability commitments in operational practice rather than leaving them in a separate ESG silo.
The Big Change: ISO 22002-100 and the New PRP Architecture
This is the most structurally important shift in Version 7. Instead of treating each sector PRP document as a mostly standalone universe, the new model creates a common foundation in ISO 22002-100:2025 and then layers sector-specific requirements on top.
For most organizations, the practical impact is not that entirely new hygiene concepts appear overnight. It is that your PRP documentation, internal cross-references, and audit logic need to match the new structure rather than the old ISO/TS layout your system was built on.
If your procedures still point to the old ISO/TS 22002 headers and clauses, the issue is not just formatting. Under Version 7, it can become a visible sign that the system was never actually transitioned to the new architecture.
Where Teams Will Feel the Change Most
The new PRP architecture
ISO 22002-100:2025 becomes the shared baseline for hygiene, sanitation, pest control, allergen management, traceability, food defense, and more. Sector-specific parts then add only what is unique to manufacturing, packaging, catering, retail, and other categories.
Retail and wholesale are now properly in scope
ISO 22002-7:2025 opens a clearer FSSC pathway for retail and wholesale operations, expanding the scheme beyond its previous practical limits and giving more of the food chain a consistent certification route.
Food safety culture and sustainability both get heavier
GFSI 2024 alignment sharpens expectations on food safety culture, fraud, defense, and management commitment, while Version 7 also increases pressure to show how your system reflects SDG-related sustainability commitments in practice.
Version 7 also sharpens category clarity, which matters for multi-site and mixed-operation businesses. If you manufacture, store, distribute, or retail under one group structure, your certification body should be aligned early on exactly which sector parts apply where.
Climate and Sustainability Stop Sitting on the Side
Version 7 lands in a context where ISO 22000 already carries climate action considerations through its amendment and where buyers expect food safety systems to acknowledge broader operational responsibility. That does not mean every site suddenly needs an ESG report embedded in the HACCP plan. It does mean your policies, reviews, supplier expectations, and operating controls should stop pretending sustainability and food safety live on different planets.
The Transition Timeline
Version 7 publishes on May 15, 2026. From May 15, 2027, all audits and assessments must follow the new version. Twelve months sounds reasonable until you account for standards review, documentation redesign, site training, certification body coordination, and the very real possibility that your regular audit cycle will overlap with the transition window.
Pre-audit preparation sequence
How Crosscheck Helps
Crosscheck supports food safety certification alongside broader supply chain and sustainability compliance work. For the Version 7 transition, the key benefit is mapping requirements to the documentation you already have, so your team can see where the real gaps are instead of discovering them in front of an auditor.
When your FSMS records are uploaded, Crosscheck can help organize the new PRP architecture, highlight where evidence is missing, and separate common foundational requirements from category-specific ones. For multi-site groups, that means one platform can still reflect different food chain categories without forcing each site into the wrong audit lens.
The transition window starts when Version 7 is published, not when your team finds time to think about it.
Next step
FSSC 22000 V7 launches on May 15, 2026. The PRP restructure alone can burn through the transition year.
Crosscheck maps FSSC 22000 Version 7 requirements against your existing FSMS, highlights where your PRP architecture and evidence packs no longer fit, and gives your team a clearer pre-audit transition plan.