Juice HACCP Plan Templates & Examples for Compliance

Identify food safety hazards, set critical limits, and document procedures with our customizable juice HACCP plan templates and AI HACCP builder.

Create a USDA-approved HACCP plan for raw, cooked, or frozen juice products.

Fruit juice HACCP plan

Introduction
Juice HACCP Plan Templates

Juice products currently fall under the regulatory rules of the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) program.

Here, you will find how to develop a HACCP plan to achieve USDA compliance.

Who Can Use Juice HACCP Plan Templates?

Juice manufacturers, juice processors, retailers

What Products Do Our Juice HACCP Templates Cover?

Juice

MilApple Juice – Pasteurized Refrigerated

Cold-Press Juice with High-Pressure Processing

Orange Juice – Fresh

Orange Juice – Concentrate

Orange Juice – Pasteurized

Worried about your special business needs? You can customize any template with FoodReady consultants.

Building a Complete Juice Food Safety System with HACCP

A HACCP plan is vital to your food safety system, but is not the only part. Prerequisite programs, such as GMPs (Good Manufacturing Practices), must be in place to support your HACCP plan. The regulation (117 Subpart B) mandates safe food processing practices under sanitary conditions, including:

HACCP Consulting

Sanitary operations

Sanitary facilities & controls

Equipment & Utensils

Processes & controls

Plant & grounds

Defect action level considerations

Warehousing & distribution

Industry Leaders Who Already Use Our HACCP Plan Templates

Thanks Danks

Gabriel’s Bakery

eurobake

Process Flow

Example Juice Processing Steps

Q
What does a HACCP plan look like?

A
The process flow of a food safety plan (HACCP) is the center of a food product’s food safety story. It tells how a company makes its products and what juice hazards and controls are associated with each step.

Here's an example process flow for 100% orange juice:

Orange juice HACCP plan template

Steps:

1.
Receiving

2.
Storage

3.
Washing

4.
Sorting

5.
De-stoning

6.
Pressing

7.
Filtration

8.
Deaeration

9.
Pasteurization

10.
Cooling

11.
Holding tank missing

12.
Aseptic filling

13.
Sealing/labeling

14.
Palletizing

15.
Distribution storage

16.
Transport

Suggested
Logs and Records

Monitoring records and logs must include the actual values or observations that document the actual implementation of a Food Safety Plan.
For example, it should be the exact temperature recorded, not just a checkmark that the temperature complied with the critical limit.
To comply with regulations, you must record the information when you observe it.
Here are suggested record and log types to use:

Suggested
Supply Chain Documents

The safety of your product goes beyond your facility.
If an ingredient has a history of association with a specific hazard, a supply chain program may be required to control that risk within your food safety plan.
Many companies also implement broader supplier programs to monitor performance and ensure compliance beyond food safety.
Here is a list of suggested documents to obtain from your supply chain:

Potential Hazards

Biological
Chemical
Physical
Salmonella
Patulin
Metal
E. coli O157:H7
Environmental chemical contaminants
Glass
Cryptosporidium parvum
Pesticides
Plastic
Listeria monocytogenes
Cleaning agents
Wood
Clostridium botulinum
Food additives
-
Yeasts and molds
Undeclared food allergens
-
Biological:
Salmonella
E. coli O157:H7
Cryptosporidium parvum
Listeria monocytogenes
Clostridium botulinum
Yeasts and molds

Chemical:
Patulin
Environmental chemical contaminants
Pesticides
Cleaning agents
Food additives
Undeclared food allergens
Physical:
Metal
Glass
Plastic
Wood

Suggested Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)

SOPs are related to GMPs and controls of hazards in a food safety plan.

SOPs define the steps of how GMPs and Controls of Hazards mitigate food safety hazards and define a repeatable process.

Additional Components for Compliance (Recommended)

The following associated food safety components are recommended to achieve compliance with State and Federal rules and regulations.

Recall Plan

According to the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), Preventive Controls for Human Food regulation requires a written Recall Plan when a hazard analysis identifies a hazard requiring a preventive control.

Recalls are actions an establishment takes to remove an adulterated, misbranded, or violative product from the market.

In other words, a product for which the FDA or a state could take legal action against the company would be recalled.

Verification

Verification is essential to the supply chain, sanitation, allergen, and critical controls. It confirms that the HACCP Plan is operating as intended.

Validation confirms the effectiveness of the HACCP Plan. The purpose of verification is to make sure that the HACCP Plan is:

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