Governing Body
Grade Scale
Certified Sites Global
Countries
Audit Cycle
Understanding the Standard
What Is BRCGS Certification β And Why Do Kenyan Packhouses Need It?
BRCGS stands for Brand Reputation Compliance Global Standards β formerly known as the British Retail Consortium Global Standard (BRC). It is the worldβs most widely adopted food safety and quality certification framework, with over 30,000 certified sites in 130+ countries. For Kenyan packhouses, food processors, and agro-exporters supplying the UK and European supermarket supply chains, BRCGS certification is the primary food safety standard their buyers require at the packhouse and processing level.
While GLOBALG.A.P. covers food safety at the farm level and Kenya GAP establishes baseline compliance for Kenyan horticulture, BRCGS operates at the next level in the supply chain β the packhouse, processing facility, cold store, or food manufacturing site. Any Kenyan operation that receives, sorts, packs, processes, or stores fresh produce or food products destined for major UK or EU supermarkets will typically receive a BRCGS certification requirement from those buyers.
Major UK supermarkets that specify BRCGS for their Kenyan suppliers include Tesco, Sainsburyβs, Marks & Spencer, Waitrose, Asda, Co-op, and Morrisons. European buyers including major Dutch, German, and French retailers also specify BRCGS. For a Kenyan avocado, French bean, or flower packhouse β BRCGS is increasingly the entry requirement to the premium European retail supply chain.
BRCGS vs GLOBALG.A.P. β understanding the difference
GLOBALG.A.P. is a farm-level certification covering how crops are grown. BRCGS is a packhouse and processing-level certification covering how food is handled, packed, processed, and stored after it leaves the farm. A Kenyan avocado exporter typically needs both β GLOBALG.A.P. for the farms supplying the packhouse, and BRCGS for the packhouse itself. The two standards are complementary, not alternatives.
Packhouse operations
Grading, sorting, packing, labelling, and cold chain management of fresh produce β avocado, French beans, mangoes, flowers, herbs, baby vegetables
Food processing
Processing of agricultural commodities β dried fruits, nuts, spices, processed vegetables, macadamia, coffee, tea, juices, and other value-added products
Storage & distribution
Cold stores, warehouses, and distribution centres handling food products in the export supply chain β BRCGS Storage & Distribution standard applies
Who Needs BRCGS in Kenya
Which Kenyan Operations Require BRCGS Certification?
BRCGS applies to any Kenyan operation in the food supply chain that processes, packs, or handles food products for major retail buyers. These are the sectors where Kenyan operations most commonly receive BRCGS requirements from their buyers.
Fresh Produce Packhouses
The largest BRCGS-certified sector in Kenya. Avocado, French bean, snow pea, baby vegetable, and mango packhouses supplying UK and EU supermarkets. Operations like VegPro, Homefresh, and Planet Associates hold BRCGS certification for their Kenyan packhouses.
Standard: BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9
Coffee Processing & Export
Kenyan coffee processors, dry mills, and exporters supplying branded coffee companies in the UK and EU. BRCGS is increasingly specified by specialty roasters and retail coffee buyers alongside Rainforest Alliance or FairTrade certification.
Standard: BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9
Macadamia & Nut Processing
Kenya is Africaβs largest macadamia producer. Processing facilities supplying UK and EU food manufacturers and retailers face BRCGS requirements. Macadamia processing involves specific food safety risks β aflatoxin, foreign body contamination β that BRCGS specifically addresses.
Standard: BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9
Herbs, Spices & Dried Foods
Kenyan dried herb, spice, and dried fruit processors supplying European food manufacturers and retailers. This sector has specific BRCGS requirements around aflatoxin control, moisture management, and pest control in dry storage environments.
Standard: BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9
Tea Processing Facilities
Kenyan tea factories and blending operations supplying branded tea companies in the UK (Unilever, Twinings, Tetley, Yorkshire Tea) face BRCGS requirements alongside Rainforest Alliance certification. BRCGS covers the processing facility; RA covers the farm level.
Standard: BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9
Cold Stores & Logistics
Third-party cold storage and logistics operations handling temperature-controlled Kenyan exports β particularly at Nairobi, Mombasa, and airport cargo facilities. The BRCGS Storage & Distribution standard applies to these operations.
Standard: BRCGS Storage & Distribution Issue 4
The Right Standard for Your Operation
Which BRCGS Standard Applies to Your Kenyan Operation?
BRCGS is not a single standard β it is a family of standards covering different parts of the food and consumer goods supply chain. The correct standard depends on what your operation does. Applying for the wrong standard wastes time and money. Agrosocial identifies the correct standard for your operation before any preparation begins.
Understanding Your Grade
The BRCGS Grading System β From AA to D
BRCGS uses a grading system that reflects both the number of non-conformities found during the audit and the audit type (announced or unannounced). Grades range from AA (highest β achieved through unannounced audit with zero or minimal non-conformities) to D (certification withheld). Your grade is publicly visible on the BRCGS Directory and your buyers can look it up.
Announced vs Unannounced audits β what Kenyan operations should know
First-time BRCGS audits are announced β you receive advance notice. After certification, you can choose between announced audits (Grade A maximum) or unannounced audits (Grade AA available). Many major buyers now prefer or require unannounced audits from their certified suppliers, as this demonstrates consistent standards rather than pre-audit preparation. Agrosocial recommends maintaining year-round audit readiness to make the unannounced option viable β and to achieve Grade AA status that differentiates your operation.
What BRCGS Assesses
BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9 β Key Requirements for Kenyan Packhouses
BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9 is organised into eight sections covering every aspect of food safety management from senior management commitment to operational controls. Below are the sections most relevant to Kenyan packhouse and food processing operations β and the specific requirements that commonly challenge Kenyan facilities.
Section 1 β Senior Management Commitment & Continuous Improvement
BRCGS requires demonstrable senior management commitment to food safety β not just policy documents, but evidence that management actively drives the food safety agenda. Auditors look for senior management participation in food safety meetings, review of KPIs, and resource allocation for food safety improvements.
Section 2 β Food Safety Plan (HACCP)
The HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point) plan is the technical heart of BRCGS. A fully documented, validated, and verified HACCP plan must cover all product types and processes at the facility. This is the section where most first-time Kenyan applicants have the largest gaps β either no formal HACCP system exists, or the system exists on paper but has not been validated against actual operational data.
Section 3 β Food Safety & Quality Management System
The documented management system that underpins all food safety activities. Includes document control, record keeping, complaint management, supplier approval, and traceability. Traceability is a major focus for Kenyan export packhouses β you must be able to trace any product from incoming raw material to outgoing shipment within 4 hours.
Section 4 β Site Standards
Physical inspection of the packhouse or processing facility β the most visually impactful section of the audit. Auditors physically walk the entire site assessing building structure, equipment condition, pest control, waste management, water quality, and environmental hygiene. This is where visible issues β dirty walls, pest evidence, damaged equipment, inadequate hand washing β result in immediate non-conformities.
Section 5 β Product Control
Product specifications, shelf life management, microbiological and chemical testing, allergen management, and product authenticity. For Kenyan fresh produce packhouses, the key requirements are residue testing against EU MRLs, microbiological testing of product and contact surfaces, and accurate product labelling for export.
Section 6 β Process Control
Operational controls for production and packing processes β ensuring consistent product quality and food safety through controlled processes. Includes temperature control, weight and measure control, equipment calibration, and control of non-conforming product.
Section 7 β Personnel
Training, hygiene, and health requirements for all personnel β permanent, temporary, and contractors. Worker hygiene practices are physically observed during the site walk. BRCGS requires documented training records for all personnel covering food hygiene, HACCP awareness, and job-specific tasks.
What to Expect
The BRCGS Audit Process in Kenya β Step by Step
BRCGS audits are conducted by BRCGS-approved certification bodies (CBs) β accredited third-party audit firms. In Kenya, approved CBs include SGS Kenya, Bureau Veritas Kenya, Intertek Kenya, and others. Here is what the complete BRCGS certification process looks like.
Select a BRCGS-Approved Certification Body
Contact a BRCGS-approved CB operating in Kenya. Get quotes from at least two CBs β audit costs vary. Confirm they are accredited for the specific BRCGS standard you need (Food Safety, Storage & Distribution, etc.). Your buyer may specify which CB they prefer β check before engaging. Agrosocial can advise on CB selection based on your sector, location, and budget.
Agrosocial Gap Assessment & Preparation (2β6 Months)
We conduct a thorough pre-audit gap assessment against all BRCGS requirements β reviewing your existing documentation, walking your facility, assessing your HACCP system, and identifying every gap. We then work systematically through corrective actions: building or upgrading your HACCP plan, establishing your Quality Management System documentation, training your HACCP team, and verifying site standards. The timeline depends on how mature your existing food safety systems are.
Internal Audit β Your Final Readiness Check
Before the CB audit, Agrosocial conducts a full mock BRCGS audit of your facility β assessing every section against the BRCGS checklist, identifying any remaining gaps, and verifying that all corrective actions from the gap assessment have been fully implemented. This is the critical final check that determines your readiness.
The BRCGS Audit Day (Announced)
The CB auditor spends 1β3 days at your facility (depending on size and complexity) conducting: an opening meeting, document review (HACCP plan, QMS documents, training records, testing results), a full site walk and physical inspection, and staff interviews. The audit follows the BRCGS checklist systematically β every section is assessed. Agrosocial can be present throughout to support your management team.
Closing Meeting β Non-Conformities Presented
The auditor presents all non-conformities found β graded as Critical, Major, or Minor. Critical non-conformities mean no certification. Major non-conformities require documented corrective action within 28 days. Minor non-conformities require corrective action before the next audit. The grade is determined by the number and type of non-conformities.
Corrective Actions & Certificate Issued
Major non-conformity corrective actions are submitted to the CB within 28 days for verification. Once accepted, the CB issues your BRCGS certificate. Your site is listed on the BRCGS Directory β publicly searchable by your buyers worldwide. Your certificate and grade are visible to any buyer who searches your site on the directory.
Annual Renewal Audit
BRCGS certification requires annual re-audit. Agrosocial recommends maintaining a continuous improvement approach throughout the year β so annual audits are smooth, your grade improves over time, and you can transition to unannounced audits to achieve Grade AA status.
Financial Planning
How Much Does BRCGS Certification Cost in Kenya?
BRCGS costs vary significantly based on facility size, complexity, and the number of audit days required. Below are realistic ranges for Kenyan packhouse and food processing operations.
BRCGS Audit Fee (CB)
USD 1,500β4,500
CB audit fee for 1β3 audit days. Approximately KES 230,000β690,000. Includes travel and accommodation for the auditor. Larger or more complex facilities require more audit days.
BRCGS Annual Fee
USD 400β800
Annual BRCGS directory listing and certificate fee. Approximately KES 62,000β123,000. Paid directly to BRCGS separately from CB audit fees.
Agrosocial Preparation
KES 150Kβ450K
Gap assessment, HACCP development, QMS documentation, staff training, and mock audit. Cost depends on facility size, complexity, and current food safety system maturity. First-time BRCGS applicants typically require more preparation than facilities upgrading existing systems.
Laboratory Testing
KES 80Kβ250K
Microbiological testing (water, product, surfaces), pesticide residue testing, and water quality testing at accredited Kenyan laboratories. BRCGS requires documented testing schedules with results.
The commercial return on BRCGS investment: BRCGS Grade A certification typically enables access to 3β5 additional major buyer relationships per year for a Kenyan packhouse. A single new UK supermarket supply chain relationship β representing 500+ metric tonnes of avocado per season β generates revenue that dwarfs the total BRCGS certification cost many times over. BRCGS is not a cost β it is a market access investment with a measurable commercial return.
Preparation Intelligence
The Most Common BRCGS Failures at Kenyan Packhouses
Based on Agrosocialβs experience preparing Kenyan agri-export facilities for food safety audits, these are the non-conformities most commonly found during BRCGS assessments of Kenyan operations β and they are all preventable.
1. Inadequate or undocumented HACCP plan
The most common first-time Critical or Major finding for Kenyan packhouses. Either no formal HACCP plan exists, or a plan exists on paper but has never been validated against actual process data, the HACCP team has not been trained, and critical limits have not been established through scientific evidence. Building a BRCGS-compliant HACCP plan from scratch is typically the most significant preparation task for Kenyan facilities and requires expert input.
2. Traceability failures β cannot trace product within 4 hours
BRCGS requires that any product can be traced from incoming raw material to outgoing shipment within 4 hours. Kenyan packhouses that do not use lot coding at intake, or that cannot link specific farm-level intake records to specific export cartons, fail this requirement. A traceability exercise is conducted during the audit β failure during the exercise is a Major non-conformity regardless of how good the documentation looks on paper.
3. Pest control β evidence of activity or inadequate controls
Rodent droppings, insect evidence, or improperly sealed entry points are Critical non-conformities. Many Kenyan packhouses in rural areas face genuine pest pressure β the solution is a contracted, documented pest control programme with regular monitoring, proofing, and bait station records. Evidence of pest activity without a documented control response is an immediate failure.
4. Personal hygiene β observed violations during site walk
Workers observed handling product without washing hands after toilet breaks, wearing jewellery in production areas, not using hair covering, or eating in production areas β all result in non-conformities even if the hygiene policy documents exist. The auditor observes actual practice, not policy. Agrosocialβs pre-audit training ensures workers understand and consistently practice BRCGS hygiene requirements.
5. Metal detector not validated or no foreign body detection programme
For Kenyan packhouses handling produce that passes through mechanical equipment, BRCGS requires a foreign body detection programme β typically metal detection with documented sensitivity tests at start, during, and end of each production run. Metal detectors that are not calibrated, not tested at the right frequency, or where test records are incomplete result in Major non-conformities.
6. Supplier approval β farms not formally approved
BRCGS requires all raw material suppliers (farms supplying the packhouse) to be formally assessed and approved through a documented supplier approval programme. Many Kenyan packhouses source from hundreds of outgrower farms without any formal approval process. Building a risk-based supplier approval programme β where GLOBALG.A.P. or Kenya GAP certification substitutes for individual farm approval β is a key preparation task.
Our Role
How Agrosocial Prepares Kenyan Packhouses for BRCGS Certification
We have direct experience supporting agribusiness clients at the commercial operations level β including delivery of annual sustainability and compliance training for Del Monte Kenya at their Thika facility. BRCGS preparation builds on this operational compliance expertise applied to the packhouse and food processing environment.
Full BRCGS Gap Assessment
Comprehensive assessment of your facility against all BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9 requirements. Document review, site walk, staff interviews, and equipment assessment. Written gap report with prioritised corrective actions graded by audit severity and implementation urgency.
HACCP Plan Development
We build or upgrade your HACCP plan from scratch β conducting hazard analysis for your specific products and processes, identifying CCPs with validated critical limits, establishing monitoring procedures, and training your HACCP team to maintain and review the plan.
Quality Manual & QMS Documentation
We develop the complete BRCGS-compliant Quality Management System β Quality Manual, standard operating procedures, work instructions, record forms, and document control system. All documentation is built to BRCGS Issue 9 requirements and your specific operation.
Staff Training β HACCP & Food Hygiene
Training for your HACCP team, production supervisors, and all food handling staff. Covers HACCP principles, food hygiene practices, personal hygiene requirements, allergen awareness, and food safety culture β with documented training records that meet BRCGS requirements.
Site Standards Remediation
We identify physical site issues β pest proofing gaps, drainage problems, equipment condition, cleaning station adequacy, signage β and provide practical, prioritised remediation plans. We work with your maintenance team to verify all physical issues are resolved before the CB audit.
Full Mock BRCGS Audit
Before your CB audit, we conduct a complete mock BRCGS audit β assessing your facility exactly as the CB auditor will, identifying any remaining gaps, conducting a traceability exercise, and verifying that all preparation is complete. This is your final readiness confirmation before the real audit.
Start Your BRCGS Journey β From Gap Assessment to Grade A
We work with packhouses and food processing facilities across Kenya. Contact us for a free initial discussion about your facilityβs BRCGS readiness and preparation timeline.
BRCGS Kenya β Frequently Asked Questions
Is BRCGS the same as BRC?
Yes β BRCGS is the rebrand of BRC (British Retail Consortium). The organisation rebranded from BRC to BRCGS in 2019. The standards are the same; only the name changed. If a buyer specifies βBRCβ certification, they mean BRCGS. The current Food Safety standard is Issue 9, published in 2022.
How long does BRCGS preparation take for a Kenyan packhouse?
For a Kenyan packhouse starting from scratch with no existing food safety management system, preparation typically takes 3 to 6 months. A facility that already has some documentation and a basic HACCP system can often be audit-ready in 2 to 3 months. The single most time-consuming element is building and validating the HACCP plan β particularly for facilities handling multiple product types or complex processes.
Do I need BRCGS if my farms are already GLOBALG.A.P. certified?
GLOBALG.A.P. and BRCGS operate at different levels. GLOBALG.A.P. certifies the farms growing your produce. BRCGS certifies the packhouse or processing facility handling it after harvest. If your buyer requires both, you need both β they are not alternatives. GLOBALG.A.P. certification of your supplier farms does, however, simplify part of the BRCGS supplier approval requirement.
Which certification bodies conduct BRCGS audits in Kenya?
BRCGS-approved certification bodies operating in Kenya include SGS Kenya, Bureau Veritas Kenya, Intertek Kenya, and Control Union Kenya. Your buyer may specify a preferred CB. Costs and audit scheduling times vary between CBs β Agrosocial can advise on CB selection based on your location, timeline, and budget.
What is the BRCGS Directory and why does it matter?
The BRCGS Directory is a publicly accessible database of all BRCGS-certified sites worldwide. Your buyers β including UK and EU supermarkets β check the BRCGS Directory to verify your certification status before approving you as a supplier. Your site name, location, certification standard, grade, certificate issue date, and expiry date are all publicly visible. Buyers can set up alerts to notify them if your certificate lapses or your grade changes.
Can a small Kenyan packhouse afford BRCGS certification?
The minimum total cost for BRCGS certification (CB audit, BRCGS fee, laboratory testing, and preparation support) for a small Kenyan packhouse is approximately KES 400,000β600,000 in the first year. This is a significant investment β but consider that without BRCGS, access to major UK and EU supermarket supply chains is closed entirely. The commercial value of a single supermarket supply relationship typically exceeds this cost many times over in the first season alone. Agrosocial helps small packhouses sequence their investment efficiently to achieve certification with maximum cost efficiency.