Food Recall Firms

Which companies have the most FDA food recalls? Rankings based on 29,034 recall records from the FDA enforcement database.

The FDA tracks which companies are responsible for food recalls. Every recall action is associated with a recalling firm — the company that initiated or was required to conduct the recall. A high recall count does not necessarily indicate a dangerous company. Larger food manufacturers that produce high volumes across many product lines are statistically more likely to appear in recall data. This list is based on all FDA food enforcement actions in the openFDA database.

All Recalling Firms

5,383 firms found in FDA recall records. Sorted by recall count.

# Recalling Firm Recalls Most Recent View
5351 King Juice Company, Inc. 1 Apr 23, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5352 Ganesha Enterprises LLC 1 Feb 14, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5353 HEMU TRADING INC 1 Apr 2, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5354 French Broad Chocolate Factory 1 Apr 23, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5355 Disaronno Ingredients S.p.a. 1 Mar 4, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5356 Green Organic Vegetables 1 Apr 21, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5357 FINESALER LLC 1 Mar 26, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5358 Givaudan Flavors Corp 1 Apr 22, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5359 WE R NUTS 1 Apr 20, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5360 Prospector Popcorn, LLC 1 Apr 28, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5361 Ocinet, Inc. 1 May 1, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5362 Pork King Good, LLC 1 Apr 23, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5363 Stoltzfus Family Dairy LLC 1 May 5, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5364 Pure Ground Ingredients, Inc. 1 Apr 8, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5365 Llorens Pharmaceuticals International Division, Inc. 1 May 7, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5366 Shining Sea Fish Co. LLC 1 Apr 28, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5367 Honeyville, Inc 1 Apr 21, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5368 Fly By Jing Inc. 1 May 8, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5369 Sato Pharmaceutical Inc. 1 Mar 12, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5370 Nassar Investment Company LLC 1 Apr 30, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5371 Creative Compounds, LLC 1 Dec 15, 2025 View Recalls · Brand History
5372 Terra Medi LLC 1 May 13, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5373 SECOND NATURE BRAND 1 May 1, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5374 Guittard Chocolate Company 1 May 5, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5375 The Brownie Baker Inc. 1 Apr 27, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5376 The a2 Milk Company 1 May 1, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5377 Wilco Peanut Co 1 May 18, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5378 Total Nutrition Inc 1 May 22, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5379 Refresqueria Estrella Inc. 1 May 19, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5380 Weikfield Foods Pvt. Ltd. 1 Feb 25, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5381 University of California Health Milk Bank 1 May 22, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5382 BEF Foods, Inc 1 Mar 23, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History
5383 E & S Grocery & Bakery Inc. 1 Jan 30, 2026 View Recalls · Brand History

Firm names are taken directly from FDA recall records and may include subsidiaries, brand names, or distribution companies. The recalling firm is not always the original manufacturer.

Understanding Food Firm Recall Data

Why Do Companies Recall Food Products?

Food recalls occur when a product may be adulterated, contaminated, or mislabeled. The most common triggers are bacterial contamination (Salmonella, Listeria, E. coli), undeclared allergens that could cause reactions in sensitive consumers, and foreign objects found during quality control. Recalls can be voluntarily initiated by the company or requested by the FDA after an inspection or consumer complaint.

Does a High Recall Count Mean a Company is Unsafe?

Not necessarily. Large food companies that produce thousands of SKUs across multiple facilities will statistically appear in recall data more often than small producers. What matters is the severity of the hazard (Class I vs. Class III), the speed of response, and whether the company proactively found the issue or waited for consumer complaints. Companies with good safety programs often catch problems earlier and recall voluntarily.

Frequently Asked Questions

The recalling firm is the company that initiates or is legally responsible for a food recall. This is typically the manufacturer, but it can also be a distributor, importer, or retailer — whoever holds legal responsibility for the product in the supply chain at the time the recall is issued. In cases where a product is made by one company and distributed under another's brand, the recalling firm may differ from the producer. The FDA identifies the recalling firm in every enforcement action record.

Under the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), companies must immediately notify FDA when they have reason to believe that a food product is adulterated or misbranded. Once a recall is underway, the company must notify all direct consignees (distributors, retailers) to stop distributing the product, remove it from commerce, and provide a recall strategy to the FDA. The company must submit periodic status reports to the FDA until the recall is terminated. Failure to report known food safety violations can result in significant civil and criminal penalties.

Yes. Under FSMA, the FDA has mandatory recall authority for food products. If a company refuses to voluntarily recall a product that the FDA determines poses a serious health risk, the agency can order a mandatory recall. In practice, the vast majority of food recalls are voluntary — companies typically cooperate with FDA requests to avoid legal liability, negative publicity, and more severe regulatory action. Mandatory recalls are rare but do occur when a company contests the FDA's safety determination.

Use the search bar above to look up any company by name. The results show all FDA recall records associated with that firm, sorted by most recent. You can also use the Browse All Recalls page to filter by firm name using the keyword search. For ongoing alerts, the FDA publishes new recall notices on FDA.gov and sends email alerts through MedWatch. You can sign up for recall alerts by product category on FDA.gov.

After a significant food recall, companies typically face regulatory scrutiny including follow-up inspections by FDA investigators. They may be required to submit a corrective action plan (CAPA) detailing how the root cause was identified and what steps were taken to prevent recurrence. In serious cases, FDA may issue a Warning Letter, pursue injunctive action, or refer the case to the Department of Justice. Financially, large recalls can cost companies millions of dollars in lost product, legal fees, and customer refunds. Companies with strong food safety programs typically recover faster and with less lasting reputational damage.

Search Food Recalls

Look up recalls by product name, reason, state, or classification using our full FDA recall database.