The CFIA is involved in everything Canadians consume, with different roles taking place across the entire supply chain since production. Very broadly, the primary purpose of any inspection is to ensure health, safety, and ethicality, to limit the risk of negative impacts from production mistakes, poor business decisions (including quality sacrifices), and contamination. Our food system is determined by domestic and international food standards, the combination of which maintains Canada’s title as a global food leader. The CFIA controls food licenses and operational certificates, sets ingredient and additive guidelines, upholds plant and animal health and safety standards, traces food and animal movements including in and out of the country, and ensures transparency in all our labels (food and chemical). Its standards, much like the majority of Canadian regulation, are set using evidence-based criteria; this creates objective, measurable targets that keep up with (or should) scientific developments.
Farmers are well-versed in CFIA bureaucracy, having to consult with guidelines when using agricultural inputs and animal biosecurity. Food businesses, too, are constantly monitoring CFIA updates in requirements like Preventative Control Plans, which ensures businesses understand how and why food is produced with the protections it does. Although most inspections are considered routine, the CFIA may also be called in instances of noncompliance. Noncompliance, regardless of intent, signals a decline in food safety, and risks the safety of other products in compliance. Therefore, the CFIA is also responsible for penalties for violators, which may be training courses or operation suspensions for first time or accidental offense, or steep fees and loss of license for nefarious individuals.
Not every violation makes it onto grocery shelves but those that do are issued recalls and repeated, purposeful mislabeling may be investigated for food fraud. At the time of writing, 2026 has already seen 25 food recalls in a variety of products, for issues such as undeclared allergens, bacterial/mold contamination, or plastic traces. Food recalls and food labels are arguably some of the most obvious ways consumers notice the CFIA’s work to keep Canadians safe. It’s important that the food made available to consumers be safe up to the point of purchase given how many foodborne illnesses are the result of improper handling, cooking, or storage at home.