Most food businesses don’t fail food safety because they don’t care, they fail because they’re busy.
Service is pumping, someone’s called in sick, the delivery just arrived during the lunch rush, and suddenly the small shortcuts start creeping in.
Over time, those shortcuts turn into habits. And those habits? They’re exactly what show up during audits, or worse, an incident.
Here are the most common food safety mistakes we see in Australian and New Zealand cafés, restaurants, and commercial kitchens, and how to fix them without slowing service to a crawl.
You know the one. The cool room that’s packed tighter than a Friday night service.
Why it’s a problem:
In both Australia and NZ, cold food must be kept at 5°C or below. But an overloaded fridge works harder, and often loses.
Quick fix:
If you can’t see the back wall of your fridge, it’s probably time for a declutter.
Every kitchen has one. A container of something brown-ish, made… sometime.
Why it’s risky:
Under AU/NZ food standards, ready-to-eat potentially hazardous foods must be date-marked if stored.
Quick fix:
If someone says, “It should be fine,” that’s your red flag.
Spray bottle? ✔
Cloth? ✔
Correct dilution? …Maybe?
We often see sanitiser solutions that are too weak (ineffective) or too strong (chemical risk).
Why it matters:
Quick fix:
The fridge has apparently been 3°C every single day for six months. Impressive. Suspicious, but impressive.
We get it, logging temps can feel repetitive, but falsified or rushed records defeat the whole purpose.
Why it’s serious:
Quick fix:
Your logs protect your business just as much as they protect your customers.
The rush hits, gloves go on, and hands maybe get rinsed. Maybe.
Gloves don’t replace handwashing, and in busy hospitality environments, cross-contamination spreads fast.
High-risk moments we see often:
Quick fix:
We sometimes see cleaning chemicals, staff drinks, personal items, and food all living together.
Why this matters:
Quick fix:
It’s rarely laziness. It’s usually:
Ask yourself:
If you hesitated on any of those — start there.
Australia and New Zealand have some of the strongest food safety standards in the world. Compliance is about protecting your reputation, your customers, and your livelihood.
A single food safety incident can mean:
Most of the issues above take minutes to fix, but months to recover from if ignored. When done right, it means you'll pass your audit with flying colours!
Learn how Chomp’s digital food safety tool keeps your kitchen safe, audit-ready and can save you time over paper logs.