From 1 July 2026, new Food Organics and Garden Organics (FOGO) requirements begin rolling out across New South Wales.
If you own or operate a café, restaurant, pub, club or hotel, now is the time to understand what's changing and start preparing.
The good news? Many of the changes that help you comply with FOGO can also reduce food waste, improve food safety and save your business money.
FOGO stands for Food Organics and Garden Organics.
The new NSW legislation requires businesses that prepare, sell or handle food to separate food waste from general waste so it can be recycled instead of going to landfill. The rollout starts with the largest food waste generators and expands to smaller businesses over the next few years.
The new requirements are being introduced in stages based on how much general waste your business sends to landfill each week.
|
From |
Businesses likely to be affected* |
|
1 July 2026 |
Large hotels, clubs, food courts and other high-volume hospitality businesses (3,840L+ of general waste per week). |
|
1 July 2028 |
Medium-sized hospitality businesses (1,920L+ per week). |
|
1 July 2030 |
Smaller hospitality businesses and commercial kitchens (660L+ per week). |
*The rollout is based on your weekly general waste capacity. If you're unsure where your business sits, check with your waste provider or visit the NSW EPA website.
It's easy to think these new laws are simply about separating food waste.
But the biggest opportunity is reducing how much food ends up in that bin in the first place.
Every ingredient that's thrown away has already been purchased, delivered, stored and prepared. That's money your business never gets back.
Reducing food waste can help you:
For many venues, the biggest savings don't come from changing their bins. They come from improving the way the kitchen operates every day.
Many of the reasons food gets thrown away are also common food safety risks.
Think about:
When you improve these everyday processes, you'll often reduce food waste and improve food safety at the same time.
That's a win for your customers, your team and your bottom line.
Even if your business isn't affected until 2028 or 2030, there's no reason to wait.
A few simple improvements today can make compliance much easier tomorrow:
Small changes made consistently often have the biggest impact.
The new FOGO requirements are an important step towards reducing Australia's food waste.
But for hospitality businesses, they're also an opportunity to build a more efficient kitchen.
The venues that benefit most won't simply separate their food waste.
They'll focus on creating less of it.
At Chomp, we help hospitality businesses simplify food safety, improve consistency and create smarter daily routines that naturally reduce waste.