Food recalls are on the rise. What happens to the waste?

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From contaminated cucumbers to mislabeled energy drinks, food recalls have made several headlines this year. Suppliers and distributors will likely do the same for items that public health announcements instruct shoppers to do. In other words, throw away the item.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture together oversaw 294 individual food recalls during the first six months of 2025, according to a report from compliance firm Sedgwick. The FDA ordered more than twice as many — nearly 85 million — to be destroyed in the first six months of 2024. The USDA recall affected nearly 1.5 million pounds of food, nearly three times more than the same time last year.

Some companies may explore disposal alternatives, but sources say most of these items could end up in landfills.

“There are probably many potential, legally appropriate and compliant ways to deal with this problem, but everyone has a garbage can,” said Tracy Johnson-Hall, clinical professor of operations and information systems management at William & Mary.

Although other food chain issues, such as accident handling or uncertainty about expiration dates, result in much larger amounts of food waste, recalls still play an important role. More and more companies are investing in unpackaging technologies to recover these foods for recycling, but there is limited data on how much of the food is recovered. Wary of claims that edible items are being landfilled or incinerated, several recyclers offering certified disposal services declined to comment for this story.

In many cases, items that are recalled or simply no longer sent through the supply chain are perfectly safe for people to eat. These products could have implications for other businesses that target consumers who are reluctant to let good food go to waste.

Explore recall regulations

For companies that have goals or guidelines to reduce uneaten inventory, because of their size, there are other sources of waste that can be prioritized for reduction. For example, nearly a quarter of food surplus comes from overproduction, while nearly a fifth is not harvested at all.

According to ReFED’s Food Waste Monitor, food safety issues, excluding date label issues, account for about 2.4% of all food waste generated in the United States each year.

Items are often voluntarily removed from sale as a way to comply with rules established by the FDA and USDA. But federal departments can seize items and help with inspections and monitoring to catch contamination and other problems.

Staffing and funding cuts at the FDA this year could hinder these efforts. As a result, McGuireWoods recommended in the latest edition of the Sedgwick U.S. Recall Index Report that companies monitor product safety more actively.

Meanwhile, consumers are expecting better recall systems and safety nets to catch potential problems. In an August webinar, Sedgwick’s staff said it was difficult to see how these expectations could lead to fewer food recalls in the future.

In theory, brands with recalled items can try to find management solutions that fit elsewhere on the waste scale. That means deploying upcycling, conversion to animal feed, composting and anaerobic digestion rather than landfill. In fact, sources say these options are ignored for a variety of reasons. Foods are most likely to be recalled due to allergen contamination. Of these, milk is the biggest problem, followed by pathogens.

“It’s up to you to make sure you’re not putting anything into your commerce that could harm anyone,” says Mark Carter, a food quality and safety consultant and former president of the International Food Protection Association. Items with microbial, physical or chemical hazards cannot be re-entered into the market.