The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has dramatically escalated its probe into Swiggy Instamart, laying down strict compliance demands that force the quick-commerce giant to lay bare its internal inventory and customer service mechanisms. The central food regulator has given the delivery platform a firm deadline to submit clear evidence of its warehouse and backend operations or face harsh legal penalties under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006.
The directive comes as part of a sweeping investigation into nine separate consumer safety notices. These notices were triggered by repeated customer reports of receiving contaminated baby food, rancid milk, and expired daily groceries from the application’s dark stores.
FSSAI Demands Full Back-End Transparency
To address the recurring complaints of spoiled and expired goods, the FSSAI has ordered Swiggy to provide comprehensive operational details regarding its daily quality control and warehouse management.
The regulator is forcing the platform to hand over documentation covering:
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Stock Rotation and Monitoring: Full disclosure of the active internal controls, inventory management tracking systems, and stock rotation rules used to catch expired goods before they reach delivery riders.
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Storage and Hygiene Standards: A detailed breakdown of the hygiene practices, temperature control setups, and product handling guidelines enforced inside local fulfillment centers to protect fresh and sensitive items like infant formula.
Focus Shift to Grievance Failures and Preventive Strategy
A major point of contention for the regulator is Swiggy’s historical handling of severe product complaints. Customers frequently reported that the quick-commerce platform simply processed a monetary refund without tracking down the contaminated batch or conducting root-cause investigations.
Consequently, the FSSAI is demanding that Instamart provide an explicit framework for its Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPA). The platform must demonstrate a functional root-cause analysis procedure for severe lapses and show concrete improvements to its customer grievance portals. The central agency wants proof that future safety escalations will trigger systemic warehouse checks rather than automated customer service text responses.
Strict Timeline with Threat of Operational Suspension
The FSSAI has warned that the window for excuses has firmly closed. Swiggy Instamart must furnish the required explanations and formal compliance reports within the designated, stipulated timeframe.
Should the quick-commerce platform fail to meet the regulator’s deadline or provide insufficient documentary evidence, the FSSAI has stated it will initiate appropriate legal action under the FSS Act, 2006. Legal experts note that these repercussions could range from steep financial penalties to the suspension of operating licenses for individual dark stores, potentially crippling the platform’s rapid delivery network across major metropolitan hubs.
