FoodDocs Blog: Actionable Food Safety Resources and Education

Critical Limits: What Is a Critical Limit in a HACCP Program & Examples

Written by Katrin Liivat - FoodDocs CEO | Mar 28, 2025 8:45:00 PM


Establishing critical limits is Principle 3 of HACCP and one of the most important steps in controlling food safety hazards. Critical limits are the measurable boundaries that separate safe food from potentially unsafe food at each Critical Control Point (CCP). If a process exceeds a critical limit, immediate corrective action is required to prevent unsafe food from reaching consumers.

Whether you're managing a restaurant group, care home, hospital kitchen, catering operation, or food-to-go business, critical limits provide the measurable standards that keep hazards under control and support compliance with HACCP requirements.

If you're new to HACCP, you can start with our guide on what is HACCP and how HACCP plans are developed before establishing critical limits.

 

What is the purpose of establishing critical limits in a HACCP plan?

Establishing critical limits allows food businesses to distinguish safe from unsafe operating conditions at each Critical Control Point. They provide the measurable standards that determine whether a food safety hazard is being effectively controlled.

In simple terms, a critical limit acts as a safety threshold. When monitoring results remain within the limit, the hazard is considered controlled. When results fall outside the limit, food safety may be compromised and corrective action becomes necessary.

Digital monitoring checks include corrective actions. If a task is out of range, a prompt will guide your team on how to respond, ensuring food safety and saving time on training.


Without critical limits, a CCP cannot effectively perform its role within a HACCP system because there is no objective way to determine whether the control measure is working.

For example, when cooking chicken, the CCP is the cooking process. The critical limit may be achieving a minimum core temperature of 75°C. Any product that fails to reach this temperature may contain harmful pathogens and requires corrective action.

Critical limits also support due diligence by providing clear evidence that food safety controls are operating as intended. This is particularly important during Environmental Health Officer (EHO) inspections and HACCP verification activities.

What is a critical limit?

A critical limit is a measurable minimum or maximum value that must be achieved at a Critical Control Point to prevent, eliminate, or reduce a food safety hazard to an acceptable level.

Critical limits can apply to biological, chemical, or physical hazards and must be based on scientific evidence, regulatory requirements, or validated operational data.

Examples include:

  • Minimum cooking temperature
  • Maximum cooling time
  • Minimum sanitizer concentration
  • Maximum pH level
  • Minimum metal detector sensitivity
  • Maximum water activity level

A critical limit must clearly define the point at which food safety control is either achieved or lost.

Critical limits are closely linked to food safety hazards, as each limit is established specifically to control an identified hazard within the HACCP plan.

What are the characteristics of a critical limit?

Not every measurable value qualifies as a critical limit. To be effective, critical limits should have several key characteristics.

Observable

Food handlers must be able to identify whether the critical limit has been met. Monitoring results should be easy to interpret and support immediate decision-making.

Measurable

Critical limits must be quantified using reliable methods such as:

  • Temperature measurements
  • pH testing
  • Water activity testing
  • Time monitoring
  • Chemical concentration testing
  • Microbiological validation

Vague statements such as "cook thoroughly" are not acceptable critical limits because they cannot be measured consistently.

Monitored in real time

Critical limits should be monitored during production or service to enable immediate corrective action when deviations occur.

Digital food safety software simplifies critical limit monitoring, helping teams complete checks correctly and providing real-time visibility into food safety compliance



Scientifically justified

Every critical limit should be supported by scientific evidence, regulatory guidance, industry standards, validation studies, or recognised food safety authorities.

How are critical limits determined?

Critical limits should be established using a combination of scientific evidence, regulatory requirements, and validation activities.

Regulatory and industry guidance

Many critical limits are already established by food safety authorities and industry standards.

Examples include:

  • Minimum cooking temperatures
  • Pasteurisation requirements
  • Refrigeration temperatures
  • Approved sanitizer concentrations

In the UK, food businesses should prioritise guidance from the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and relevant legislation when establishing critical limits.

Scientific evidence

Critical limits should be supported by published research, validation studies, industry guidance, or expert recommendations.

For example, research demonstrates that cooking poultry to 75°C effectively destroys pathogens such as Salmonella and Campylobacter.

Validation

Once selected, critical limits should be validated to confirm they effectively control the identified hazard under actual operating conditions.

Validation is an important part of a robust HACCP food safety program and demonstrates that control measures achieve their intended outcome.

Always measurable

Critical limits should be specific and objective.

Instead of:

❌ Cook thoroughly

Use:

✅ Cook to a core temperature of at least 75°C

Specific limits improve monitoring consistency and reduce interpretation errors.

What are critical limits in a food safety plan?

Critical limits can be established for a wide range of food safety parameters depending on the hazard and process being controlled.

Common examples include:

Parameter Example Critical Limit
Temperature Cook poultry to 75°C
Time Hold sanitiser on surfaces for 60 seconds
pH Maintain pH at or below 4.6
Water activity Maintain water activity at or below 0.85
Humidity Maintain specified storage humidity
Flow rate Maintain minimum pasteurisation flow rate
Sanitizer concentration Maintain chlorine concentration within approved range
Metal detection Detect metal fragments above specified size
Preservative concentration Remain within approved limits

Critical limits are established after identifying hazards and determining CCPs through a HACCP study. 

What are examples of critical limits?

Critical limits vary depending on the process and hazard being controlled.

Cooking

Hazard: Biological contamination

Critical limit: Cook poultry to a minimum core temperature of 75°C.

Cooling

Hazard: Bacterial growth

Critical limit: Cool food from 63°C to 8°C within the required timeframe defined by your HACCP plan.

Refrigerated storage

Hazard: Pathogen growth

Critical limit: Store chilled foods at 8°C or below.

pH control

Hazard: Clostridium botulinum growth

Critical limit: Maintain pH at or below 4.6.

Water activity

Hazard: Microbial growth

Critical limit: Maintain water activity at or below 0.85.

Allergen cleaning verification

Hazard: Allergen cross-contact

Critical limit: No detectable allergen residue after cleaning validation.

Metal detection

Hazard: Physical contamination

Critical limit: Reject products containing metal fragments above the validated detection threshold.

These examples demonstrate that critical limits extend far beyond temperature control and can apply to biological, chemical, and physical hazards.

What happens when a critical limit is exceeded?

When monitoring identifies a deviation from a critical limit, immediate corrective action is required.

Typical corrective actions may include:

  • Stopping production
  • Isolating affected food
  • Reprocessing products where appropriate
  • Discarding unsafe products
  • Investigating root causes
  • Retraining staff
  • Repairing equipment
  • Increasing monitoring frequency

Corrective actions should be documented in advance within the HACCP plan so staff know exactly what steps to follow when a deviation occurs.

Digital monitoring checks include corrective actions. If a task is out of range, a prompt will guide your team on how to respond, ensuring food safety and saving time on training

What comes after establishing critical limits?

Once critical limits have been established, the HACCP team must implement additional controls to ensure they remain effective.

Monitoring

Monitoring activities confirm that critical limits are consistently achieved.

Examples include:

  • Temperature checks
  • Digital temperature logs
  • Thermometer calibration
  • pH testing
  • Sanitizer concentration testing
  • Visual inspections

Corrective actions

Every CCP should have predefined corrective actions to address deviations.

Verification

Verification confirms that monitoring, corrective actions, and critical limits continue to control hazards effectively.

Verification activities may include:

  • Internal audits
  • Record reviews
  • Calibration checks
  • Product testing
  • HACCP plan reviews

Record keeping

Monitoring records provide evidence of compliance and support due diligence during inspections and audits.

How can food safety software help monitor critical limits?

Many food businesses still rely on paper records to monitor critical limits. While paper systems can work, they often create challenges around missed checks, incomplete records, delayed corrective actions, and multi-site visibility.

Digital food safety software such as FoodDocs helps standardise critical limit monitoring by:

  • Standardising and scaling daily monitoring checks
  • Track monitoring completion and performance in real time
  • Guide staff through checks with clear step-by-step instructions
  • Stay ready for and confident during inspections with secure, searchable monitoring records
  • Protect your brand and its patrons with instant corrective action alerts



For businesses developing a HACCP plan from scratch, FoodDocs can automatically generate a customised plan based on operational workflows, including hazard analysis, CCP identification, critical limits, monitoring procedures, corrective actions, verification procedures, and record-keeping requirements.

If you're building a HACCP system, it's also worth reviewing how to write a HACCP plan, the HACCP principles, and the role of prerequisite programmes that support CCP management.

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