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FDA Registration Guide for Food Manufacturers in Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban

Food producers from Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban are expanding their exports to the United States. This guide explains the FDA Food Facility Registration process and the documents you need before your first shipment.

FDABridge TeamJan 1, 20263 min read

South Africa is one of Africa's most diversified food exporters, with strengths in wine, fruit, processed meat, dairy, beverages, nuts, and specialty agricultural products. Companies from Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, Pretoria, Port Elizabeth, and the Western Cape agricultural heartland are all actively pursuing access to the lucrative US market. This guide walks you through every regulatory requirement for exporting food to the United States.

Why Must South African Food Facilities Register with the FDA?

Under the US Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), any facility that manufactures, processes, packs, or stores food intended for US consumers must be registered with the FDA before the first shipment. This applies to all South African food exporters — whether you are a large Johannesburg food processing plant, a Cape Winelands winery, a Durban seafood processor, or a smaller Gauteng packaged food company. Failure to register means your cargo can be detained at the port of entry or refused outright.

What Is the DUNS Number and Why Do You Need It?

A DUNS (Data Universal Numbering System) number is a 9-digit business identifier issued by Dun & Bradstreet. The FDA uses it to verify company information during the registration process. You must obtain a DUNS number before submitting your FDA Food Facility Registration. FDABridge helps South African exporters from Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban obtain this number quickly as part of our complete registration package.

What Is the US Agent and Why Is It Mandatory?

The FDA requires all registered foreign food facilities to designate a US Agent — a person or business physically located in the United States who serves as the official point of contact between the FDA and your company. The FDA routes all inspection notices, document requests, and important communications through the US Agent. FDABridge provides a full US Agent service for all South African food facilities.

Step-by-Step FDA Registration Process

Step 1: Gather facility information (name, address, product types, contact person). Step 2: Obtain a DUNS number if you do not already have one. Step 3: Designate a US Agent. Step 4: Submit the Food Facility Registration online through the FDA FURLS system. Step 5: Receive your FEI (Food Establishment Identifier) registration number. The entire process typically takes 3–5 business days once all documents are received.

Which South African Food Products Require FDA Registration?

Most South African food products exported to the US require registration: Cape wines and spirits, citrus and deciduous fruits, processed and canned vegetables, seafood and fish products, rooibos and herbal teas, biltong and processed meat (subject to additional USDA requirements), macadamia nuts and dried fruits, specialty sauces and condiments, and health foods and supplements. FDABridge confirms the specific requirements based on your product category.

How FDABridge Helps South African Food Exporters

FDABridge specialises in helping food businesses from Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, and across South Africa meet FDA requirements from start to finish. Our services include document review and consultation, DUNS number acquisition, US Agent service, Food Facility Registration submission. Contact us today to start exporting your South African food products to the United States.

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