FSMA 204 enforcement is paused until July 20, 2028. Here's what changed, what the FDA's June 2026 public meeting revealed, and what wholesale food distributors should do now.
If you've been holding your breath on FSMA 204, you can exhale a little — but not all the way.
In November 2025, Congress passed the Continuing Appropriations, Agriculture, Legislative Branch, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Extensions Act of 2026, the bill that ended the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. Tucked inside it: language directing the FDA not to enforce the Food Traceability Rule (FSMA Section 204) before its compliance date of July 20, 2028. That date itself had already been pushed back 30 months earlier in 2025, from the original January 2026 deadline.
So where does that leave wholesale food distributors? Two more years of runway, officially. But the details of how lot-level traceability will actually work are still being written — and that's exactly why now is the wrong time to put your traceability plans on a shelf.
On June 15, 2026, the FDA hosted a virtual public meeting, "Challenges and Solutions in Lot-Level Food Traceability," as part of the stakeholder engagement Congress required alongside the enforcement pause. The meeting gave industry a formal chance to flag ongoing concerns — particularly around lot-level tracking requirements and where compliance flexibility might be warranted. The FDA has since released a recording for companies that couldn't attend live.
The takeaway for distributors: this isn't a rule that's been shelved. It's a rule that's actively being refined, with real industry input shaping the final shape of enforcement. The companies participating in that conversation — or at least paying close attention to it — are the ones who'll be least surprised when enforcement actually starts.
It's tempting to treat a compliance delay as permission to wait. In practice, that's how distributors end up scrambling in 2027 to retrofit systems that should have been built incrementally starting now. A few reasons the extra time is better spent building than waiting:
Traceability Lot Codes (TLCs) are still coming. Nothing about the enforcement pause changes the underlying requirement to assign and track Traceability Lot Codes for foods on the Food Traceability List. The mechanics of howyou'll capture, store, and share that data are the hard part — and that work doesn't get faster by starting later.
Recalls don't wait for compliance deadlines. A slow, spreadsheet-driven recall process is a real cost today, regardless of what FSMA 204 requires. Distributors running weak lot tracking are exposed right now, not just after 2028.
Your customers may not wait either. Retail and foodservice buyers increasingly ask for traceability documentation as a condition of doing business, independent of what the FDA requires. Being "compliant when the deadline hits" and being "trusted by your customers today" are two different bars.
Use this window the way it's meant to be used — to get ahead of the rule instead of scrambling to meet it:
FreshByte customers already run real-time, lot-level traceability as a standard part of daily operations — not a special project bolted on for a compliance deadline. If your team is still asking "are we ready for FSMA 204," the honest answer is usually "not yet, but we could be." That's a conversation worth having well before 2028.