RLRecall Lot Watch
Lot and code guide

How to tell whether a food recall may match your product.

Food recall records can include long product descriptions and code text. This guide explains which fields to compare before deciding whether a product, shipment, or inventory batch needs action.

Product description

Match brand, item name, package size, flavor, form, and any product-specific wording in the official recall row.

Lot and code information

Look for lot numbers, batch codes, UPCs, best-by dates, production dates, establishment numbers, or package codes.

Recall dates

Report date, initiation date, and termination date are different fields. A terminated recall can still matter for products still in homes or inventory.

Distribution pattern

Distribution text may name states, retailers, warehouses, broad regions, or customer channels. It is not always a complete consumer list.

Common lot-code questions

What if my package has several codes?

Compare all visible package codes against the recall row. If one code appears to match, use the official source link or a paid report before deciding the item is safe.

What if the distribution text is broad?

Broad distribution can still matter. Check the supplier, retailer, warehouse, or purchase record, especially when the recall names multiple states or nationwide distribution.

What if the recall status says terminated?

Terminated is a source status. It does not prove that every affected item has left homes, shelves, warehouses, or food-service inventory.