RLRecall Lot Watch
Source and citation guide

Where Recall Lot Watch data comes from and what paid reports add.

Recall Lot Watch is built around source-backed recall records. Public pages help users search and compare; paid reports expose the citation trail, source context, and response checklist.

Federal food enforcement records

Recall Lot Watch indexes openFDA food enforcement rows where available, including recalling firm, classification, status, reason, product description, code information, and dates.

Official reference sources

USDA FSIS, FoodSafety.gov, FDA safety-alert pages, and CDC outbreak pages are kept as official citation/reference paths when they do not expose stable record-level rows for automated ingestion.

Source citations

Public pages summarize indexed records. Paid reports label the difference between indexed source rows and official reference pages, then include source names, source URLs, citation paths, and generation-time context.

Daily checks

Configured source checks run daily. Source refresh dates reflect the newest indexed source data available to the platform, not a promise that every agency has published new data that day.

State and business context

State records, retailer notices, brand notices, and local health department posts can add context. Enterprise workflows can add custom source monitoring for those needs.

Important limitations

Public summaries are not legal advice

Recall Lot Watch helps users find and understand records. High-impact food safety, business, legal, or customer-notice decisions should verify official sources and request human QA.

Some official sources are reference-only

When FSIS, FoodSafety.gov, FDA alert pages, CDC outbreak pages, state agencies, retailers, or brands do not provide stable machine-readable rows, reports identify them as official reference paths instead of pretending they are complete indexed records.

Source systems publish on their own timelines

The platform can check daily, but source agencies and firms control when records, expansions, corrections, and status changes are published.

Reports are stronger than public tables

Paid reports are built to show citation paths, dates, lot/code interpretation, distribution context, and questions to ask before acting on a recall row.