Cool Regulations: Country of Origin Labeling Compliance for Food Businesses



COOL Regulations, or Country of Origin Labeling Regulations, require certain retailers to tell consumers the country of origin of covered food commodities at the final point of sale.

They do not apply to every food; they focus on specific covered commodities and depend on accurate labeling, supplier documentation, and recordkeeping. COOL applies mainly to covered commodities sold by covered retailers, not to restaurants, food service establishments, or every packaged food item.

Whether you are a grocery retailer, food supplier, importer, or distributor, understanding COOL Regulations helps you label correctly, keep the right records, and prepare for a USDA audit. This guide covers what is covered, retailer and supplier duties, audits and complaints, and common compliance mistakes.

Contents


1. What Cool Regulations Are and Which Foods Are Covered


COOL Regulations are a USDA labeling law, not a universal food-origin rule. The single most important point is that they apply only to certain covered commodities sold by covered retailers, so scope is always the first question. Getting it wrong leads to both over-labeling and missed requirements.

The rules are administered and enforced by the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service, or AMS. They connect to broader food and beverage compliance and agricultural obligations.



Which Foods and Businesses Are Covered by Cool Regulations?


COOL Regulations do not apply to every food or every seller. Three questions decide scope: whether the business is a covered retailer, whether the product is a covered commodity, and whether a processed-food or food-service exemption applies.

Covered commodities generally include:

  • Meats: lamb, goat, and chicken.
  • Fish and shellfish: wild and farm-raised.
  • Produce: fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables.
  • Nuts and other: peanuts, pecans, macadamia nuts, and ginseng.

Food service establishments, such as restaurants, cafeterias, and similar prepared-food sellers, are generally outside the COOL disclosure requirement. Coverage has also changed over time, so current scope should be confirmed for a specific commodity.



What Are the Key Laws Behind Cool Compliance?


COOL compliance is built on a federal statute and USDA regulations. The core rules sit in the Agricultural Marketing Act provisions on country of origin labeling and the USDA regulations that implement them.

SourceWhat It Governs
7 U.S.C. Section 1638aRetailer duty to disclose origin at final point of sale
7 C.F.R. Part 65COOL rules for meats, produce, nuts, ginseng
7 C.F.R. Part 60COOL rules for fish and shellfish
USDA AMSAdministration and enforcement

The statute allows origin to be conveyed by a label, stamp, mark, placard, or other clear and visible sign, and it authorizes USDA audits and requires suppliers to provide origin information.



2. Retailer and Supplier Duties


COOL splits responsibility between the retailer at the point of sale and the suppliers behind it. Retailers must inform consumers; suppliers must give retailers accurate origin information and backup. Both roles have to work together, or the label at the shelf cannot be supported.

Understanding which duty applies to your business is the starting point. The obligations look different for each link in the chain.



How Must Covered Retailers Notify Consumers of Country of Origin?


Covered retailers must disclose the country of origin of a covered commodity to consumers at the final point of sale. The information can be provided through a label, stamp, mark, placard, or other clear and visible sign, so signage on a bin or case can satisfy the rule for unpackaged items.

For each product, a retailer should work through the scope questions in order:

  • Whether the business is a covered retailer for COOL purposes.
  • Whether the item is a covered commodity.
  • Whether a processed-food or food-service exemption applies.
  • What origin statement or signage the point of sale requires.

Because the retailer makes the claim consumers see, it needs supplier information behind every statement.



What Origin Records Must Suppliers Provide to Retailers?


Suppliers of covered commodities must provide accurate country-of-origin information to retailers and keep records maintained in the normal course of business. This is what lets a retailer's shelf claim be verified if USDA asks.

Those records include import or customs documents, producer affidavits, supplier certifications, production records, and chain-of-custody materials that support the origin declaration, consistent with import and trade compliance practices. Importers and distributors should preserve this documentation so origin can be traced through the supply chain, and for seafood, wild versus farm-raised and origin details raise specific issues under seafood import regulations.



3. Usda Audits, Recordkeeping, and Complaints


COOL is verified through recordkeeping and USDA AMS audits, not just by looking at a label. A COOL audit typically asks a business to connect the retail claim back to its supporting records. Being able to make that connection quickly is the heart of compliance.

Complaints and audits can arrive with little warning. Preparation is what determines the outcome.



What Happens during a Usda Cool Audit or Complaint?


During a USDA COOL audit, AMS verifies that origin claims are accurate and supported by records maintained in the normal course of business. A COOL audit is not just a label review; it can require a business to connect the retail claim to supplier records, import documents, and producer affidavits.

Records that commonly support this audit verification include:

  • Normal course of business records showing origin.
  • Import and customs documents for imported commodities.
  • Producer affidavits and supplier certifications.
  • Animal or production records, where relevant.

Complaints from consumers, competitors, or supply-chain partners can trigger a review, so a strong recordkeeping system, aligned with agricultural compliance, is the best defense.



How Should a Business Respond to a Cool Complaint or Finding?


A business should respond to a COOL complaint by gathering the records that support the origin claim and correcting any labeling gap quickly. AMS may request documentation, ask for corrections, and verify that the issue has been resolved.

The response should trace the claim through the supply chain, from the retail label back to supplier and import records. A prompt, well-documented correction is usually better than a defensive one, and strong supply chain compliance makes this far easier.



4. Common Mistakes and Getting Help


Most COOL problems come from a handful of avoidable mistakes, especially confusing COOL with other origin rules. Knowing these traps prevents both violations and wasted effort. A short review often catches them.

The biggest source of confusion is treating several different origin regimes as one. They are not.



How Do Businesses Confuse Cool with Made in Usa or Customs Marking?


Businesses often confuse COOL with "Product of USA," "Made in USA," and customs origin marking, but these are separate regimes with different rules. COOL is a specific retail food-labeling requirement for covered commodities, while the others involve voluntary claims and import marking.

Common COOL mistakes include:

  • Labeling non-covered products the same way as covered ones.
  • Missing signage on covered loose or bulk items.
  • No supplier origin records to support the claim.
  • Treating mixed-origin produce as single-origin, or missing wild versus farm-raised for seafood.
  • Equating customs marking with retail COOL, or COOL with a Made in USA claim.

For meat, poultry, and egg products, voluntary "Product of USA" or "Made in the USA" claims should also be reviewed under current USDA and FSIS claim standards, separately from mandatory COOL, alongside country of origin marking compliance for imports.



When Should You Contact a Country of Origin Labeling Lawyer?


Contact a lawyer before finalizing labels, changing suppliers, or responding to a USDA AMS audit or complaint. Early review helps confirm coverage, align supplier documentation, and avoid mixing COOL with unrelated origin claims.

Counsel can assess whether a product is a covered commodity, whether an exemption applies, and how to build a recordkeeping system that survives an audit. Because origin claims touch labeling, sourcing, and imports at once, getting guidance before a problem escalates is far safer than reacting after an AMS inquiry.



5. Cool Regulations Questions Answered for Retailers and Suppliers


Food retailers, suppliers, and importers often have practical questions about country of origin labeling. These quick answers cover what COOL requires, covered foods, restaurants, processed foods, audits, and common confusions.



What Are Country of Origin Labeling Regulations?


Country of Origin Labeling Regulations, or COOL Regulations, are USDA rules that require certain retailers to tell consumers the country of origin of covered food commodities at the final point of sale. They apply only to specific covered commodities sold by covered retailers, not to all foods, and are administered by the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service.



What Foods Are Covered by Cool Regulations?


COOL covers specific commodities, generally including lamb, goat, and chicken, fish and shellfish, fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables, peanuts, pecans, macadamia nuts, and ginseng. Processed food items may be excluded, and coverage has changed over time, so a product-by-product review is important before labeling.



Are Restaurants Subject to Cool Regulations?


Usually not in the same way as covered retailers. COOL generally focuses on covered commodities sold by covered retailers at the final point of sale, while food service establishments such as restaurants and cafeterias are generally exempt for prepared or served foods. The exact analysis depends on the product and sales setting.



Are Processed Foods Covered by Cool?


Often no. A raw covered commodity may fall outside mandatory COOL if it becomes a processed food item. Businesses should review the product form, processing step, packaging, and retail setting before assuming COOL applies or does not apply.



Can Usda Audit Cool Compliance?


Yes. The USDA Agricultural Marketing Service can audit businesses to verify COOL compliance, reviewing whether origin claims are supported by records maintained in the normal course of business. These can include supplier affidavits, import and customs documents, and production records, so recordkeeping is central to passing an audit.



Is Cool the Same As Made in Usa?


No. COOL is a specific retail food-labeling requirement for covered commodities, while "Made in USA" and "Product of USA" are separate voluntary claims with their own rules, and customs origin marking is different again. Treating them as the same is a common and risky mistake.


03 Apr, 2026


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