Co-packing
Co-Packing for Food Brands: Packaging, Filling, Labeling, and Retail Execution
Co-packing helps food brands package, fill, label, assemble, or prepare products for distribution without building every packaging capability internally.
Co-packing versus co-manufacturing
| Question | Co-Packing | Co-Manufacturing |
| Primary role | Packages, fills, labels, kits, or assembles product. | Produces the product itself from ingredients or components. |
| Formula responsibility | Often remains with brand or upstream manufacturer. | Often shared through production specifications. |
| Best use | Retail packaging, seasonal runs, multi-packs, labeling, fulfillment, or distribution preparation. | Scaling production, adding capacity, or producing products with specialized equipment. |
| Key evaluation | Packaging quality, line capability, label accuracy, speed, and logistics. | Food safety, process controls, ingredient handling, capacity, and quality consistency. |
Co-packer selection checklist
Line capability
Package format, fill type, seal method, speed, coding, inspection, and case pack.
Food safety fit
Certifications, allergen handling, sanitation, traceability, pest control, and recordkeeping.
Quality checks
Weight, seal integrity, label accuracy, date coding, visual defects, and release criteria.
Commercial fit
Minimum runs, changeover cost, lead time, storage, freight, and scheduling reliability.
Co-packing FAQ
When does a brand need a co-packer?
A co-packer helps when packaging complexity, labor, equipment, speed, or retail requirements exceed internal capability.
What documents does a co-packer need?
Product specs, packaging specs, labels, case configuration, quality criteria, lot coding, and handling requirements.
What can go wrong?
Label errors, seal failures, missed dates, allergen cross-contact, poor case configuration, and unclear responsibilities can create costly problems.
Co-packing request checklist
| Information To Provide | Why It Matters |
| Product type and physical form | Liquids, powders, baked goods, frozen items, shelf-stable products, and refrigerated goods require different lines. |
| Package format | Pouches, bottles, jars, cartons, flow wrap, trays, clamshells, and cases require different machinery. |
| Expected volume | Minimum run, changeover cost, labor planning, and price depend on volume. |
| Label and code requirements | Retailers and distributors require accurate labels, lot codes, date codes, and case labels. |
| Storage and shipping needs | Ambient, refrigerated, frozen, fragile, or hazardous constraints affect cost and fit. |
Red flags when selecting a co-packer
No clear quality checks
A co-packer that cannot describe weight checks, seal checks, label checks, and hold procedures creates avoidable risk.
Unclear responsibility
Formula, ingredients, packaging, claims, rework, rejects, and complaints need written ownership.
Weak scheduling discipline
Frequent delays can damage retail commitments, seasonal programs, and distributor relationships.
Poor traceability
Finished cases need lot control that connects ingredients, packaging, production dates, and shipments.