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Costco Foreign Material Control - Towels

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Best Answer , 17 October 2025 - 01:13 PM

The Costco language is clear, if you believe your clothes do not pose a risk, you simply need a risk assessment-job done


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AlwaysMyFirstDay

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Posted 16 October 2025 - 06:11 PM

Hello everyone! 

 

It has been quite a few years since I have needed to pose a question. I have been quietly absorbing everyone's expertise for years and you have all been extremely helpful in bolstering my knowledge base.

 

I am now with a food manufacturer following SQF's standards in the United States and we are exploring the additional Costco requirements. Their expectations regarding foreign material control are clear, except for one snippet. Here's the quoted text :

 

"Clothes, towels, and other cleaning materials that pose a risk of contamination or adulteration shall not be used to remove dirt and debris from products."

 

My company does use hand towels! We also have a system in place so the towels are under limited access, are color coded for specific purposes, and are regularly laundered by a third party service. Does anyone have any experience with addressing this specific concern?

 

I expect that I will need to add more details, but with what I have provided above, I believe my company's practice should be a non-issue. Am I correct?

 

 

 

Thanks for taking the time to read and give input!

 

Always My First Day


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G M

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Posted 16 October 2025 - 07:52 PM

We have a system that treats small hand towels for cleaning like other untethered utensils.  They are regularly accounted for, and checked in/out from the laundry room.  We haven't seen any push back or unusual scrutiny from the auditors.


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jfrey123

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Posted 16 October 2025 - 08:59 PM

Auditors will want to see the HACCP flow/safety plan from your laundry service.  How do they guarantee their process eliminates contamination concerns?  Not just how do they clean your soiled rags, but whether their process eliminates allergen, chemical, pathogens, etc.  They'll want to see a policy about how you control the hazards between accepting delivery, storing, using (you mentioned color coded separation, that's good), along with any inspections you perform to ensure the towels aren't fraying or otherwise damaged if you're using them to clean equipment.

 

And since you specifically mentioned "hand towels", have to ask whether employees are using them to dry their hands after mandatory hand washing?  In SQF that's a specific no-no because the towels can't stay clean/dry between users.  If you just said hand towels to describe them by size/shape, disregard lol.


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GMO

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Posted 17 October 2025 - 06:28 AM

I've never had any production site which used reusable cloths. The types we used were the "green pad" scourer type (not completely immune to shedding so we'd train people about their use) and the "J cloth" type.

 

These kind of things:

 

Professional Caterers Scourers | Green | 23cm x 15cm | Pack of 10 – Premier Healthcare & Hygiene Ltd

J Cloth Type (Pack of 50) choice of 4 colours - Hygenie

 

The cost is c 10-14p each so there's no value in trying to keep them.

 

I'd worry with reusing cloths that you have a micro risk (temperature of washing), foreign matter risk (they will degrade) and allergen risk (how do you validate?)  So personally I'd move to disposable.

 

Also for this clause though I'd look at any brushes you use which will be reusable and make sure your team know when to get them replaced, how damaged they need to be before replacement and have stock in place for them. Also a cleaning regime so they're not micro or allergen hazards in themselves (although I'd have specific colour coding for allergens.)


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Scampi

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Posted 17 October 2025 - 01:13 PM   Best Answer

The Costco language is clear, if you believe your clothes do not pose a risk, you simply need a risk assessment-job done


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AlwaysMyFirstDay

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Posted Yesterday, 10:49 PM

My team and I are very grateful for everyone's responses!

 

...

 

Also for this clause though I'd look at any brushes you use which will be reusable and make sure your team know when to get them replaced, how damaged they need to be before replacement and have stock in place for them. Also a cleaning regime so they're not micro or allergen hazards in themselves (although I'd have specific colour coding for allergens.)

 

We are fastidious in replacing our tools that undergo wear-and-tear already, which is going to be our approach with our towels, as well. I'm confident in my company's practices, I just need to ensure that the documentation I create reflects those practices.  :cheezy:

 

 

Auditors will want to see the HACCP flow/safety plan from your laundry service.  How do they guarantee their process eliminates contamination concerns?  Not just how do they clean your soiled rags, but whether their process eliminates allergen, chemical, pathogens, etc.  They'll want to see a policy about how you control the hazards between accepting delivery, storing, using (you mentioned color coded separation, that's good), along with any inspections you perform to ensure the towels aren't fraying or otherwise damaged if you're using them to clean equipment.

 

...

 

The hand towels are largely used to wipe down non-food contact surfaces - which of course should on its own clear my company from the language in the Costco standard. But I'm confident we all know what happens when we start to get ideas on how things should be...

 

 

The Costco language is clear, if you believe your clothes do not pose a risk, you simply need a risk assessment-job done

 

I agree! the language is clear and a risk assessment should be sufficient to cover the question if it comes up - which is a mere formality for my team, at this stage.

 

I appreciate everyone's input!

 

Always My First Day


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GMO

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Posted Today, 05:22 AM

I still don't understand why you'd go for reusable over cheap disposable.  Explain that to me? 


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