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EU Food Waste Regulations: What Restaurant Owners Must Know in 2026

The EU has adopted binding food waste reduction targets for 2030. Here's what the Waste Framework Directive, France's AGEC law, and Spain's Ley 1/2025 mean for your restaurant.

Anirban Das26 March 20266 min read

EU Food Waste Regulations: What Restaurant Owners Must Know in 2026

If you run a restaurant in the EU, food waste is no longer just a cost problem — it's a legal one. The European Union and its member states have adopted binding food waste reduction targets with real enforcement and real fines.

Most restaurant owners haven't noticed yet. By the time they do, catching up will be expensive.

Here's what's already in effect, what's coming, and what you should do now.

The Big Picture: EU Waste Framework Directive

In 2025, the European Parliament adopted amendments to the Waste Framework Directive with legally binding food waste reduction targets for 2030:

  • 10% reduction in food processing and manufacturing
  • 30% per capita reduction jointly at retail, restaurants, food services, and households

These targets are measured against the average annual food waste generated between 2021 and 2023. Member states have 20 months to transpose these into national law.

According to Eurostat's 2023 data, the EU generates approximately 58 million tonnes of food waste per year — about 130 kg per person. Restaurants and food services account for 11% of that total, roughly 7 million tonnes or 14 kg per person.

For restaurants, the message is clear: track your waste, reduce it, and be ready to prove it.

Country-Level Laws Already in Effect

France: Garot Law & AGEC Law

France has been the most aggressive on food waste legislation. Two laws work together:

The Garot Law (Loi n° 2016-138) established the foundation:

  • Prohibited supermarkets over 400m² from destroying edible unsold food
  • Required donation agreements with approved food aid charities
  • Set a base fine of EUR 3,750 for deliberately rendering edible food unfit for consumption

The AGEC Law (Loi n° 2020-105) strengthened and expanded these obligations:

  • Extended the food destruction prohibition to collective catering operators and food industry
  • Increased penalties to up to 0.1% of annual turnover for larger businesses
  • Made doggy bags mandatory — restaurants must offer take-away containers for unfinished meals (Article 62)
  • Set a national target to halve food waste by 2025 in retail and collective catering, and by 2030 in other sectors

The AGEC Law treats food waste as an environmental offence. Inspectors can and do check compliance during routine health inspections.

Spain: Ley 1/2025

Spain's Ley de Prevención de las Pérdidas y el Desperdicio Alimentario, published in the BOE on April 2, 2025, is one of the most comprehensive food waste laws in Europe. According to Spain's Ministry of Agriculture (MAPA):

  • All food chain agents must have a food waste prevention plan (enforcement begins April 2026)
  • Restaurants must allow customers to take uneaten food home in recyclable containers (except buffets)
  • A hierarchy of uses prioritises human consumption, then animal feed, then composting, then energy recovery

The sanctions regime is tiered:

Infraction levelFine range
Minor (leves)Warning to EUR 2,000
Serious (graves) — e.g. no prevention planEUR 2,001 – EUR 60,000
Very serious (muy graves) — repeat serious offence within 2 yearsUp to EUR 500,000

Italy: Gadda Law (Legge 166/2016)

Italy took an incentive-based approach. The Gadda Law encourages food donation by:

  • Allowing municipalities to reduce the waste tax (TARI) for businesses that donate food surplus
  • Simplifying bureaucratic and liability rules for food donors
  • Treating donated food similarly to food given to employees for liability purposes

Less punitive than France or Spain, but the direction is the same: reduce waste or face increasing regulatory pressure.

Germany: National Strategy

Germany's strategy aligns with the EU 2030 targets but has been slower to legislate specific penalties. However, the binding EU Waste Framework Directive targets mean Germany must transpose the 30% reduction requirement into national law within 20 months of adoption. Voluntary agreements with the food industry will give way to mandatory obligations.

What This Means for Your Restaurant

If you're in...Key obligationPenalty risk
FranceNo destruction of edible food + doggy bagsEUR 3,750 base, up to 0.1% of turnover
SpainPrevention plan + take-home containers (April 2026)Up to EUR 500,000
ItalyDonation incentives (voluntary but advantageous)Low (for now)
GermanyReporting obligations (coming)TBD
Other EUNational transposition of WFD by ~2027Varies

5 Things You Should Do Now

1. Start Measuring Your Waste

You can't reduce what you don't measure — and you can't report what you haven't tracked. Start logging what you throw away, why, and how much. Even a simple daily log beats nothing.

2. Implement FEFO Stock Rotation

First Expired, First Out ensures items closest to their expiry date get used first. Tools like VivaShelf automate this entirely, but even manual labelling helps.

3. Create a Waste Prevention Plan

Spain already requires this (enforcement from April 2026). Other countries will follow. A basic plan should include:

  • Your current waste baseline (kg/week or EUR/month)
  • Specific reduction targets
  • Actions you're taking (FEFO, portion control, staff training)
  • How you'll measure progress

4. Set Up a Donation Channel

Identify a local food bank or charity that accepts surplus food. In France, this is already mandatory for larger operations. In Italy, it earns you tax benefits under the Gadda Law.

5. Build an Audit Trail

When regulators come asking, you need records. Every batch consumed, every item wasted, every action logged. An immutable digital audit trail is what compliance officers want to see.

The Cost of Doing Nothing

Research by Champions 12.3 and WRAP, analysing 114 restaurants across 12 countries, found that for every $1 invested in food waste reduction, restaurants saved $7 in operating costs on average. Over 75% recouped their investment within the first year.

The regulation isn't going away. It's accelerating. The restaurants that start now will have lower costs, cleaner records, and zero compliance stress when the next wave of enforcement hits.

Start With What You Can Control

You don't need to overhaul your entire operation overnight. Start by tracking expiry dates, rotating stock properly, and logging waste. These three actions alone put you ahead of most restaurants in the EU.

Start tracking expiry dates for free — no credit card required

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