This is the live UK food recall list. We track every recall and allergen alert issued by the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and Food Standards Scotland (FSS), record the supermarkets affected, the batch codes and dates to look for, and what you can do if you bought one. The list refreshes every week. Primary source on every recall is the FSA news and alerts feed at food.gov.uk/news-alerts.

Currently active UK food recalls

The following recalls were issued in April 2026 and remain in force at the date this page was last updated. Check the batch codes against the product in your cupboard, fridge or freezer. If it matches, do not eat it.

MOMA porridge — possible mouse contamination

MOMA Foods recalled nine of its porridge products on 25 April 2026 because of possible mouse contamination at the manufacturing site. The affected batches are coded M5296 to M6028. The recall covers:

  • Almond Butter and Salted Caramel Porridge Pot 55g
  • Apple, Cinnamon and Brown Sugar Porridge Pot 65g
  • Banana and Peanut Butter Protein Porridge Pot 65g
  • Blueberry and Vanilla Porridge Pot 65g
  • Cranberry and Raisin Porridge Pot 70g
  • Golden Syrup Porridge Pot 70g
  • Plain No-Added Sugar Porridge Pot 65g
  • Almond Butter and Salted Caramel Porridge Sachets, 7 by 40g
  • Apple, Cinnamon and Brown Sugar Porridge Sachets, 6 by 40g

Products were sold at Tesco, Morrisons and Sainsbury's. The FSA advises consumers do not eat the affected products and return them to the store of purchase for a full refund.

Walkers Hot Honey 6-pack — undeclared milk allergen

Walkers recalled the Hot Honey 6-pack (six 25g bags) after discovering some packs contain mislabelled Mild Cheese and Onion bags with undeclared milk. Affected packs carry the best-before date 16 May 2026 and batch code GBB 584 031. The FSA flagged this as a possible health risk for anyone with an allergy to milk. Return the pack to the shop for a full refund; a receipt is not required.

Good4U Super Sprouts Super Greens 60g — possible salmonella

Good4U recalled its Super Sprouts Super Greens 60g pack with use-by dates up to and including 3 May 2026 because of possible salmonella contamination. Sold at Tesco, Sainsbury's and Morrisons. The FSA advises do not eat the product.

How to check if a UK food product is still on recall

The FSA maintains the canonical UK product recall list at food.gov.uk/news-alerts. You can filter by date, by product type, and by allergen. Recalls remain on the public list indefinitely; they are not removed when stock is cleared from shelves, because the products may still be in households. If a product is on the FSA list, the recall is still active.

The supermarkets also publish their own recall pages. Morrisons keeps an up-to-date list at my.morrisons.com/product-recall. Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Aldi, Lidl, Waitrose, M&S, Co-op and Iceland all publish recall information on their own customer-services pages.

How to get a refund without a receipt on recalled food

For every UK food recall covered by the FSA, the supermarket where you bought the product is required to give you a full refund without a receipt when you return the product. This is a regulated condition of the recall, not a goodwill gesture. Take the product (or what is left of it, in original packaging) to the customer-services desk at any branch of the supermarket. You do not need to go back to the same store.

If you bought the product online or through a delivery app (Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Ocado, Morrisons, Deliveroo, Uber Eats), contact the retailer's customer-services team with your order number. The refund is processed back to your original payment method.

What to do if you have already eaten a recalled product

For most UK food recalls (mislabelled allergens, foreign objects, packaging defects), the risk to a healthy adult is low if you have no symptoms. For allergen recalls, the risk is real only for people with the named allergy. For microbiological recalls (salmonella, listeria, E. coli), symptoms typically appear within 6 to 72 hours.

If you have symptoms, contact NHS 111 (England, Scotland, Wales) or your GP. In Northern Ireland, call your GP or 111 where available. In an emergency (severe allergic reaction, breathing difficulty, swelling of the lips or throat), call 999. Where the recall was for an allergen and you carry an EpiPen, follow your prescribed allergy plan.

For non-emergency reporting, you can report a food safety incident to the FSA at food.gov.uk/contact or to your local council's environmental health team.

How UK food recalls work

A UK food recall is issued in one of two ways:

  • Product Recall Information Notice (PRIN): the FSA publishes a notice asking consumers to return the product. The supermarket runs the refund process. This is the most common form.
  • Allergy Alert: issued when a product contains an undeclared allergen (milk, nuts, gluten, eggs, soya, etc.). Risk applies only to allergic consumers, but the alert is issued publicly so allergy-monitoring apps and patient organisations can pass it on.

Recalls are coordinated by the FSA in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and by Food Standards Scotland in Scotland. Both agencies publish to a single feed. The trigger is usually the manufacturer self-reporting an issue (a microbiological test failure, a packaging mistake, foreign matter in a batch), although the FSA can also initiate a recall after independent testing or after consumer complaints.

Where to check live