Why food products need barcodes
Retail stores, grocery distributors, and online marketplaces all use barcodes to manage inventory and track sales. Without a UPC on your product, a grocery store can't scan it at checkout, Amazon can't create a listing for it, and distributors can't add it to their systems. A barcode is infrastructure: it has to exist before anything else works.
One SKU, one barcode — every time
This is the rule that trips up most food brands. Your granola comes in three flavors and two sizes? That's six SKUs, six barcodes. A new flavor is a new barcode. A new size is a new barcode. A reformulation with a new name is a new barcode. The code identifies the specific product configuration — not the brand.
Which retailers require GS1 specifically?
Large grocery chains — Kroger, Whole Foods, Safeway, Target grocery — run vendor compliance against GS1's database. If you're going into those retailers, GS1 membership is the safer path. For Amazon Fresh, Amazon grocery, specialty food sites, Etsy food category, and regional distributors: third-party codes from legitimate UCC-issued prefixes work fine.
FDA labeling and barcodes
The FDA doesn't require a specific barcode on food packaging — but if you put one on there, it has to be the correct GTIN for that product. The barcode is part of your product identity. Once you put a UPC on your packaging, that UPC is permanently that product's identifier.
Package recommendation
Count your SKUs — every flavor, every size. Most small food brands launching with 3–6 SKUs do well with the 5 or 10-code pack. Scaling a product line? The 25-code pack at $30 covers most catalog expansions.
View packages →Get your barcodes for upc barcodes for food products
One-time payment. Instant digital delivery. No annual fee. PNG, SVG, and TXT files included.