Your Menu Moves Fast, Make Sure Allergen Data Moves Faster.
Under the Allergen Disclosure for Dining Experiences (ADDE) Act, restaurant chains with 20 or more U.S. locations must keep allergen information accurate and easy to check. Ingredient swaps — from stock shortages or vendor changes — are a common cause of mislabeling in inspections.
SB-68 expects operators to know what’s in their ingredients. For example, if a dairy-free spread is swapped for butter without approval, the allergen info is immediately wrong — and you could be non-compliant.
Documented substitution protocol
To comply with SB-68, operators should follow a clear, trackable process for ingredient swaps. The steps below match California Department of Public Health (CDPH) standards for allergen checking and traceability.
| Step | Action | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Keep an approved substitute list | Each recipe lists approved alternative ingredients. Substitutes must have the same allergens and be verified in your system. | Prevents unapproved swaps from being used. |
| 2. Require manager or QA approval | No substitutions without OK from an Allergen Champion or QA lead. | Ensures accountability before items reach guests. |
| 3. Update allergen info centrally | Approved swaps automatically update allergen info across all menus — print, digital, and delivery. | Keeps allergen data consistent everywhere. |
| 4. Keep a change history | System logs who approved the swap, when it happened, and which menus were updated. | Creates a clear audit trail for inspections. |
Cross-contact risks during substitutions
Swapping ingredients can create cross-contact risks, especially with new vendors or production lines. Even if the item looks similar, allergens can differ. Examples:
| Substitution Scenario | New Risk | Required Action |
|---|---|---|
| Vendor A’s soy-free mayo is replaced by Vendor B’s version | B’s mayo contains egg | Update allergen info from “Soy” to “Egg” and get manager approval |
| Canola oil swapped with refined peanut oil | Introduces a major allergen | Update allergen info and fryer cross-contact statements immediately |
| Proprietary wheat flour replaced with local generic | May contain undeclared soy or milk stabilisers | Verify top 9 allergens before approval |
Verification and recordkeeping
Digital menu tools automate SB-68 documentation, track every change, and show real-time allergen control — replacing manual logs.
| Record Type | Purpose | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Allergen review log | Tracks who approved each swap | Timestamped approval records in the system |
| Menu verification proof | Shows which allergen info was live at a given time | Export or screenshot of menu with timestamps |
| Vendor confirmation | Confirms allergen info from manufacturer or distributor | Stored PDFs, declarations, or synced vendor data |
| Change log | Tracks all edits to recipes and menu info | Automatic log entries with version history |
Ingredient swaps happen fast — your allergen info must keep pace.
Stay compliant when ingredients change
Access expert tools to manage substitutions, verify allergens, and meet SB-68 requirements at every location.
Ask an expert Download resources See legislationContext: California Senate Bill 68 (ADDE Act) makes written allergen disclosure mandatory for restaurant chains with 20+ locations by July 2026.

