BRC V9 Transition Gap‑Analysis Template

BRC V9 Transition Gap‑Analysis Template
Food Safety

BRC V9 Transition Gap‑Analysis Template

Last Updated on December 1, 2025 by Melissa Lazaro

Why a Gap-Analysis Matters During the BRC V9 Transition

When companies start preparing for BRC V9, one question always comes up:
“Where do we begin?”

If you’re feeling that way, it’s normal. I’ve helped teams transition from previous BRC versions, and the smoothest transitions always start with a structured, honest gap-analysis — not guesswork, not rushed document edits, and definitely not waiting until the internal audit.

A good gap-analysis gives you clarity.
It shows what’s already compliant, what needs updating, and what requires deeper work — before an auditor finds it.

By the time you finish this guide, you’ll have a clear structure to evaluate your current system, assign responsibility, and prioritize what needs attention first.

How to Use This Gap-Analysis Template (Before You Begin)

Before diving in, it helps to understand how to make this tool work in real operations, not just on paper.

Here’s the simplest way to approach it:

  • Do it as a team, not alone behind a laptop.
  • Review each requirement using real operational evidence, not assumptions.
  • Validate controls with people — not just documents.
  • Compare V8 vs V9 wording to understand intent, not just compliance.

Who should be involved?

  • QA or Technical Manager
  • Production Supervisors
  • Training/HR
  • Food Defence/TACCP Lead
  • IT or cybersecurity representative
  • Procurement or supplier assurance (depending on structure)

Pro Tip

Treat this as a working workshop, not a tick-box exercise. The conversations during the assessment are often more valuable than the form itself.

Common Mistake

Only reviewing documents — without checking whether actual practice still matches.

BRC V9 Transition Gap‑Analysis Template Section-by-Section Comparison Table: BRC V8 vs V9 Requirements

This is where the real work happens.

The table format should make gaps visible immediately — not buried in paragraph text.

Clause V9 Requirement Summary Current Evidence Gap Identified Priority (H/M/L) Actions Needed Owner Deadline Status

Keep your responses short and factual. You’re not writing audit notes — you’re mapping reality.

Why This Table Matters

I’ve seen teams skip the comparative format and jump straight to corrective work. The result?
They fix low-priority items and discover high-impact gaps too late.

This table prevents that.

Key Focus Areas in V9 to Audit More Deeply

Some areas in V9 are new or strengthened — meaning auditors will pay closer attention. Let’s go through the ones that typically require the most work.

1. Food Safety Culture Requirements

BRC now expects measurable and repeatable actions — not slogans.

Examples of evidence:

  • Culture KPIs
  • Staff engagement metrics
  • Training effectiveness evaluations
  • Leadership review records

If your current culture approach is a paragraph in the manual, this will need updating.

Avoid: assuming “training = culture.”
Culture is about behavior, accountability, and follow-through.

2. Allergen and Label Control Enhancements

Allergen mislabeling remains a leading cause of recalls — so V9 tightens expectations.

Check:

  • Cleaning validation
  • Label verification steps
  • Reformulation controls
  • Trending of allergen swab results
  • Corrective action evidence

If your system relies heavily on operator judgment without verification steps, that’s a gap.

3. Food Defence, TACCP & Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity is now explicitly referenced — which surprises a lot of teams.

Look for:

  • User access controls
  • Password policies
  • System backup procedures
  • Evidence of review and testing
  • Vulnerability assessment updates

A quick test:
If you can’t explain how unauthorized access to production or quality systems is prevented, there’s a gap.

4. Risk-Based Documentation & Evidence Trails

V9 expects decisions to be justified — not just written.

Examples:

  • Rationale for sampling frequency
  • Explanation for cleaning validation frequency
  • Documented review triggers
  • Trend analysis, not isolated results

Auditors don’t just ask “Show me.”
They now ask: “Why this frequency, and how did you decide?”

Prioritization & Action Planning Framework

Once the gaps are visible, the next challenge is deciding what to do first.

A second table helps convert findings into action:

| Gap | Risk Level | Effort Required | Owner | Support Needed | Verification Method | Completion Evidence | Status |

Focus on risk and impact, not convenience.

Pro Tip

Small improvements delivered consistently beat large plans never implemented.

Common Mistake

Assigning everything to QA. Ownership should reflect where the risk lives.

Validation & Internal Review Checklist

Before closing transition work, confirm:

  • All identified gaps are addressed
  • Evidence exists — not just revised documents
  • Risk-based decisions are justified and recorded
  • Records align with procedures
  • Team is trained and can demonstrate competence
  • Internal audit confirms readiness

This step is where most teams uncover final blind spots — especially in implementation.

FAQs

1. How often should we repeat the gap-analysis?
Once during transition, again before internal audit, and after major process or supplier changes.

2. Can the template replace an internal audit?
No — it supports the internal audit, but the audit validates system performance.

3. Who should own the final review?
The QA or Technical Manager — with cross-functional input.

Conclusion: What Happens After the Gap-Analysis

A solid gap-analysis turns the transition into a structured plan instead of a stressful scramble. It gives your team clarity, ownership, and a roadmap to full V9 alignment.

Once you’ve completed the review, the next logical steps are:

  • Finalize action plan
  • Train affected teams
  • Update verification and evidence records
  • Run a focused internal audit
  • Prepare for external certification

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