The year 2025 marks a major turning point for the food packaging industry in Canada. With stricter regulations, growing environmental pressure, and rising consumer expectations, companies can no longer afford to improvise. To remain competitive, they must adapt their practices—from design to containerization—while ensuring compliance, safety, and sustainability.

Why These Regulations Are a Game Changer:

  • Banned materials: Several types of single-use plastics, even for food, will be restricted or prohibited.
  • Stricter labeling rules: Transparency on recyclability, food safety, and sorting instructions will be required.
  • Increased accountability: Businesses will need to prove that their food packaging meets new standards, especially for export.

Containerization, often seen as a simple logistics step, is becoming a regulated part of the compliance chain. A non-compliant package at the time of containerization can now block an entire shipment, cause additional costs, or damage a company’s brand image.

In this context, packaging is no longer just about protection. It becomes a strategic tool that impacts logistics performance, regulatory compliance, and customer perception.

 What’s Changing in 2025 for Food Packaging in Canada

Canada’s regulatory landscape for food packaging is rapidly evolving, and 2025 marks a new phase toward a more responsible industry. These new rules apply not only to packaging manufacturers, but also to distributors, processors, exporters, and any stakeholders involved in containerization.

1. Restrictions on Single-Use Plastics

The federal government has expanded its ban on non-reusable plastics. This now includes several types of packaging used for food products—such as soft films, black trays, and multilayer containers that are difficult to recycle.

Companies must anticipate these changes and move toward recyclable or reusable solutions.

2. Standardized Sorting Instructions and Recyclability Requirements

Canada aims to harmonize sorting instructions nationwide, with clearer requirements for on-pack labeling. Starting in 2025, terms like “recyclable” or icons must accurately reflect local processing capabilities.

This will require a redesign of the information printed on packaging—and these changes must be applied before containerization to ensure compliance from the point of shipment.

(It’s essential to educate your clients clearly about recyclability.)

3. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Reinforcement

EPR requirements are increasing: companies will be held accountable for the management of their packaging even after the point of sale. This mechanism will also apply to companies exporting or marketing packaged food products.

Material traceability becomes a compliance criterion, and non-compliant packaging may be rejected by sorting centers or customs authorities.

4. Export Compliance: No Packaging, No Market Access

Export markets (Europe, USA, Asia) enforce their own food packaging standards. In cases of non-compliance, containerization may be blocked or penalized.

Anticipating both Canadian regulations and the requirements of importing countries is therefore essential.

Containerization and Compliance: What You Need to Know

Containerization is no longer just a logistical operation. In 2025, it becomes a critical checkpoint in the regulatory compliance chain. A non-compliant package—even if well-designed—can lead to shipment refusal at the destination, penalties, or costly reshipments.

Food Packaging as an Integrated System

It’s no longer enough to package a product in recyclable or compostable materials. The entire cycle must be considered:

  • Resistance to crushing and temperature fluctuations during transport
  • Compliance with food safety labeling regulations (dates, batch numbers, allergens, traceability)
  • Compatibility between primary (in direct contact with food), secondary, and tertiary packaging

A package that isn’t designed for containerization risks collapsing, deforming, or contaminating other products.

Anticipating Customs Non-Compliance Risks

Customs authorities in Canada and abroad are increasingly vigilant about the origin of packaging materials, their treatment (e.g., ISPM15 standards for pallets), and compliance with food safety requirements.

In case of non-compliance:

  • Delayed customs clearance
  • Return or destruction of the goods
  • Damage to customer or distributor relationships

Food Packaging and Certifications

Some certifications are becoming prerequisites for accessing certain markets:

  • BRCGS Packaging Materials: Ensures the safety of food packaging materials.
  • ISO 22000: International standard for food safety management.
  • Eco-labels: Recognized at the provincial or international level, these labels reinforce the environmental credibility of packaging.

These requirements must be addressed upstream of the containerization stage, during the design phase. Waiting until the final step to validate compliance can result in delays, rework, or rejection of shipments.

What Solutions Should Be Adopted in 2025 to Ensure Compliance?

Faced with evolving regulations and increasing consumer expectations, food industry companies must adapt their packaging in terms of technical design, environmental impact, and logistics efficiency. In 2025, it’s no longer just about being compliant — packaging must be strategically optimized for containerization, preservation, food safety, and brand enhancement.

1. Adopt a Certified Eco-Design Approach

Eco-design should no longer be seen as a constraint but as a performance lever. It allows companies to:

  • Reduce unnecessary materials (therefore lowering weight and transport costs);
  • Facilitate sorting and ensure real recyclability in Canada;
  • Anticipate upcoming obligations related to Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR).

2. Use Materials Approved for Food Contact

As of 2025, authorities will require proof of compliance (tests, certificates) for food packaging materials, particularly recycled plastics, bioplastics, and treated paper/cardboard.

Working with certified suppliers and a partner like Creopack helps ensure security and compliance in this step.

3. Integrate Traceability into Packaging

Standards increasingly demand traceability of the packaging itself (batch number, date, origin, serial number). This requires:

  • Durable printing or marking directly on the packaging;
  • Integration of QR codes to ensure full transparency all the way to the end consumer.

4. Think in Terms of “Logistical Performance”

An effective food package in 2025 should be:

  • Stackable, compact, and optimized for container shipping;
  • Easy to unload and store;
  • Designed to reduce breakage or contamination risks.

This is the same approach we showcased in our case study on transforming standard packaging into an eco-designed solution.

Food Packaging: A Constantly Evolving Strategic Issue

Far from being a simple container, food packaging is now seen as a key element of differentiation, regulatory compliance, and sustainability strategy. In 2025, it takes center stage in the business strategies of agri-food companies that aim to stand out, enter new markets, and reduce their environmental impact.

Here’s why your approach must evolve:

  • Regulations are becoming stricter, requiring more detailed documentation (technical data sheets, traceability, food contact standards, EPR compliance, etc.);
  • Supply chains are becoming more complex, pushing companies to design more robust, reusable, or recyclable packaging optimized for container or pallet transport;
  • Consumers are more vigilant: they examine materials, environmental labels, recyclability claims, and expect companies to empower them to act responsibly.

Companies that integrate these factors now will gain a strong competitive advantage, not only in terms of compliance, but also in brand image and logistical efficiency.

Planning Ahead to Perform Better in 2025

The year 2025 will mark a turning point for companies in Canada’s agri-food sector. As regulations evolve, labeling requirements become stricter, and environmental pressure intensifies, food packaging is no longer just a logistical tool — it becomes a strategic driver of compliance, operational performance, and sustainable positioning.

Taking a proactive approach — by integrating regulatory constraints at the design stage, choosing eco-responsible materials, and optimizing packaging for containerization — allows businesses to turn obligations into competitive advantages.

At Créopack, we support agri-food companies with custom, durable, compliant packaging solutions tailored to the realities of the Canadian market. Because good packaging does more than protect: It enhances your product, Reinforces your values, And delivers your brand’s commitment right alongside the goods.

Want to stay ahead of 2025’s regulatory shifts and optimize your food packaging?

Contact our team today for a personalized analysis of your packaging needs.

FAQ

What are the new requirements for food packaging in Canada in 2025?

Starting in 2025, several Canadian provinces will tighten regulations regarding labeling, recyclability, and packaging traceability. Non-recyclable materials are expected to be progressively banned, and clear information on the packaging’s composition and end-of-life management will be mandatory.

What is ISPM 15-compliant packaging?

ISPM 15 (NIMP15 in French) refers to international standards for wood packaging used in global trade. Compliant packaging is heat-treated to prevent the spread of harmful pests. This standard is essential for exports, especially in the agri-food sector.

How can food containerization be optimized?

Optimization involves minimizing unused space, using stackable packaging, and designing formats suited to standard pallet and container dimensions. This helps reduce transport costs and carbon footprint.

Are all packaging materials recyclable in Canada?

No. Recycling capabilities vary depending on local infrastructure, which differs from one province to another. Some plastics, composite materials, or multilayer packaging may not be recyclable in certain regions.

What are the benefits of eco-friendly packaging?

Eco-friendly packaging enhances brand image, reduces waste at the source, cuts transportation costs, and supports regulatory compliance. It is also a strategic advantage to meet growing consumer expectations.