If one acronym decides whether your plant can sell into China, it’s GACC: the General Administration of Customs of the People’s Republic of China. Here’s the plain-language version of what registration means for a Canadian seafood establishment.
What GACC registration is
China requires the overseas producer of imported food to be registered with GACC. The framework now runs under Decree 280, which took effect June 1, 2026 and replaced the earlier Decree 248 regime most guides still describe. Registration is handled through GACC’s online portal, CIFER.
Why you can’t just sign up
Food categories are risk-tiered. Aquatic products sit in the higher-risk tier, which means an establishment cannot self-register. It must be recommended to GACC by the competent authority of its own country, and for Canada, that’s the CFIA. In practice the CFIA certifies your CIFER account and submits the recommendation on your establishment’s behalf.
What you get
A successful registration produces a China registration number for your establishment. That number isn’t a trophy; it has a job: it must appear in the labelling of product you ship to China, on inner and outer packaging, alongside your CFIA establishment identifiers. Registrations carry validity periods and renewal obligations, so treat the status as maintained, not permanent.
What the process needs from you
Expect to demonstrate the basics a food-safety regulator would ask anywhere: your SFC licence and establishment listing in order, your HACCP-based controls documented, and your product scope defined. The CFIA’s role as recommender means your Canadian house has to be in order before the Chinese side moves.
Where we fit, and where we don’t
We are a navigator, not an issuer. We help you determine whether your plant qualifies, assemble the CIFER application, work the process alongside your CFIA contacts, and keep the registration number consistent across labels and documents afterward. The certification itself always comes from the authorities; anyone who implies otherwise should worry you.
Next: the step-by-step walkthrough, or the Canadian-side requirements.