Food and beverage logistics covers every step of getting perishable and shelf-stable products from manufacturer to retailer, distributor, or end consumer, with the added layer that a single misstep in temperature, documentation, or timing can mean product loss, retailer chargebacks, or a regulatory action.
The category is operationally demanding. Temperature sensitivity, strict food safety regulations, and multi-channel distribution requirements make it one of the highest-stakes segments in the supply chain. Brands that succeed in this environment rely on food logistics companies with the right certifications, infrastructure, and operational discipline to protect product integrity at every point of the journey.
This page covers what food and beverage logistics involves, what to look for in a logistics partner, and how Source Logistics handles cold chain, distribution, and compliance for food and beverage brands shipping across the U.S.
Food and beverage logistics is the planning, execution, and management of moving food products through the supply chain: from inbound receipt at a warehouse to outbound delivery to a retailer, foodservice operator, distributor, or consumer.
It differs from general freight logistics in several key ways. Products must meet food safety standards set by the FDA and enforced through frameworks like the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA). Many products require temperature control during storage and transport. Retailers impose their own compliance requirements: OTIF (On Time In Full), labeling specs, SSCC (Serial Shipping Container Code) accuracy, and pallet configuration standards that carry financial penalties for non-compliance.
The USDA estimates that 30 to 40 percent of the U.S. food supply is lost or wasted at the retail and consumer level (USDA ERS, 2023). A portion of that loss happens in logistics, where temperature breaks, handling errors, and documentation failures contribute to spoilage before products reach the shelf.
A capable food and beverage logistics partner prevents these losses through proper infrastructure, documented processes, and a compliance-first approach to every shipment.
The complexity comes from three intersecting factors. First, many products are perishable, which means delays that would be a minor inconvenience in other categories become product losses in food and beverage. Second, the regulatory environment is active: the FDA's FSMA framework created enforceable federal requirements for sanitary food transportation that apply to shippers, carriers, and receivers alike. Third, the retailer compliance environment has tightened significantly. Major grocery and mass-market retailers now measure OTIF performance to the decimal point and apply financial chargebacks to shipments that fall short, regardless of whether the failure originated in logistics or with the supplier.
Brands that manage these three factors consistently can hold retail programs, protect margins, and scale distribution without the supply chain disruptions that sideline competitors.
Cold chain logistics is the process of maintaining a defined temperature range for perishable or temperature-sensitive products throughout every stage of storage and transport.
For food and beverage brands, the cold chain spans frozen, refrigerated, chilled, and controlled-ambient categories. Each has different requirements. A frozen meal needs consistent storage at or below 0°F. Refrigerated dairy holds at 34 to 38°F. Fresh produce occupies a controlled-ambient range that varies by variety.
Under the FSMA Sanitary Transportation Rule, refrigerated transport vehicles must be pre-cooled to 41°F or below before loading, and carriers must maintain temperature monitoring records for 12 months (FDA, 2016). Shippers and carriers share responsibility for defining and maintaining those conditions throughout transit.
Maintaining cold chain integrity requires more than refrigerated trailers. A 3PL handling temperature-sensitive food and beverage products should offer:
Multi-temperature storage zones: frozen, refrigerated, chilled, and controlled-ambient under one operation
Continuous temperature monitoring with automated deviation alerts
Redundant power systems to protect frozen and refrigerated inventory
Strict time-out-of-environment controls during receiving, picking, and outbound staging
Lot, batch, and expiration tracking with FEFO (First Expired, First Out) rotation
Chain-of-custody documentation suitable for audits and recalls
Source Logistics' temperature-controlled logistics network provides all of these capabilities, with SQF-certified facilities and real-time visibility tools that let brands monitor their inventory status at any point in the supply chain.
Warehousing for food and beverage products is not the same as standard dry storage. Food-grade facilities must meet certification standards, maintain audit-ready documentation, and support the operational complexity of multi-SKU, multi-temperature inventory.
The key certifications for food warehouses are SQF (Safe Quality Food), FDA registration, and retailer-specific compliance requirements. SQF Level 3, the highest level of the program, covers both food safety and food quality management systems. Retailers like Walmart, Kroger, Costco, and Target increasingly require their suppliers' logistics partners to operate in SQF-certified facilities.
Distribution requirements for food and beverage add another layer. Brands shipping to retail distribution centers must hit OTIF targets, meet labeling and SSCC requirements, and palletize to retailer specifications. Missing any of these can trigger chargebacks that erode margin.
Source Logistics operates more than 25 warehousing and distribution facilities across the U.S., all SQF-certified and FDA-registered. The network covers every major port, population center, and retail DC corridor, with the ability to reach 75% of U.S. consumers same-day.
Today's food and beverage brands rarely ship to a single channel. A successful logistics partner should handle:
For brands managing all of these simultaneously, the advantage of a single 3PL partner is reduced handoffs, unified inventory visibility, and one point of accountability when something goes wrong.
Compliance in food logistics operates at three levels: the facility level (SQF, FDA), the transportation level (FSMA), and the retailer level (OTIF, labeling, documentation).
Most quality food logistics companies maintain facility-level certifications as a baseline. SQF certification requires audits, documented food safety plans, allergen programs, food fraud prevention protocols, and traceability systems. FDA registration applies to any facility that stores, manufactures, or processes food for human consumption.
FSMA adds requirements specific to transportation. Shippers must define temperature conditions in writing, carriers must maintain appropriate equipment, and records documenting compliance must be available on request. For brands managing cross-border freight from Mexico, additional documentation requirements apply at the border.
Retailer compliance is where many brands face the most direct financial exposure. OTIF penalties at Walmart run at 3% of invoice value for non-compliant shipments. Other major retailers have similar programs. Compliance requires accurate appointment scheduling, correct pallet configuration, valid SSCC labels, and on-time delivery, every time.
Source Logistics manages all three compliance layers through retailer-specific SOPs, value-added services including labeling and repack, and dedicated compliance workflows at each facility. See more detail in our guide to food logistics compliance.
Temperature-controlled transportation requires a carrier network vetted for food-grade practices, not just general freight capacity. Refrigerated and frozen lanes need carriers operating properly maintained, pre-cooled equipment, with the documentation practices to satisfy FDA requirements.
For food and beverage brands, key transportation considerations include:
Source Logistics integrates transportation directly with its warehouse network, which means freight moving into or out of a Source facility uses the same team, the same systems, and a single point of contact. That eliminates the coordination gaps that arise when separate providers have to sync across platforms.
Real-time visibility is not optional in food and beverage logistics. Retailers expect electronic advance ship notices (ASNs). Regulatory compliance requires documented temperature records. Brands managing shelf life need FEFO rotation data on demand.
The technology stack that supports these requirements typically includes:
For brands that already have their own ERP or WMS, the right logistics partner integrates directly, without creating parallel data entry or visibility gaps. Source Logistics' systems integration connects with Shopify, NetSuite, SAP, Microsoft Dynamics, Manhattan, and other EDI-enabled platforms.
The Source Customer Portal provides brands with on-demand access to inventory data, temperature logs, order history, and shipment status in one dashboard.
Not every 3PL that handles food and beverage has the certifications, infrastructure, and operational experience to support brands with retail, compliance, and cold chain requirements. When evaluating food logistics companies, look for:
Certifications: SQF certification (Level 2 or 3), FDA registration, and if relevant, AIB or GFSI-recognized programs. Ask specifically which facilities are certified, not just whether the company has certifications somewhere.
Temperature control infrastructure: Multi-temperature zones, continuous monitoring, redundant power, and documented procedures for time-out-of-environment. Request a sample deviation report to understand how the provider responds when something goes wrong.
Retailer compliance track record: OTIF performance data, chargeback history, and direct experience with the specific retailers you service. Compliance workflows differ by retailer, and a provider with Walmart and Kroger experience manages them differently than one who has only serviced regional chains.
Traceability and recall readiness: Lot and batch tracking, FEFO rotation, and the ability to execute a recall within a defined time window. This is non-negotiable for food brands with retail exposure.
Bilingual support: For brands with LATAM supply chains or multicultural product lines, bilingual operations and account management teams reduce miscommunication risk at every handoff.
Source Logistics has operated in the food and beverage space since 1999, originally focused on helping Hispanic brands enter the U.S. market. That experience shaped a compliance-first culture and the infrastructure depth to support demanding food retailers and distributors. Explore our full suite of food and beverage logistics services or talk to an expert to discuss your specific requirements.
Source Logistics is a full-service 3PL with specialized expertise in food and beverage, grocery retail, and CPG. The operation combines temperature-controlled storage across over 5.8 million square feet, a nationwide transportation network, and retailer-compliant fulfillment workflows built for brands that ship to Walmart, Kroger, Costco, Target, and other major retailers.
Key capabilities for food and beverage brands:
SQF Level 3 certified, FDA-registered facilities with multi-temperature zones
FEFO rotation, Lot and Batch tracking, and expiration management
Retailer-specific compliance SOPs for labeling, SSCC, OTIF, and appointment adherence
Temperature-controlled transportation with vetted, food-grade carriers
Cross-border freight management for northbound Mexico and LATAM imports
Real-time visibility through integrated WMS, EDI, and the Source Customer Portal
94% customer retention rate across food, grocery, CPG, and health and beauty sectors
Whether you're scaling a regional brand into national retail, managing complex cold chain requirements across multiple temperature zones, or navigating the compliance demands of a new retail partner, Source Logistics provides the operational depth and accountability to support your growth.
Talk to an expert to start a conversation about your food and beverage logistics requirements.