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Restaurant Food Safety: Protecting Guests with Food Allergies

Written by Robert Hoover, CRA, Vice President of Business Development | Jun 24, 2025 7:43:16 PM

Operating a restaurant means more than serving memorable meals. You also carry the responsibility to deliver a safe dining experience for every guest. For people with severe food allergies and other food-related medical conditions, eating out poses real dangers.

One wrong bite — a mislabeled menu item or cross-contaminated dish — can trigger life-threatening consequences, along with lawsuits, reputational damage, and higher insurance costs. Here are tips to manage these risks, so you protect both your guests and your business.

The cost of food allergy errors

Picture this: A young woman with a peanut allergy visits a favorite restaurant and orders a dish she knows well. The chef recently swapped the sauce for one containing peanuts, but no one shares this news. She takes a single bite, experiences anaphylaxis, and does not survive the trip to the hospital.

In the past 12 months, news outlets have highlighted several tragedies like this. Errors in the kitchen, inaccurate menus, and untrained staff all contributed. These incidents devastate families and can put a restaurant out of business.

Understanding your diners' needs

About 1 in 16 people in the U.S. have food allergies. For some, foods like peanuts, tree nuts, milk, and shellfish trigger a severe reaction called anaphylaxis, which requires fast medical attention to avoid fatal outcomes.

Restaurants need to plan for several other medical conditions, as well. Here are two examples:

  • Celiac disease: Around 1% of the population lives with this autoimmune condition. Even tiny gluten exposures, such as crumbs from shared kitchen tools, can cause pain and intestinal harm.
  • Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE): This immune disorder, while rare, is growing in prevalence. It causes the esophagus to swell in response to triggers like dairy, wheat, eggs, and soy. Food then becomes lodged, and the guest may need assistance — but not the Heimlich maneuver.

Customers with conditions like these may ask for meal modifications. When your team responds with flexibility and care, you boost customer loyalty and word-of-mouth referrals.

How food safety emergencies affect your restaurant’s insurance

Dropping the ball on food safety can lead to financial fallout. Injured guests sometimes choose to sue, blaming mislabeled menus, accidental exposures, or slow emergency response.

Look at the provisions of your general liability policy. How would it respond if a guest experiences an anaphylactic reaction caused by food or service errors?

Claims of this type can drive up insurance premiums and sometimes lead to policy non-renewal. And no insurance product can undo the harm. Prevention remains the smartest investment.

Essential steps to prevent food allergy and cross-contact incidents

Provide food prep and menu transparency

  • Label allergens clearly on every menu: Use direct phrasing, such as “contains peanuts.” Include language on the menu about the potential for cross-contamination if you can’t prevent it in your kitchen. Ask your legal counsel to review your menu and provide recommendations.
  • Designate allergen-safe prep areas: Assign separate counters, cookware, and utensils exclusively for allergen-free meals. Color code tools to avoid mix-ups.
  • Keep products isolated: Clean every surface, utensil, and piece of equipment thoroughly between uses. Never use a shared fryer, grill, or toaster for both gluten-free and regular foods.
  • Instruct staff to change gloves: Require everyone to wash hands and put on fresh gloves before preparing an order with an “allergy alert.”

Deliver focused employee training

  • Food safety: Educate every team member on allergen risks, conditions like Celiac disease and EoE, and how to spot cross-contamination threats.
  • Communication: Teach servers to ask precise questions about guests’ dietary restrictions, confirm requests with the kitchen, and alert the manager on duty about the reported medical condition. Encourage staff to double-check with guests or escalate concerns if any information remains unclear.
  • Emergency action: Train employees to spot allergic reactions — like hives, swelling, or trouble breathing — and act immediately. Empower staff to administer first aid, call 911, and communicate critical information.
  • Follow-up: Report the incident to your general liability insurance carrier and ask for guidance. They may recommend specific follow-up actions. Also, let your insurance broker know. Show you care by keeping in touch with the guest and/or family members throughout the ordeal and recovery.

Recognizing choking, food blockages, and allergy emergencies

If possible, arrange for your full staff to receive first aid and CPR certifications. At the very least, your supervisors need this knowledge. This training will help your team recognize the differences between respiratory choking, esophageal food impaction (often seen with EoE), and allergic reactions that affect breathing:

  • Choking: If food blocks the airway, a guest may gesture to alert others, but sometimes they head to the restroom for privacy or simply pass out. Does your staff know how to discern when to perform the Heimlich maneuver? Do you have a protocol for sending an employee to the restroom to check, if you suspect a customer is choking?
  • EoE: When a guest says they can’t swallow but can still breathe and speak, there may be an esophageal blockage. Most EoE-related impactions are uncomfortable but not instantly life-threatening. When do you require your employees to call 911, even if the guest insists it’s not necessary?
  • Allergic reaction: Quick action is essential for anaphylaxis. Breathing trouble or swelling of the throat could signal the need for epinephrine. Call 911 immediately.

Training your team to assess each scenario and respond appropriately mitigates risk and can save lives. Employees need the judgment to pause, ask questions, and act based on the specifics of each emergency.

Document the procedures you want employees to follow in various types of emergencies, and make sure all employees know where to find this information. Also, post a pictorial version of your emergency procedures in the kitchen and possibly other high-traffic areas.

Building a lasting safety culture in your restaurant

Successful restaurants elevate safety well beyond checklists. Use personal examples and real scenarios during training to help staff internalize their role in protecting both guests and the business.

Safety training needs to occur on a regular basis, not just at onboarding. Frequent refresher sessions anchor best practices and build your team’s confidence for high-stress moments.

More people than ever dine out with special dietary needs. You build goodwill and strengthen your competitive edge when you accommodate them with care. By investing in preparation and training, you lower the risk of a medical emergency, earn your guests’ trust, and reduce business risk.

Want to learn more?

Connect with the Risk Strategies Hospitality Team at hospitality@risk-strategies.com.

About the author

Rob Hoover of Risk Strategies is a national expert on restaurant safety. At 15, Rob started as a potato peeler in a small, family-owned diner. Today, he’s an industry insider with deep knowledge of day-to-day hospitality challenges. For the past 20 years, he’s helped hospitality businesses as a risk management and insurance advisor.