Food Safety Careers
By Greg Aronoff | Oregon State University Professional and Continuing Education
If you have started looking into food safety education, you have probably run into both terms: certification and training.
They often get used interchangeably, but they are not the same thing, and understanding the difference can save you a significant amount of time, money, and frustration.
The short version: training builds your knowledge.
Certification proves it, usually for a specific regulatory or audit requirement.
Most people in food safety need both at some point. The question is which comes first, and when.
A ladder diagram showing foundational training at the base, building up through core certifications to advanced credentials and food safety leadership How training and certification build on each other Start Core Next Advanced Foundational food safety training How systems work, hazard identification, audit readiness, GMPs HACCP certification Hazard analysis and critical control points PCQI certification FDA-required for FSMA food safety plans SQF practitioner GFSI-recognized audit standard certification FSSC 22000 ISO-based food safety management system Food safety leadership and management QA manager, food safety director, regulatory affairs Foundation training Core certifications Advanced credentials
Food safety training is education that builds your working knowledge of how food safety systems operate. It covers the concepts, frameworks, and practical skills that help you understand your role in keeping food safe, and the broader systems your facility depends on.
Training can take many forms: in-person workshops, on-demand online courses, employer-led onboarding, or structured certificate programs from universities and industry organizations.
The goal is comprehension and application, coming away able to actually do the job better.
Training is not always tied to a regulatory requirement, but that does not make it less important. In fact, strong foundational training is what makes certifications meaningful.
Without it, a certification is a credential you passed a test for.
With it, it is a reflection of something you actually understand.
Certification is a formal credential issued by an accredited body that verifies you have met a specific standard of competency. In the food safety world, certifications are often tied to regulatory requirements, audit standards, or employer expectations.
Some certifications are legally required. Others are industry expectations.
Most come with an exam, a renewal requirement, and in some cases, a specific training curriculum you must complete first.
Here are the certifications that come up most often in food and beverage manufacturing:
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PCQI Preventive Controls Qualified Individual. FDA-required for facilities under FSMA. Responsible for preparing and overseeing the facility's food safety plan. fspca.us |
HACCP Certification Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points. Widely recognized across the industry and often expected for QA and food safety management roles. haccpalliance.org |
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SQF Practitioner Safe Quality Food standard, one of the most widely recognized GFSI-benchmarked certification schemes. Required in many facilities operating under SQF. sqfi.com |
FSSC 22000 GFSI-recognized food safety management system standard built on ISO 22000. Common in larger manufacturing operations working with international retailers. fssc22000.com |
Think of it this way: training gives you the map. Certification tells someone else you know how to read it.
Most food safety certifications have a prerequisite of relevant knowledge or experience. The PCQI curriculum, for example, assumes you already have a working understanding of food safety concepts.
Without that foundation, the course can feel like drinking from a fire hose. With it, the pieces click into place.
This is where foundational training programs, ones that cover the full landscape of food safety systems before you go deep on any one credential, are genuinely valuable. They are not a replacement for certification. They are the preparation that makes certification stick.
One more distinction worth making: a certificate of completion (from a training program) is not the same as a certification (from an accrediting body).
A certificate means you completed a course or curriculum. A certification means you passed an exam and met a verified standard. Both have value, but they are different things. When an employer or auditor asks if you have a "HACCP certification," they are typically asking about the latter.
That said, certificate programs from credible institutions carry real weight, especially for professionals building a foundation. They demonstrate initiative, structured learning, and a working knowledge of the subject.
Oregon State University's Quality and Food Safety Training Series is designed for food and beverage professionals who want to build practical knowledge before, or alongside, pursuing specific certifications.
The program covers food safety systems across multiple sectors, the regulatory landscape, hazard identification and control, audit readiness, and how facilities bring programs together into a cohesive, risk-based approach.
It is not a PCQI course. It is not a HACCP certification program.
What it is is the kind of grounded, practical education that makes those next steps more meaningful, and more effective, when you get to them.
Certification and training are not competitors, they are partners. The best food safety professionals tend to have both: a solid foundational understanding of how the industry works and the specific credentials their role or facility requires.
If you are early in your food safety career, start with the foundation. Get the knowledge first. The certifications will be there when you need them, and you will be ready for them.
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Sources and further reading
Ready to build the foundation?
Oregon State University's Quality and Food Safety Training Series is a fully online, on-demand program built for food and beverage professionals at every stage of their career. No prior food science background required.
Not sure where you stand? Take our free Food Safety Career Quiz to get a personalized snapshot of where you are and what to focus on next.
Greg Aronoff is the Communications Manager for Oregon State University's Professional and Continuing Education program.