Finding a food manufacturer in Southeast Asia is not hard. Finding a reliable one that meets EU food safety standards is.

The challenge is not a shortage of factories. Thailand alone has over 10,000 food processing companies. Vietnam’s food processing industry includes approximately 11,000 companies. The challenge is information asymmetry: the best manufacturers often do not appear on Alibaba, and the ones that do may not hold the certifications you need.

This guide walks through a five-step process for identifying, evaluating, and verifying food manufacturers in ASEAN, based on practical experience across 350+ research projects in 80+ countries.


Step 1: Start with Government Databases, Not Google

Government industrial databases contain factory-level data that commercial search engines cannot access. They are the most reliable starting point for building a long list of manufacturers.

Most international buyers start with Google or Alibaba. Both are useful, but they skew toward companies that invest in English-language marketing, which is a small fraction of the manufacturing base in Southeast Asia.

Government databases give you the full picture:

Thailand

  • BOI (Board of Investment) — Searchable database of BOI-promoted companies by sector. URL: boi.go.th. Look for the “Promoted Companies” search function. BOI-promoted food companies benefit from tax incentives, which often correlates with export capability

  • DIW (Department of Industrial Works) — Maintains factory license records for all registered manufacturers. Accessible at diw.go.th. Factory licenses are classified by type; food manufacturing falls under specific industrial codes

  • Thai FDA — Issues food premises licenses. The Food e-Submission System (food.fda.moph.go.th) contains manufacturing license data, though the interface is primarily in Thai

  • National Food Institute (NFI) — A non-profit under the Ministry of Industry that supports food industry development. Useful for identifying certified and export-ready manufacturers

Vietnam

  • MOIT (Ministry of Industry and Trade) — Recently launched a database of Vietnamese manufacturing companies in collaboration with IFC. Available at moit.gov.vn

  • VietFactory — Vietnam’s largest manufacturer directory with nearly 50,000 profiles. URL: vietfactory.com

  • Fact-Link Vietnam — Business directory covering 4,490 registered manufacturing firms. URL: fact-link.com.vn

  • Companies House Vietnam — Searchable by company name or Enterprise Code, based on Ministry of Planning & Investment filings. URL: companieshouse.vn

Indonesia

  • BKPM (Ministry of Investment) — Primary investment promotion agency. Tracks investment data by industry sector including food manufacturing. Now restructured as the Ministry of Investment and Downstream Industry

  • BPOM (Food and Drug Authority) — Registration portal at e-reg.pom.go.id. Product verification at productlist.id. Codes: ML (imported), MD (domestic), SP (regulatory guidance)

  • Kemenperin (Ministry of Industry) — Maintains an industrial directory with manufacturing company data

Practical tip: Most of these databases are in the local language. If you cannot read Thai or Vietnamese, you will need either a local partner or a research service to extract and translate the data effectively.


Step 2: Expand Your Search Through Industry Networks

Industry associations, trade exhibitions, and B2B platforms each give you access to different segments of the manufacturing base. Use all three.

Industry Associations (Free Membership Directories)

Association Country What You Get
Thai Food Processors’ Association (TFPA) Thailand Members list with company profiles. URL: thaifood.org
Vietnam Food Association (VFA) Vietnam Access to Vietnamese food exporters. URL: e.vietfood.org.vn
GAPMMI Indonesia 400+ member companies across food manufacturing. URL: gapmmi.or.id
ASEAN Food & Beverage Alliance (AFBA) ASEAN-wide Members from all 10 ASEAN countries. URL: afba.co
Food Industry Asia (FIA) Asia (Singapore HQ) 130+ F&B companies in 13 countries. Regulatory hub at regulatoryhub.foodindustry.asia
FMM (Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers) Malaysia Searchable member list. 51st edition of the FMM Directory available. URL: fmm.org.my

Trade Exhibitions (Where Manufacturers Show Up in Person)

The most efficient way to meet multiple manufacturers in a few days:

Exhibition Location Dates (2026) Scale
THAIFEX-Anuga Asia Bangkok May 26-30 Asia’s premier F&B trade show. USDA-endorsed
FHA - Food & Hospitality Asia Singapore April 21-24 80,000+ attendees, 2,750+ exhibitors from 115 countries
Vietfood & Beverage Ho Chi Minh City August 6-8 30th edition, 1,000 exhibitors
Food & Drinks Malaysia by SIAL Kuala Lumpur July 21-23 SE Asia’s leading B2B F&B exhibition
SIAL InterFOOD Jakarta November 4-8 Indonesia’s major food processing event
Philippine Food Expo Manila April 17-19 8,300 sqm exhibition

THAIFEX is the single most important show for food sourcing in ASEAN. If you can only attend one event, make it this one.

B2B Platforms

  • ThaiTrade.com — Official marketplace by Thailand’s Department of International Trade Promotion. Verified Thai exporters

  • Alibaba — Extensive ASEAN listings, but quality varies enormously. Filter by “Verified Supplier” and “Trade Assurance”

  • VinaSources — Vietnam-specific sourcing platform with verified suppliers. URL: vinasources.com

  • Global Sources — Asia-focused B2B with verified supplier programs. Strong trade show presence


Step 3: Filter Candidates by Certifications and Export Capability

Do not waste time evaluating manufacturers who lack the certifications your market requires. Filter by certification first, then evaluate everything else.

Certifications Required for EU Market Access

Certification Why It Matters Verification Database
BRC (BRCGS) Required by most UK and continental European retailers. 39% of EU food accreditation directory.brcgs.com (free “Directory Lite” account, 55,000+ sites)
IFS Most popular in Germany, France, Italy, Spain. 47% of EU food accreditation ifs-certification.com (login required, 20,000+ certificates)
FSSC 22000 GFSI-recognized, ISO-integrated. Growing in global adoption. 14% of EU accreditation fssc.com/public-register/ (updated daily, free)
HACCP Legally mandatory in the EU (Regulation 852/2004). Baseline requirement No single global register. Verify through the issuing certification body
ISO 22000 International food safety management system standard iafcertsearch.org (free search by company or certificate number)

How to verify a certificate is real:

  1. Go to the public register of the certification scheme (links above)

  2. Search by company name or certificate number

  3. Confirm the scope covers the product category you need

  4. Check the expiry date — expired certificates mean the factory may have lost certification

  5. Verify the certification body (CB) is accredited via IAF CertSearch

Do not rely on PDF certificates provided by the factory. Certificates can be fabricated or expired. Always cross-reference with the public register.

Additional Filters

  • EU export history — Ask the manufacturer for a list of EU customers or EU export destinations. A factory that has never exported to the EU will face a steep learning curve on compliance

  • Production capacity — Ensure the factory can handle your volume. Ask for monthly capacity in metric tons, not just “we can handle it”

  • Minimum order quantity (MOQ) — This varies enormously. Large companies like Thai Union have high minimums; smaller OEM specialists may offer lower MOQs

  • R&D capability — If you need custom formulations, check whether the factory has an in-house R&D team


Step 4: Conduct Factory Audits (Never Skip This)

Desktop research can confirm certifications; only on-site visits can confirm actual practices. Budget for either a personal visit or a third-party audit before placing your first order.

What to Check During a Factory Audit

  1. Personnel and hygiene — Hair nets, gloves, handwashing stations, visitor protocols. Are workers actually following the procedures, or are the SOPs just on paper?

  2. Facility and sanitation — Cleanliness of production areas, pest control evidence (bait stations, insect light traps), waste management

  3. Process controls — Temperature monitoring logs, cross-contamination prevention (separate zones for raw/cooked), allergen management protocols

  4. Documentation and traceability — HACCP plans, batch records, supplier approval records, recall procedures. Can they trace a finished product back to raw material sources within hours?

  5. Raw material controls — Incoming inspection procedures, storage conditions (temperature, humidity), supplier qualification records

  6. Lab testing capability — In-house microbiology lab, retention sample storage, third-party lab testing contracts

Red Flags That Should Stop the Process

  • Fabricated or outdated documentation

  • No written HACCP plan, or one that has not been updated in years

  • Expired or non-accredited certifications

  • Reluctance to allow unannounced visits

  • No batch traceability system

  • Workers not following hygiene protocols despite SOPs being posted on walls

  • Pest evidence in production areas

Third-Party Audit Companies in ASEAN

If you cannot visit in person, commission a third-party audit:

Company Headquarters ASEAN Presence Typical Cost
SGS Geneva All major ASEAN countries Varies by scope
Bureau Veritas Paris Extensive (1,400+ offices globally) Varies by scope
Intertek London Labs in Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines Varies by scope
TUV SUD Munich Regional offices in ASEAN Varies by scope
QIMA Hong Kong Strong SE Asia focus Starting ~$700/audit

A food safety audit typically costs $700-2,000 depending on scope and factory size. An ethical/social audit (SMETA) adds approximately $800+. This is a small investment compared to the cost of a contamination incident or EU border rejection.


Step 5: Start Small, Then Scale

Place a trial order before committing to a long-term contract. Test the product, the communication, and the logistics chain.

Trial Order Checklist

  • Product quality — Does the sample match the specification? Test with an accredited third-party lab (SGS, Intertek, Bureau Veritas have food testing labs throughout ASEAN)

  • Communication responsiveness — How quickly does the factory respond to emails? Do they understand your requirements without repeated clarification?

  • Documentation quality — Are shipping documents, certificates of analysis (COA), and customs paperwork accurate and complete?

  • Logistics reliability — Did the shipment arrive on time? Were cold chain requirements maintained throughout transit?

  • Packaging and labeling — Does the packaging meet your market’s requirements (EU labeling regulations, allergen declarations, language requirements)?

Common Failures to Watch For

Based on EU RASFF (Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed) data for ASEAN exports:

  • Mycotoxin contamination (mainly aflatoxin) — The most commonly reported food safety issue from ASEAN

  • Pesticide and veterinary drug residues — Vietnam saw a 60% increase in EU violations in 2024 (61 cases, up from 38 in 2023)

  • Herbs and spices — Account for 15% of all ASEAN food safety notifications to the EU

  • Nuts and seeds, fish and seafood, fruits and vegetables — Together cause over two-thirds of all food safety reports

Thailand receives 32% of all ASEAN food fraud notifications to the EU. Indonesia has a 95% border rejection rate on flagged products. These numbers do not mean these countries are unsafe — they mean due diligence is non-negotiable.


Recommended Resources

Databases for Ongoing Monitoring

Advisory Organizations

  • ProFound (Netherlands) — Market entry advisory specializing in food sourcing from developing countries. Has guided 3,000+ companies into international markets over 30+ years. URL: thisisprofound.com

  • USDA Foreign Agricultural Service — Publishes detailed country food industry reports and endorses trade shows like THAIFEX. URL: fas.usda.gov

  • Food Industry Asia (FIA) — Regulatory hub covering food standards across 13 Asian countries. URL: foodindustry.asia


Sources

  • BOI Thailand “Food Industry Report” (factory count, investment incentives)

  • MOIT Vietnam “Database of Vietnamese Manufacturing and Supporting Industries” 2024

  • BPOM Indonesia official portal (registration system)

  • Thai Food Processors’ Association, thaifood.org (members list)

  • GAPMMI (Indonesian Food & Beverage Association), gapmmi.or.id

  • AFBA (ASEAN Food & Beverage Alliance), afba.co

  • THAIFEX-Anuga Asia official website, thaifex-anuga.com

  • USDA FAS “THAIFEX-Anuga Asia 2026 Trade Show Announcement”

  • BRCGS “Directory” https://directory.brcgs.com/

  • FSSC 22000 “Public Register” https://www.fssc.com/public-register/

  • IFS “Certification Database” https://www.ifs-certification.com/

  • IAF CertSearch https://www.iafcertsearch.org/

  • PLOS ONE “Incidence of fraud and adulterations in ASEAN food/feed exports: A 20-year analysis of RASFF’s notifications” 2021

  • VietnamNet “Vietnam must tighten food safety controls after 130 EU export warnings” 2024

  • Sedex “Food & Beverage Supply Chains Insights 2025”

  • ProFound official website, thisisprofound.com


About the Researcher

Takashi Kinoshita, MBA — Founder of Taitonmai Co., Ltd. 8 years in international procurement at SHARP Corporation, including factory operations in Thailand. Now leads a research team covering 80+ countries, specializing in ASEAN company intelligence and market analysis. 350+ projects delivered to clients in Japan, Europe, and North America.


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