Food safety when eating out (2024)

Healthy eating

  • If hospitality staff don’t look after themselves and their premises, they’re unlikely to look after your food very well.
  • Hot food should be served hot at 60 °C and above, and cold food should be served cold at 5 °C or less.
  • If you are in any doubt about the safety of food, don’t eat it.
  • If you have serious concerns with the way food is handled, stored, prepared or cooked by a food business, contact the local council in which the premises is located.

On this page

  • Food that can make you sick
  • High-risk foods
  • Choosing where to eat out
  • Hints for buying food
  • What to look for at buffets or self-service restaurants
  • Taking food home
  • Doggy bags
  • Where to get help

Food businesses have a legal responsibility to sell food that is safe, suitable and correctly labelled. However, there are some basic measures you can take that will minimise the risk of food poisoning when eating out.

Food that can make you sick

Many different types of food can make you sick. Food that contains dangerous bacteria or viruses may not look, smell or taste any different from food that is safe. Food poisoning bacteria are either in the food to begin with or are transferred to the food during storage, preparation, cooking or serving.

High-risk foods

Food poisoning bacteria can grow and multiply on some types of food more easily than others. High-risk foods include:

  • raw and cooked meat - such as chicken and minced meat, and foods containing these, such as casseroles, curries and lasagne
  • dairy products - such as custard and dairy-based desserts like custard tarts and cheesecake
  • eggs and egg products - such as mousse
  • small goods - such as ham and salami
  • seafood - such as seafood salad, patties, fish balls, stews containing seafood and fish stock
  • cooked rice and pasta
  • prepared salads - such as coleslaws, pasta salads and rice salads
  • prepared fruit salads
  • ready-to-eat foods - such as sandwiches, rolls, and pizzas that contain any of the food above.

When eating out, pay special attention to how these high-risk foods are prepared, cooked, stored and served.

Choosing where to eat out

When you decide to eat in a restaurant or buy takeaway food, think about whether:

  • staff members are using separate utensils and equipment for handling raw and cooked foods, for example, when preparing sandwiches
  • staff members are using a clean cloth to wipe surfaces
  • raw and cooked foods are well separated
  • the toilets are clean
  • the shop or restaurant is generally clean.

Dirty conditions in the public areas of a shop or restaurant can be a clue that things may be worse in the kitchen or behind the scenes where customers don't go.

Hints for buying food

When buying food, remember:

  • Hot food should be served steaming hot (60 °C and above). Avoid eating lukewarm food.
  • Cold food should be displayed on ice or in a refrigerated cabinet and should feel cold when you eat it (5 °C or less).
  • Pre-made sandwiches and rolls that contain perishable ingredients, such as meat, fish, chicken, egg and cheese, should be stored in a refrigerated cabinet or kept at room temperature for less than 4 hours.
  • Don't buy 'tired-looking' food that looks like it has been sitting at room temperature for a long time.
  • Minced meat, hamburgers, rolled or stuffed roasts and chicken must be cooked right through - there should be no pink meat. Do not eat undercooked meats. Return them for further cooking.
  • Steak, chops and whole cuts of red meat can be cooked to your preference as contaminants are usually on the surface of the meat and are killed during the cooking process.
  • Takeaway food should be served in appropriate takeaway containers and at the appropriate temperature.

What to look for at buffets or self-service restaurants

At buffets or self-service restaurants check that:

  • food to be eaten hot is stored in hot food display cabinets or over burners at 60 °C and above
  • cold food is displayed on ice or in refrigerated cabinets at 5 °C or less
  • each food dish has its own serving utensils
  • fresh food is replenished regularly but not tipped into leftover food
  • foods are covered by some type of guard or cover
  • plates and cutlery are clean and dry.

Taking food home

When you have takeaway food, either eat it within 4 hours or take it home and put it in the fridge immediately. Make sure that it is eaten within a couple of days. Throw out any high-risk food that has been left in the temperature danger zone of between 5 °C and 60 °C for more than 4 hours.

Doggy bags

Doggy bags are not the same as normal takeaway foods. Takeaway food is intended to be eaten away from the premises and is served by the food business at the appropriate temperature and in suitable takeaway containers.

The term 'doggy bag' developed when food left uneaten at a restaurant was taken home for the family pet. However, many customers take doggy bags home and consume that food themselves later.

There are no laws that prevent restaurants and cafes from giving customers doggy bags. However, uneaten food taken from a restaurant or cafe in a doggy bag may become unsafe for human consumption.

Foods taken home in doggy bags can be exposed to a number of hazards including:

  • high-risk food left in the temperature danger zone (between 5 °C and 60 °C) can have increased levels of food poisoning bacteria
  • incorrect handling by the consumer can contaminate the food with food poisoning bacteria
  • not being reheated adequately.

Where to get help

  • Food Safety HotlineExternal Link Tel. 1300 364 352
  • Your local council environmental health officer - find your council's contact details at 'Find a CouncilExternal Link '

  • Food safetyExternal Link , Department of Health, Victorian Government.
  • Your guide to food safetyExternal Link , 2016, Department of Health, Victorian Government.

This page has been produced in consultation with and approved by:

This page has been produced in consultation with and approved by:

View all healthy eating

More information

Related information

  • Food poisoning prevention
  • Food safety while travelling
  • Food safety and eggs
  • Food safety and storage
  • Handwashing - Why it's important

Content disclaimer

Content on this website is provided for information purposes only. Information about a therapy, service, product or treatment does not in any way endorse or support such therapy, service, product or treatment and is not intended to replace advice from your doctor or other registered health professional. The information and materials contained on this website are not intended to constitute a comprehensive guide concerning all aspects of the therapy, product or treatment described on the website. All users are urged to always seek advice from a registered health care professional for diagnosis and answers to their medical questions and to ascertain whether the particular therapy, service, product or treatment described on the website is suitable in their circ*mstances. The State of Victoria and the Department of Healthshall not bear any liability for reliance by any user on the materials contained on this website.

Reviewed on: 04-10-2021

Food safety when eating out (2024)
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