Batch Records for Small Makers
What to record, why it matters, and a simple format to get started
A batch record is a written account of everything that went into a specific production batch. It is your evidence that you made the product correctly, your tool for diagnosing problems, and your defense if a customer ever has an adverse reaction. In a small operation, batch records take five minutes per batch to fill out. They are worth every minute.
Why batch records matter
- Traceability: If a supplier recalls a raw material lot, you need to know which batches used it.
- Recall scope: Without records, any recall becomes a blanket recall of all products ever made. With records, you can isolate affected batches.
- Customer complaints: When a customer reports a reaction, your batch record tells you the exact formula, lots used, and date — critical for investigating the cause.
- Quality consistency: Batch records over time reveal patterns — a formula change, a new supplier, a seasonal variation — that explain quality differences between batches.
- GMP compliance: Good Manufacturing Practice guidelines require production records. If you want to wholesale to retailers or work with distributors, they may ask to see your GMP documentation.
What to record per batch
| Field | What to capture | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Batch number / lot number | Unique identifier for this batch | 20260315-01 |
| Product name | The product being made | Lavender Oatmeal Bar Soap |
| Date made | Date of manufacture | March 15, 2026 |
| Formula / recipe reference | Which version of the recipe was used | Formula v3.2 (link or attach) |
| Batch size | Total weight of finished product | 2,800g (approx 16 bars) |
| Ingredient | Each ingredient used | Coconut Oil (Refined, 76°) |
| Weight used | Actual weight measured for this batch | 600g |
| Supplier | Supplier name for each ingredient | Brambleberry |
| Supplier lot number | The lot/batch number from the supplier COA | BRB-COC-2026-002 |
| Temperature at mixing | Lye water and oil temps at time of mixing | Lye: 95°F, Oils: 98°F |
| Notes / observations | Anything unusual — seizing, ricing, temp deviation | Traced quickly; no issues; scented at light trace |
| Cure start date | Date unmolded and put to cure | March 17, 2026 |
| Cure complete date | Date product is ready | April 28, 2026 |
| Yield | Final count and weight of finished bars | 15 bars × 180g avg |
| Made by | Name or initials of person who made the batch | JM |
Simple batch record format
Minimum viable batch record
You do not need elaborate software. A spreadsheet or a printed form in a binder works fine. Each batch gets one row or one page. What matters is consistency — filling it out every time, not just when you remember.
At minimum, capture: date, product, formula version, batch number, ingredients + weights + supplier lots, and any notes.
Free Batch Record Template
Printable form with all fields pre-built — open in browser and print to PDF
For digital records, a simple spreadsheet with one tab per product type works well for small operations. Each row is a batch; columns are the fields above. Back it up regularly.
Raw material records
In addition to batch records, keep a raw material log that tracks each ingredient purchase:
- Date received
- Ingredient name and supplier
- Supplier lot number (from the label or COA)
- Quantity purchased and amount remaining
- Certificate of Analysis (COA) — file or scan for each lot
- Expiration or best-before date
COAs are only as good as the batch they cover
Pro Tip
