Food delivery platform Swiggy on Friday said it has resolved an issue flagged by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) relating to its food ordering and delivery platform Toing, after updating the particulars of its licence.In a regulatory filing, the Bengaluru-based company said it had received a prohibition order dated July 6 from the FSSAI’s designated officer in Karnataka over certain observations related to its FSSAI licence for Toing. The company clarified that the matter was administrative in nature and did not involve any food safety violations.“The matter involved no food safety concerns and was limited to the updation of licence particulars. The Company has addressed the observations and received a modified FSSAI licence on July 9, 2026,” Swiggy said in its filing.The company added that no monetary penalty has been imposed and that the order is not expected to have any material impact on its operations or financial position. Swiggy also said it disclosed the development after evaluating the order and the subsequent corrective steps.The disclosure comes at a time when food delivery and quick commerce companies have increasingly come under the scanner of food safety regulators. Rival quick commerce platform Zepto has previously received notices from the FSSAI over food safety and hygiene-related issues at some of its dark stores, prompting the company to strengthen compliance and operational checks.Industry experts, however, say regulatory inspections and notices are becoming more common as the sector scales rapidly.“These are routine inspections and such observations can happen during checks at dark stores and restaurants. The bigger issue is ensuring processes are robust enough to identify and remove products before they become a problem,” said Satish Meena, founder of Datum Intelligence. He added that companies need to tighten inventory management and quality control as consumers now have multiple alternatives and are unlikely to tolerate poor service or quality.Meena also noted that companies must maintain stricter operational standards as the market becomes more competitive. “If the quality is not up to the mark, it is a very big risk because customers have many options. Companies should be more strict with the way they are running their dark stores,” he said.Swiggy reported a net loss of ₹800 crore in Q4FY26, improving from ₹1,081 crore a year ago, while revenue rose 45 per cent year-on-year to ₹6,383 crore.Published on July 11, 2026