Importing Macadamia Nuts from Africa — Sourcing and Compliance
Africa supplies 80% of EU macadamia imports. Kenya leads by volume, South Africa leads on quality benchmarks. Here is what every buyer needs to know before their first African macadamia order.
Netherlands 2024 imports
limit — tree nuts
system
Mombasa to Rotterdam
Africa has become the world's primary source of macadamia nuts for the European market. Kenya, South Africa, and Malawi collectively supply approximately 80 percent of EU macadamia imports, with Kenya alone taking a 40 percent share of Netherlands imports in 2024 according to CBI market data. Australia — historically the global macadamia benchmark — now holds a smaller share than it once did as African processing quality has improved substantially.
For EU food manufacturers, specialty nut retailers, and chocolate producers, African macadamia offers competitive pricing and improving quality consistency. But it also comes with specific sourcing risks — aflatoxin contamination, variable style grade consistency, and a wider range of processor quality than buyers find in Australian supply chains — that demand careful due diligence.
This article covers the complete sourcing and compliance picture for importing macadamia nuts from Africa: origin selection, style grade specifications, aflatoxin compliance requirements, food safety certification, packaging standards, documentation, and how to evaluate and verify African macadamia processors.
- Kenya holds 40% of Netherlands macadamia imports in 2024 — Africa dominates EU supply from developing country origins
- EU aflatoxin limit: 4 ppb Total Aflatoxin, 2 ppb Aflatoxin B1 — stricter than US (20 ppb total) — test every lot
- Style grade specification is critical — always specify Style 0, 1, 2, or 4 before ordering; "mixed" has significantly lower value
- HS code for shelled macadamia kernel: 0802 60 (or CN 0802 61/62 for in-shell vs shelled)
- Sea freight from Mombasa to Rotterdam: 20–25 days; vacuum-packed or nitrogen-flushed kernel required for shelf-life protection
- BRC Global Food Standard or FSSC 22000 at the processing facility is the standard expectation for EU food industry buyers
- South Africa's processors have the most consistent BRC certification; Kenya's range from world-class to basic — verify individually
Understanding African Macadamia Origins
Africa produces macadamia from six main countries, each with distinct market positions, quality profiles, and buyer relationships. Understanding these differences is the foundation of effective African macadamia sourcing strategy.
Macadamia Style Grades — What You Are Actually Buying
When you order macadamia kernel from Africa, you are not buying "macadamia nuts" — you are buying a specific style grade from a specific lot. Getting the style grade specification wrong is the most expensive sourcing mistake in the macadamia trade. A mixed lot without style grade sorting has a market value significantly below premium sorted kernel, and the difference between Style 0 and Style 4 is almost three times the price per kilogram.
The SAMAC (South African Macadamia Association) style grading system is the standard used across African macadamia trade:
Always specify your required style grade — and the percentage breakdown acceptable within that grade — in writing before committing to purchase. A reputable processor will provide a Certificate of Analysis (COA) showing the actual style breakdown of each lot.
Aflatoxin — The Non-Negotiable Compliance Requirement
Aflatoxin contamination is the primary food safety risk in macadamia sourcing from Africa. Unlike most food safety issues that are visible or detectable through inspection, aflatoxin contamination is invisible and requires laboratory testing to detect. And the EU's limits are strict.
The EU sets Total Aflatoxin at a maximum of 4 ppb and Aflatoxin B1 at 2 ppb for tree nuts intended for direct human consumption. The US sets the limit at 20 ppb total. A shipment that passes US aflatoxin standards may still fail EU standards by a significant margin. Always test to EU limits when supplying European markets, regardless of what the processor quotes as their "passing" result from previous US-market shipments.
Aflatoxin in macadamia is primarily produced by Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus fungi. These moulds thrive in damaged, improperly dried, or poorly stored nuts. The risk is highest in nut-in-shell (NIS) and shell-on product stored with elevated moisture content or in warm, humid conditions. Properly processed kernel — cracked, dried to below 1.5 percent moisture content, and packaged in nitrogen-flushed or vacuum-sealed bags — has a substantially lower aflatoxin development risk if handled correctly through the cold chain.
What Your Aflatoxin Testing Must Cover
For every shipment of macadamia nuts imported from Africa, require a pre-shipment aflatoxin test from an ISO 17025-accredited laboratory. The test must be conducted using HPLC (High Performance Liquid Chromatography) or ELISA methodology on a representative composite sample drawn from the specific lot being shipped — not from a previous batch or from a manufacturer's retained reference sample.
The test report must show results for Aflatoxin B1, B2, G1, and G2 individually, and the total. Results must be clearly below the EU limits — most EU buyers require test results showing Total Aflatoxin below 2 ppb (well within the 4 ppb limit) to provide a safety margin against measurement uncertainty.
Food Safety Certification — What EU Buyers Expect
| Certification | Standard Body | Who Requires It | African Compliance Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| BRC Global Food Standard (BRCGS) | BRCGS, UK | EU retail chains, major food manufacturers | Most South African processors certified; Kenya varies significantly by processor |
| FSSC 22000 | Foundation FSSC 22000 | EU food industry alternative to BRC | Some Kenyan and SA processors; growing adoption |
| ISO 9001 | ISO | Some buyers accept alongside HACCP | Common in Kenya — not a substitute for BRC/FSSC in EU retail chains |
| EU Organic / USDA NOP | ECOCERT, Control Union | Organic food manufacturers and retailers | Available from select Kenyan and SA producers — significant premium |
| Fairtrade / Rainforest Alliance | Fairtrade Int'l / RA | Sustainability-positioned brands | Limited availability in Africa — premium channel only |
Packaging Requirements for Sea Freight Macadamia
Macadamia kernel is highly susceptible to rancidity and quality degradation if exposed to oxygen, light, or temperature variation during sea freight. Nitrogen-flushed or vacuum-sealed packaging is non-negotiable for any macadamia kernel shipment by sea.
Standard packaging for export macadamia kernel is food-grade aluminium foil laminate bags (typically 10kg or 25kg fill weight), nitrogen-flushed and heat-sealed before packing into outer cartons. Some processors use vacuum-sealed polythene bags within cartons. The packaging must achieve oxygen levels below 2 percent at point of sealing. Request the oxygen level measurement from the packing process as part of your COA documentation.
Moisture content of the kernel at packing must be confirmed below 1.5 percent. Kernel packed above this moisture level will continue developing microbial activity during the 20–25 day sea freight transit, reducing shelf life and increasing aflatoxin risk. The COA must include a moisture content result for each lot.
The Step-by-Step Import Process
Identify and shortlist African processors
Source from ExportReady.africa's verified directory or from CBI's African macadamia supplier lists. Prioritise processors holding BRC or FSSC 22000 certification. Request a capability profile covering annual kernel production volume, style grade breakdown capability, and food safety certifications held.
Request a trial sample and COA before committing volume
Order a 50–100 kg trial sample at cost price plus shipping. Send it to your own laboratory for aflatoxin testing (to EU limits), moisture content, and style grade breakdown assessment. This step prevents expensive full-container disappointments.
Negotiate specifications in writing
Specify in the purchase order: style grade required and acceptable percentage range, moisture content maximum (1.5%), aflatoxin limit (Total <4 ppb, B1 <2 ppb), packaging type (N2-flushed or vacuum), lot traceability requirements, and what happens if quality does not meet specification at destination.
Require pre-shipment COA and aflatoxin test from this specific lot
The COA must reference the specific lot number being shipped. Results from previous lots are not acceptable. COA should include: aflatoxin by HPLC, moisture content, style grade breakdown, oxygen level at packaging, and best-before date.
Confirm documentation package before loading
Commercial invoice (HS 0802 60), phytosanitary certificate (from KEPHIS or equivalent), certificate of origin (for preferential EU duty rate), BRC/FSSC certificate copy, COA from accredited lab, and packing certificate confirming N2-flush or vacuum parameters.
Book reefer container and confirm temperature settings
Macadamia kernel should travel at 5–10°C in a reefer container for optimal quality preservation during the 20–25 day sea transit. Confirm container temperature settings with the shipping line before loading.
Documentation Checklist for African Macadamia Imports
| Document | Purpose | Who Issues It | Critical Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commercial Invoice | Customs valuation, HS 0802 60, lot and style grade details | African exporter | Style grade must be specified explicitly on the invoice |
| Phytosanitary Certificate | Plant health clearance for EU customs | KEPHIS (Kenya) / DALRRD (SA) | Must reference the specific container/lot; issued after final inspection |
| Certificate of Origin | Preferential EU duty rate (GSP or EPA) | KRA or Chamber of Commerce | Required for zero/reduced duty — do not ship without it |
| Aflatoxin Test Certificate | EU food safety compliance | ISO 17025-accredited lab — per lot | Must be for the specific lot shipped, not a previous reference batch |
| Moisture Content Test | Quality parameter — confirms <1.5% MC | Processor QC / accredited lab | Must be from same lot — request with COA |
| Food Safety Certificate (BRC/FSSC) | Processing facility food safety standard | BRC / FSSC certification body | Verify via sqfi.com/directory or fssc22000.com — do not rely on PDF only |
| Packing Certificate | Confirms N2-flush or vacuum packing parameters | Processor QC department | Should show oxygen level at sealing (<2% for N2-flush) |
| Bill of Lading | Sea freight transport and title document | Shipping line | Container number must match all other documents |
What EU Buyers Should Ask Every African Macadamia Processor
Before placing your first order with an African macadamia processor, ask these specific questions. The quality of the answers tells you more about the processor's real capability than any marketing brochure.
What food safety certification does your processing facility hold, and what is the certificate number so we can verify independently? What are your typical aflatoxin results from this season's production — please provide the last three COAs with lot references? What cracking and grading equipment do you use, and what is your typical Style 0/1 yield percentage from this season's NIS input? What is your facility's cold storage capacity, and how long does kernel typically sit in storage before export? What packaging specifications do you use — N2-flush or vacuum seal, what oxygen level at sealing, and what foil bag specification? Can you provide two current EU or international buyer references we can contact?
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Source African Macadamia?
ExportReady.africa's verified supplier directory includes BRC and FSSC-certified African macadamia processors — all independently verified against food safety certification databases.
