The National Institute for Food and Drug Surveillance (INVIMA) announces that, as of January 14, 2026, Decree 1083 of 2025 will enter into force, amending Decree 1686 of 2012, Decree 162 of 2021, and Decree 1366 of 2020, which pertain to the sanitary requirements that must be met for the manufacture, production, hydration, packaging, storage, distribution, transportation, marketing, sale, export, and import of alcoholic beverages intended for human consumption.
Most relevant aspects of Decree 1083 of 2025:
- Elimination of mandatory Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) certification. Elimination of mandatory Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) certification. The Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) certification is eliminated as a mandatory requirement for obtaining the sanitary registration of alcoholic beverages, both domestic and imported. However, the implementation of GMP remains mandatory, and certification becomes voluntary.
- Recognition of the Certificate of Free Sale (CFS) for imported products. For imported alcoholic beverages, the requirement to submit a valid Certificate of Free Sale (CFS) issued by the competent health authority of the country of origin or its equivalent remains in place as proof of compliance with sanitary requirements.
- Extension of the validity of previously issued GMP Certificates. The validity of Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) certificates previously issued by Invima is extended for an additional two (2) years, counted from the entry into force of Decree No. 1083 of 2025, in accordance with a gradual and proportionate approach.
- Specific adjustments for micro-entrepreneurs: the provisions contained in Decree 1366 of 2020 are updated, maintaining a differentiated regime for micro-entrepreneurs. Within this framework, the validity of previously issued Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) certifications is extended by five (5) years.