Marks & Spencer food hygiene rating

Retailers - supermarkets/hypermarkets · East Dunbartonshire

Marks & Spencer passed its most recent food hygiene inspection. Scotland's scheme does not award star ratings, a pass means the supermarket met the legal standard on the day it was inspected.

The rating: Pass

The rating dates from 19 August 2024, 22 months ago. That is getting on for the longest gap councils usually leave, so the score may not reflect how the business is run today.

Address: Unit 1A Marks And Spencer Crosshill Road, Bishopbriggs, G64 2TS

Questions about Marks & Spencer

What is Marks & Spencer's food hygiene rating?

Marks & Spencer does not have a numeric food hygiene rating. Its current status is "Pass".

When was Marks & Spencer last inspected?

Marks & Spencer was last inspected on 19 August 2024, 22 months ago. Food hygiene inspections are unannounced, and the rating is published by East Dunbartonshire Council rather than by the business.

Who decides the rating?

East Dunbartonshire Council inspects Marks & Spencer and sets the rating; the Food Standards Agency publishes it. Neither the business nor this site can change a rating, a business that disagrees can appeal to its council, and can request a re-inspection once it has fixed the problems.

Tell me when this changes

The Food Standards Agency publishes only a business's rating today, not what it scored before, and not when it moves. We check every UK rating each night. Watch Marks & Spencer and we will email you the morning after its rating changes.

Free, for three businesses, forever. No password, we send you a link. How rating alerts work →

Understanding this rating

More food hygiene ratings near here

Marks & Spencer is one of 142 rated food businesses in Bishopbriggs. See every hygiene rating in Bishopbriggs

East Dunbartonshire inspects and rates 696 food businesses across its whole area. See every food hygiene rating in East Dunbartonshire

The official record is held by the council: http://www.eastdunbarton.gov.uk/home.aspx

Rating from the Food Standards Agency under the Open Government Licence. Ratings reflect standards found at the time of inspection and can change. If you think a rating is wrong, the official record is held by the FSA and the local authority; corrections there flow through here. How ratings work →