Taxonomy Guide

Product Taxonomy Standard Guide for GS1 Global Product Classification

Learn the complete code structure, hierarchy rules, and attribute requirements of the GS1 Global Product Classification taxonomy standard.

~40,000
Categories
4 levels
Max Depth
Annually
Update Frequency
Overview

What is GS1 GPC?

GS1 Global Product Classification (GS1 GPC) is the product classification standard developed by GS1, the international organization behind barcodes, GTINs, and the Global Data Synchronisation Network (GDSN). GS1 GPC provides a standardized language for categorizing products traded through the retail supply chain, from food and beverages to healthcare, beauty, and consumer electronics. With approximately 40,000 categories organized into four hierarchical levels, it is the most widely used classification standard for consumer goods data exchange between retailers and manufacturers worldwide.

The taxonomy follows a strict four-level hierarchy: Segment (broadest grouping, e.g., Food/Beverage/Tobacco), Family (category group, e.g., Beverages), Class (product type, e.g., Coffee), and Brick (most specific level, e.g., Coffee - Instant). Each Brick can have optional Brick Attributes that capture additional characteristics like flavor, packaging type, or organic certification. This Segment-Family-Class-Brick structure with Brick Attributes provides a balance between a manageable hierarchy and the detailed product differentiation needed for retail data exchange.

GS1 GPC is a mandatory component of the GDSN data synchronization process. Any manufacturer or retailer exchanging product data through GDSN must classify their products using GS1 GPC codes. Beyond GDSN, the standard is used by major retailers for product onboarding, category management, and shelf planning. Regulatory agencies in food safety, healthcare, and consumer protection also reference GS1 GPC for product identification and recall management. For e-commerce businesses, GS1 GPC provides a well-maintained, retail-focused taxonomy that maps cleanly to other standards like Google Product Category and marketplace-specific category systems.

At a Glance

Maintained byGS1 AISBL
Year Founded2003
Current VersionFebruary 2024
Official WebsiteOfficial Website
Open Standard
No
Code Structure

GS1 GPC Category Hierarchy

Example hierarchy showing how products are organized within this standard

50000000: Food/Beverage/Tobacco

50100000: Beverages
50101500: Coffee
50101600: Tea
50101700: Juice - Fruit
50101800: Soft Drinks
50200000: Confectionery/Sugar Sweetening Products
50201500: Chocolate
50201600: Sugar/Sugar Substitutes
50201700: Candy/Gum
50300000: Dairy Products
50301500: Cheese
50301600: Milk/Milk Substitutes
50301700: Yogurt
50301800: Butter/Margarine

51000000: Healthcare

51100000: Vitamins/Minerals/Supplements
51101500: Vitamins
51101600: Minerals
51101700: Herbal Supplements
51200000: Over-the-Counter Medicines
51201500: Pain Relief
51201600: Cold & Flu Remedies
51201700: Digestive Health
51201800: Allergy Medication

53000000: Beauty/Personal Care/Hygiene

53100000: Skin Care
53101500: Moisturizers/Lotions
53101600: Cleansers/Toners
53101700: Sun Care
53101800: Anti-Aging Products
53200000: Hair Care
53201500: Shampoo
53201600: Conditioner
53201700: Hair Styling Products
53201800: Hair Color
53300000: Oral Care
53301500: Toothpaste
53301600: Toothbrushes
53301700: Mouthwash
Structure Rules

How GS1 GPC is Structured

Key rules and principles that define how this taxonomy organizes products

1

Classify to the Brick level and apply Brick Attributes

Every product must be classified to the most specific Brick level in the GS1 GPC hierarchy. The Brick level represents the most granular product type, such as "Coffee - Instant" or "Shampoo - Dandruff." After assigning the Brick code, apply relevant Brick Attributes to further differentiate products within the same Brick. Brick Attributes capture characteristics like packaging type, flavor, target gender, and organic certification that are essential for retail data exchange.

Classify instant coffee to Brick 10000263 (Coffee - Instant), then apply Brick Attributes for Decaffeinated (Yes/No) and Organic Claim (Organic/Not Organic)
Classify dandruff shampoo to Brick 10000455 (Shampoo - Dandruff), then apply Hair Type attribute (Normal, Oily, Dry)
2

Use the core product function to determine the correct Segment

The Segment level in GS1 GPC groups products by their primary industry or function. Products must be assigned to the Segment that reflects their core purpose, not a secondary use case or marketing positioning. A vitamin gummy that is marketed as a candy-like treat still belongs in the Healthcare segment, not Food/Beverage. A medicated shampoo designed for scalp conditions belongs in Healthcare, not Beauty/Personal Care.

Medicated anti-dandruff shampoo with active pharmaceutical ingredient goes under Healthcare (51), not Beauty/Personal Care (53)
Protein bars marketed as snacks go under Food/Beverage/Tobacco (50), not Healthcare/Supplements (51)
3

Do not use GS1 GPC for services, digital products, or non-tradeable items

GS1 GPC is designed exclusively for physical, tradeable products that move through the retail supply chain. Services, digital downloads, subscriptions, gift cards, and warranty plans should not be classified using GS1 GPC codes. If your catalog includes a mix of physical products and services, use GS1 GPC for products and a separate classification system (such as UNSPSC) for services.

A physical book gets a GS1 GPC code; an e-book download does not
A subscription meal kit box is classified as a physical product; the subscription service itself is not
4

Apply consistent Brick Attribute values across your catalog

Brick Attributes use controlled vocabularies defined by GS1. Always use the exact GS1-defined attribute values rather than free-text alternatives. Consistent attribute values enable meaningful data exchange with trading partners and allow retailers to accurately compare products from different suppliers. Mismatched attribute values cause data quality issues in GDSN and can result in product listing rejections.

Use the GS1-defined value "ORGANIC" for organic certification, not free-text entries like "Certified Organic" or "100% Organic"
Use standardized packaging type values like "BOTTLE", "CAN", "POUCH" from the GS1 attribute codelist
Attribute Mapping

Required Attributes by Category

Mandatory and recommended attributes for key categories in this standard

Food/Beverage/TobaccoBeveragesCoffee
Required
GPC Brick Codee.g. 10000263
text
GTINe.g. 8711000360200
text
Product Descriptione.g. Douwe Egberts Aroma Rood Instant Coffee 200g
text
Brand Namee.g. Douwe Egberts
text
Net Contente.g. 200 g
text
Target Markete.g. Netherlands (528)
text
Recommended
Decaffeinatede.g. No
boolean
Organic Claime.g. Not Organic
enum
Packaging Typee.g. Jar
enum
Coffee Forme.g. Instant
enum
Fair Trade Certifiede.g. Yes
boolean
Allergen Informatione.g. May contain traces of milk
text
HealthcareOver-the-Counter MedicinesPain Relief
Required
GPC Brick Codee.g. 10005844
text
GTINe.g. 8710537044065
text
Product Descriptione.g. Paracetamol 500mg Tablets 20-pack
text
Brand Namee.g. Kruidvat
text
Net Contente.g. 20 tablets
text
Active Ingrediente.g. Paracetamol 500mg
text
Regulatory Classificatione.g. OTC Medicine
enum
Recommended
Dosage Forme.g. Tablet
enum
Age Groupe.g. Adult
enum
Storage Instructionse.g. Store below 25 degrees C
text
Warningse.g. Do not exceed stated dose
text
Country of Origine.g. Netherlands
text
Beauty/Personal Care/HygieneSkin CareSun Care
Required
GPC Brick Codee.g. 10000468
text
GTINe.g. 3607345397245
text
Product Descriptione.g. La Roche-Posay Anthelios SPF 50+ Sunscreen 50ml
text
Brand Namee.g. La Roche-Posay
text
Net Contente.g. 50 ml
text
SPF Valuee.g. 50
number
Recommended
Water Resistante.g. Yes
boolean
Skin Typee.g. Sensitive
enum
Application Areae.g. Face
enum
UV Filter Typee.g. Broad Spectrum UVA/UVB
text
Packaging Typee.g. Tube
enum
Fragrance Freee.g. Yes
boolean
Use Cases

GS1 GPC Use Cases by Industry

Industries and scenarios where this taxonomy standard is most commonly applied

Retail and GDSN data synchronization

GS1 GPC is the mandatory classification standard for the Global Data Synchronisation Network (GDSN). Manufacturers and retailers exchanging product master data through GDSN must classify every product with a GS1 GPC Brick code. This ensures consistent product identification across the entire supply chain, from manufacturer to distributor to retailer shelf.

GTIN registration and product identification

When registering a new GTIN (barcode) with a GS1 Member Organisation, companies are required to assign a GS1 GPC classification to the product. This classification becomes part of the product's permanent identification record and is used by downstream systems to validate product data quality and apply category-specific business rules.

Category management and planogramming

Retailers use GS1 GPC to organize products into logical category structures for shelf planning, assortment optimization, and category reviews. The standardized classification enables retailers to compare product assortments across suppliers and benchmark category performance against industry standards, regardless of how individual suppliers describe their products.

Regulatory compliance and product recalls

Food safety authorities, pharmaceutical regulators, and consumer protection agencies reference GS1 GPC classifications in product recall notices and compliance reporting. The standardized classification enables rapid identification of affected product categories and ensures recall notices reach all relevant supply chain participants through GDSN alert messages.

Evaluation

Pros and Cons of GS1 GPC

Advantages
Industry-standard for retail product data exchange through GDSN, making it essential for any manufacturer or distributor working with major retailers worldwide
Well-maintained Brick Attribute system that captures product characteristics beyond the hierarchy, enabling detailed product differentiation within categories for data quality and comparison purposes
Strong governance by GS1 with a structured change request process, ensuring the taxonomy evolves thoughtfully and changes are communicated well in advance to adopters
Deep coverage of fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) categories including food, beverages, healthcare, beauty, and household products with retail-specific granularity
Limitations
Requires GS1 membership for full access to the taxonomy, Brick Attributes, and code definitions, which adds cost particularly for small and medium-sized businesses
The four-level hierarchy (Segment, Family, Class, Brick) is fixed and cannot be extended by individual organizations, which can be limiting for niche product categories that need additional depth
Primarily focused on physical consumer goods traded through retail channels; limited coverage of B2B industrial products, services, and digital goods compared to broader standards like UNSPSC

How to Implement GS1 GPC

Step-by-step guide to implementing this taxonomy standard in your product catalog

1

Register with your local GS1 Member Organisation

Contact your national GS1 office (e.g., GS1 Netherlands, GS1 UK, GS1 US) to obtain access to the GS1 GPC taxonomy. As a GS1 member, you receive access to the full classification including Brick codes, Brick Attributes, and code definitions. Download the taxonomy in your preferred format and review the current version release notes.

2

Classify your products to Brick level

For each product in your catalog, navigate the GS1 GPC hierarchy from Segment down to Brick to find the most specific classification. Use the official GS1 GPC Browser tool to search by keyword or browse the tree structure. Focus on what the product fundamentally is rather than how it is marketed. WISEPIM can automate this classification using AI that understands GS1 GPC structure and naming conventions.

3

Apply Brick Attributes to each product

After assigning Brick codes, review the available Brick Attributes for each Brick and populate them with the correct GS1-defined values. Brick Attributes capture critical product characteristics such as whether a food product is organic, what flavor it comes in, or whether a medicine is prescription or over-the-counter. Use only the standardized attribute values from the GS1 codelist to ensure data quality.

Free Template

GS1 GPC Classification Guide for Retail Suppliers

Download our practical GS1 GPC implementation toolkit with Brick-level classification templates, Brick Attribute reference sheets, and GDSN data quality checklists designed for consumer goods manufacturers and distributors working with major retailers.

GS1 GPC quick-start guide covering the most common Segments and Families for FMCG products
Brick Attribute mapping template with pre-populated attribute values for Food, Healthcare, and Beauty categories
GDSN data quality checklist covering mandatory GPC fields and common validation errors with fix instructions
Product onboarding workflow template showing where GS1 GPC classification fits in the new product setup process
Cross-reference table mapping GS1 GPC Bricks to Google Product Category and major marketplace categories
Get Free Mapping Template

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about GS1 GPC

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