Experience Review
We review your cookery, kitchen supervision and team-leading experience.
Certificate IV in Kitchen Management RPL may suit experienced cooks, chefs and kitchen supervisors who want their existing skills assessed against an Australian kitchen management qualification.
Your experience may come from restaurants, cafés, hotels, clubs, pubs, catering businesses, commercial kitchens or overseas hospitality workplaces.
Certificate IV in Kitchen Management RPL is an assessment process for people who have developed kitchen and supervisory skills through work, previous training, self-employment or overseas experience.
This may reduce the need to complete a full course from the beginning where your competency can already be demonstrated. Further evidence, assessment or gap training may still be required.
Think RPL helps chefs, cooks and kitchen supervisors understand the pathway, evidence and assessment expectations.
We review your cookery, kitchen supervision and team-leading experience.
We help you understand whether your experience may align with Certificate IV in Kitchen Management RPL.
We guide you on workplace, kitchen and business evidence that may support your RPL application.
We help chefs understand whether their duties show enough leadership and operational responsibility.
We explain the process without promising an automatic qualification outcome.
Formal assessment and qualification issuance are completed by a Registered Training Organisation.
Kitchen Management RPL may suit people who have moved beyond basic cookery duties and lead kitchen teams or manage daily kitchen operations.
Cooks with strong practical kitchen experience and broader responsibilities.
Chefs managing sections, timing, quality and service standards.
Workers supervising staff, workflow, prep and daily operations.
Team leaders coordinating people, communication and service flow.
Senior kitchen staff supporting management, ordering and quality control.
Supervisors managing food preparation, staff and event kitchen delivery.
Self-employed operators managing kitchen records, supplies and service standards.
Chefs with relevant overseas kitchen leadership experience.
Applicants with partial study and substantial workplace experience.
A Kitchen Management RPL assessment may consider practical cookery skills, supervision and team-leading responsibilities.
| Skill Area | Examples of Work | Evidence That May Help |
|---|---|---|
| Preparing Menu Items | Preparing and presenting menu items during real service conditions. | Menus, food photos, prep records, videos and supervisor references. |
| Food Safety and Hygiene | Managing food safety, hygiene procedures and safe kitchen practices. | Food safety records, temperature logs, training documents and procedures. |
| Kitchen Workflow | Coordinating preparation, timing, service periods and kitchen sections. | Rosters, prep lists, service records and workplace references. |
| Staff Supervision | Supervising kitchen staff, supporting training and managing communication. | Position descriptions, rosters, training records and referee checks. |
| Food Quality Control | Monitoring food quality, plating standards and consistency during service. | Food photos, customer feedback, kitchen procedures and supervisor evidence. |
| Stock Rotation and Waste Control | Managing stock rotation, portion control, waste reduction and storage. | Stock records, ordering records, supplier invoices and kitchen logs. |
| Ordering and Supplies | Supporting ordering, suppliers, food purchases and kitchen supplies. | Ordering records, supplier accounts, invoices and business records. |
| Workplace Safety | Maintaining safe kitchen equipment use and workplace safety standards. | Safety records, incident reports, training records and observation. |
| Front-of-House Communication | Communicating with service teams to solve kitchen and customer issues. | Service notes, manager references, complaint records and technical questions. |
This qualification may suit experienced cooks, chefs and kitchen supervisors who can show practical cookery skills plus kitchen leadership, stock control, food safety and service coordination.
Where a requirement has not been met, further evidence, additional assessment or gap training may be required.
Your evidence should show the kitchen work and management responsibilities you personally performed.
Detailed references confirming duties, leadership and employment history.
Contracts supporting your role, workplace and work period.
Payslips showing relevant employment and continuity.
Documents outlining cookery, supervision and operational duties.
Rosters showing team coordination, sections and shift responsibilities.
Menus showing the food and sections you worked with.
Photos showing dishes, preparation and plating standards.
Videos showing cooking, workflow or leadership tasks.
Temperature logs, hygiene records and safety procedures.
Stock rotation, ordering, wastage and storage records.
Supplier records, purchase orders and food-purchase documents.
Training evidence for kitchen procedures, food safety or staff support.
References confirming your role in staff coordination and service flow.
Prep lists, service notes, production schedules or shift records.
Evidence showing team-leading or workflow coordination.
Records showing how kitchen issues were resolved during service.
Your kitchen roles, cookery duties, leadership tasks and previous training are reviewed.
Your experience is compared with the requirements of the Certificate IV in Kitchen Management.
The assessor reviews whether your evidence is current, relevant and sufficient. It must connect to work you personally performed.
Technical questions, referee checks, workplace observation or practical assessment may be used if documents are not enough.
The Registered Training Organisation makes the final decision. More evidence, assessment or gap training may be required.
We review your cookery, service timing, staff supervision and operational duties.
We help identify records that demonstrate both cooking skills and leadership responsibility.
We assist chefs, kitchen supervisors, self-employed operators and overseas-experienced applicants.
We explain the RPL process without treating experience as an automatic qualification outcome.
No. Commercial Cookery RPL usually focuses on practical cookery skills. Kitchen Management RPL includes cookery skills plus supervision, team coordination and kitchen operations.
Yes, a chef may be suitable if their experience includes supervision and service coordination. It should also show stock control, food safety and kitchen problem-solving.
Strong evidence usually shows that you helped manage people, service flow or kitchen systems. This may include rosters, prep lists, ordering records, stock records, food-safety documents and training records.
Yes. Small restaurant experience can be useful if you handled broad responsibilities such as preparation, stock, service timing, staff support and quality control.
Yes. Experience in a family food business may be considered, but it must be supported by evidence. The assessor needs to confirm what work you personally completed and whether your role included kitchen management responsibilities.
Have your kitchen management, supervision and cookery experience reviewed against the Certificate IV pathway and learn what evidence may be required.