Registration
- Required
- No
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Built by a cottage bakerReview sales limits, online sales, registration, labeling, venues, shipping, foods, and source notes for this jurisdiction.
Sales limit
None
Online sales
Yes
Registration
Not required
Training
Not required
Current law details
One of most permissive cottage food laws. RARE: Allows home canned goods (pH ≤4.6 or water activity ≤0.85) and non-heat-processed fermented foods with temperature control - both exceptionally rare allowances nationally. $40 training required every 5 years for expanded categories (or recipe verification from processing authority). No sales cap (eliminated $5,000 limit in 2020). HB 1322 (2022) gave producers flexibility to vary canned food recipes based on seasonal availability. Online sales allowed but must deliver in-person (no mail/carrier shipping).
Setup requirements
These are the common operating requirements sellers check before launching or changing sales channels.
"This product was not produced in a commercial kitchen. It has been home-processed in a kitchen that may also process common food allergens such as tree nuts, peanuts, eggs, soy, wheat, milk, fish, and crustacean shellfish."
Sales channels
Confirm how customers are allowed to buy, receive, or pick up products before opening a sales channel.
Allowed: producer's primary residence, farmers markets, roadside stands, temporary venues (church bazaars, community festivals), events and fairs, online with in-person delivery. Direct-to-consumer only - no wholesale or retail store sales.
Online ordering allowed, but delivery must be in-person by producer or household member. Cannot ship via mail, UPS, FedEx, or any commercial carriers. Customer can pick up at approved locations.
Product categories
Allowed and limited categories are only a planning aid. Check official guidance before selling a specific recipe.
Allowed
Allowed
Allowed
Limited
Limited
Allowed
Limited
Not allowed
Not allowed
TWO-TIER SYSTEM: (1) No training: breads, cookies, cakes, pastries, candies, nuts, grains, seeds, dry mixes, whole fresh fruits/vegetables. (2) $40 training required: HOME CANNED GOODS (pH ≤4.6 or water activity ≤0.85, jams, jellies, pickled vegetables, acidified salsas, canned tomatoes), FERMENTED FOODS (non-heat-processed fermented vegetables like sauerkraut/kimchi, kombucha, maintained at ≤41°F), PERISHABLE BAKED GOODS (pies, kuchen, cheesecake, custard/cream-filled, maintained at ≤41°F), perishable sauces/pesto, frozen fruit/produce (≤0°F). Recipe flexibility: Can vary canned food recipes based on seasonal availability without third-party certification for each variation. PROHIBITED: low-acid canned goods (pH > 4.6), meat, poultry, seafood, dairy products.
Updates and cautions
Recent updates and warnings are included to help you spot issues that may need extra verification.
HB 1322
Effective: July 2022
Major expansion allowing home canned goods and fermented foods (both rare nationally). Added perishable baked goods, sauces, and frozen fruit/produce. Created two-tier system with training requirement for expanded categories. Gave producers flexibility to modify canned acid/acidified food recipes without third-party approval for each variation based on seasonal ingredient availability.
HB 1125
Effective: 2020
Eliminated $5,000 annual sales cap completely. Allowed producer or household member to deliver products. Expanded sales locations.
Research sources
Last updated: 2026-05-07. Use these sources as a starting point for current verification.
This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. Cottage food rules change frequently and vary by local jurisdiction. Always verify current regulations with your state and local health departments before starting your business.
Use Cottage CMS to publish products, pickup windows, forms, disclosures, and order workflows after you verify the current local requirements.