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Vermont cottage food rules

Review sales limits, online sales, registration, labeling, venues, shipping, foods, and source notes for this jurisdiction.

Sales limit

$30,000

Online sales

Yes

Registration

Required

Training

Required

Current law details

Start with the summary, then verify locally.

Act 42 (HB 401, July 2025) tripled cap from $10,000 to $30,000. Pioneer in home baker laws (first state, year unverified). Two tracks: Cottage food operators under $30,000/year need free training + annual registration (no license/inspection). Home bakers over $125/week need $100 license + inspection. Online sales allowed (own website/mail order, direct-to-consumer only). New registration required Oct 2025-Jan 15, 2026, then annually by Jan 15.

Setup requirements

Registration, training, and labeling details.

These are the common operating requirements sellers check before launching or changing sales channels.

Registration

Required
Yes
Type
registration
Cost
Free
Inspection
No

Training

Required
Yes
Type
Free online training through Vermont Department of Health
Cost
Free
Validity
Annual renewal via exemption filing

Labeling

"Made in a home kitchen not inspected by the Vermont Department of Health"

  • Product name
  • Ingredients list
  • Allergen information
  • Producer's name and address
  • Net weight or volume

Sales channels

Allowed venues and fulfillment methods.

Confirm how customers are allowed to buy, receive, or pick up products before opening a sales channel.

Sales venues

Home sales
Allowed
Farmers markets
Allowed
Roadside stands
Allowed
Events
Allowed
Retail stores
Not allowed
Restaurants
Not allowed
Online
Allowed

Direct-to-consumer only. Allowed: online sales via own website with mail order delivery, farmers markets, roadside stands, special events and festivals, from home/personal property, fairs and craft shows. Prohibited: sales to restaurants, retail stores, licensed food establishments for resale, third-party marketplace platforms (Amazon, Etsy), interstate sales. Small Commercial Bakery License required for wholesale.

Shipping and delivery

In-state
Allowed
Out-of-state
Not allowed
Commercial carriers
Allowed
Third-party delivery
Allowed

In-state mail order delivery permitted. Online sales platforms, website sales, social media orders allowed if delivery within Vermont. No interstate sales (cannot ship across state lines). All sales must be direct producer-to-consumer.

Product categories

Allowed food categories.

Allowed and limited categories are only a planning aid. Check official guidance before selling a specific recipe.

Baked goods

Allowed

Candy and confections

Allowed

Jams and jellies

Allowed

Acidified foods

Limited

Canned goods

Limited

Dried goods

Allowed

Perishables

Not allowed

Meat products

Not allowed

Dairy products

Not allowed

Extensive list of non-potentially hazardous foods. Allowed: breads, cakes, cookies, pastries, candy, jams, jellies, dry herbs/spices, trail mix, granola, mixed nuts, flavored vinegar, popcorn, roasted coffee beans, dry tea, home-canned pickles/vegetables/fruits (must meet pH and water activity standards). Prohibited: baked goods requiring refrigeration (quiche, cheese danish, cheesecake), meats, seafood, canned vegetables (unless meeting pH standards), fermented foods, dried vegetables, fruit butters, juices, fresh produce, dairy products, any food requiring refrigeration or time/temperature control.

Updates and cautions

Check these notes before making changes.

Recent updates and warnings are included to help you spot issues that may need extra verification.

Recent legislative updates

Act 42 (H.401)

Effective: July 1, 2025

active

Tripled income caps from $10,000 to $30,000 for cottage food operations. Simplified registration process. Added new online training requirement. Added annual exemption filing requirement. Unified cap for both cottage food and home bakery operations.

Important warnings

  • New annual registration system launches October 2025 - first filing deadline January 15, 2026
  • Free online training must be completed before filing exemption
  • Interstate sales prohibited
  • No wholesale to restaurants/retail without separate license
  • Two-tier system for home bakers may cause confusion ($125/week threshold)
  • Product review available for borderline/unique products

Research sources

Sources used for this summary.

Last updated: 2026-05-07. Use these sources as a starting point for current verification.

  • Vermont Department of Health - Home-Based Food Licenses and Exemptions
  • Vermont Legislature - Bill Status H.401 (Act 42)
  • Vermont Department of Health - Guide to Opening a Home-Based Food Business
  • North Star Monthly (July 2025)
  • WCAX News (July 14, 2025)
  • VTDigger (March 18, 2025)
  • Forrager.com - Vermont
  • Institute for Justice - Vermont

Important legal disclaimer

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.

Next step

Turn Vermont rules into a clear ordering experience.

Use Cottage CMS to publish products, pickup windows, forms, disclosures, and order workflows after you verify the current local requirements.