Registration
- Required
- Yes
- Type
- permit
- Cost
- $355 (2-year permit)
- Inspection
- Yes
Free forever plan · 1,700+ shops live · No credit card to start
Built by a cottage bakerReview sales limits, online sales, registration, labeling, venues, shipping, foods, and source notes for this jurisdiction.
Sales limit
$35,000
Online sales
Yes
Registration
Required
Training
Required
Current law details
One of most difficult states to start cottage food operation. $355 permit (2 years), extensive requirements including mandatory home inspections, detailed business plans (floor plan, processing, packaging, cleaning, sanitation, production, sales, child/pet management), and individual product label approvals. Online orders allowed but NO shipping - in-person pickup or personal delivery only. Sales limit increased from $25,000 to $35,000 in 2023 (HB 1500). 6-8 week application processing time. Major legislative changes being considered for 2026. Application complexity comparable to opening commercial food business.
Setup requirements
These are the common operating requirements sellers check before launching or changing sales channels.
"Made in a home kitchen that has not been inspected by the Washington State Department of Agriculture"
Sales channels
Confirm how customers are allowed to buy, receive, or pick up products before opening a sales channel.
Direct sales only at farmer's markets, events, from home, online orders with in-person pickup/delivery, farm stands, community events. Prohibited: wholesale to restaurants, wholesale to grocery stores, wholesale to retail shops, consignment sales, any indirect sales, mail order/shipping, interstate commerce. Online orders allowed but must be picked up by customer OR hand-delivered by producer - cannot use USPS, FedEx, UPS, or any courier service.
NO shipping by mail or courier service. Must be in-person pickup or hand-delivered by producer. All sales must occur within Washington state at approved venues or by agreed-upon pickup/delivery. Historical note: COVID-19 temporary exception allowed in-state shipping in 2020 but this was temporary.
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
Not allowed
Not allowed
Not allowed
Non-potentially hazardous foods only (shelf-stable at room temperature). Allowed: loaf breads, rolls, biscuits, quick breads, muffins, cakes, pastries, scones, cookies, bars, crackers, pies (with restrictions), tortillas, fried doughnuts, sweet breads with fruit/vegetables (if incorporated into batter and oven-baked), cereals, trail mixes, granola, candies, jams/jellies/preserves, fruit butters, dry spice blends, dry tea blends. Frostings/glazes allowed if: cook step OR made with ingredients stable at room temperature (large sugar amounts). Prohibited: bakery goods requiring refrigeration, cream/custard/meringue pies, cakes/pastries with cream or cream cheese fillings, fresh fruit fillings/garnishes, glazes/frostings with low sugar/cream/uncooked eggs, pies with fresh unbaked fruit, meat products, dairy products, any food requiring refrigeration or time/temperature control.
Updates and cautions
Recent updates and warnings are included to help you spot issues that may need extra verification.
HB 1500
Effective: July 23, 2023
Increased annual gross sales cap from $25,000 to $35,000. Extended permit validity from 1 year to 2 years. Maintained $355 fee (now covers 2 years instead of 1). Passed with 98-0 unanimous vote in House.
Proposed (not yet submitted)
Effective: Pending
Washington State Department of Health considering request for 2026 legislative session to update Chapter 69.22 RCW regarding cottage food operations. Goal: add cottage food operations into public health system to help direct food safety and community engagement. Community engagement completed Summer 2024. No specific changes announced yet. If proposal accepted, public input opportunity in January 2026.
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.