Skip to main content

Nevada Craft Food Can you legally sell food from home in Nevada?

Cottage Food Law

In 2015, Nevada passed a bill (SB 441) to allow “craft food operations”, which are businesses that can sell homemade acidified foods (e.g. pickles, salsas, etc).

This law allows acidified foods to be sold directly to consumers, and limits sales to $100k of acidified products per year.

Operators need to go through a fairly lengthy training and registration process to sell acidified foods from home.

Operators can sell other types of homemade foods through Nevada’s cottage food law.

Selling Where can you sell homemade food products?

You can take online or phone orders, but they must be fulfilled in-person.

Starting a cottage food business?

TAKE THE FREE MINI COURSE

How To Start A Cottage Food Business

Allowed Foods What food products can you sell from home?

Prohibited Foods

You can sell other types of homemade foods (including jams, jellies, and preserves) through Nevada’s cottage food law.

Only "non-potentially hazardous" foods are allowed, but certain non-PHFs may not be allowed. Most foods that don't need to be refrigerated (foods without meat, cheese, etc.) are considered non-potentially hazardous. Learn more

Limitations How will your home food business be restricted?

Sales are limited to $100,000 per year

Business What do you need to do to sell food from home?

Application and Testing

To sell acidified foods items from home, you must submit an application and pass a safety exam on canning. The application fee is $50, and the exam fee is $30.

Once you pass, your permit will be valid for 3 years.

Food Safety Training

You must take a basic food safety training course, such as this one which costs about $10 and can be completed online in a couple of hours.

Canning course

You must take a canning course that is approved by the ag department.

Product Testing

You must test the pH of each batch of product and keep records of your production for 5 years including:

  • Name of food produced
  • Recipe of each food, including ingredients
  • Process used in the preparation
  • The results of the pH test for each batch

Here is an example of a production log.

Labeling How do you label cottage food products?

Sample Label

Chocolate Chip Cookies

“MADE IN A CRAFT FOOD OPERATION THAT IS NOT SUBJECT TO GOVERNMENT FOOD SAFETY INSPECTION”


Forrager Cookie Company

123 Chewy Way, Cookietown, NV 73531


Phone: (123) 456-7890


Ingredients: enriched flour (wheat flour, malted barley flour, niacin, iron, thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), butter (cream, salt), semi-sweet chocolate (sugar, chocolate, cocoa butter, milkfat, soy lecithin, natural flavors), brown sugar, granulated sugar, eggs, vanilla extract (vanilla bean extract, alcohol, sugar), baking soda, salt (salt, calcium silicate)


Contains: milk, eggs, wheat, soy


Produced on 12/5/2025


NET WT 2 lb 4 oz (1.02 kg)


See this labeling guide for more info.

Resources Where can you find more information about this law?

Department
Nevada Department of Agriculture
Contacts

Food & Nutrition Division

Department
Nevada Department of Agriculture
Email
fnd@agri.nv.gov
Telephone
(775) 353-3758
Fax
(775) 353-3749
Law Dates
January 2016
SB 441
June 2025
AB 352

This page was last updated on

Is there something wrong on this page? Please contact us to let us know!

Starting a cottage food business?

TAKE THE FREE MINI COURSE

How To Start A Cottage Food Business

Nevada Forum Got questions? Join the discussion

Home Forums Nevada

This forum contains 11 topics and 10 replies, and was last updated by  David Crabill 3 years, 1 month ago.

Viewing 10 topics - 1 through 10 (of 11 total)
Viewing 10 topics - 1 through 10 (of 11 total)

You must be logged in to create new topics.

or to ask a question or create a new discussion topic