Maryland On-Farm Home Processing Can you legally sell food from home in Maryland?
Cottage Food Law
Maryland allows farmers to get a special On-Farm Home Processing License to sell certain types of homemade food.
However, most people use Maryland’s cottage food law (which does not require a permit or training from the health department) to sell their homemade food.
This older law is useful for farmers who:
- Want to sell food products that the cottage food law does not allow (pickles, dried fruit, flavored honey, etc)
- Want to sell indirectly to restaurants or retail stores
- Want to sell their products in other states
- Have reached the cottage food law’s $25,000 sales limit
If none of the above applies to you, then it should be easier to start your business with the cottage food law.
With an On-Farm Home Processing License, farmers can sell certain types of non-perishable foods (including acidified foods) through any venue, but they are limited to $40,000 of sales. Farmers who sell acidified foods must take a training course from a Better Process School.
Selling Where can you sell homemade food products?
Allowed Foods What food products can you sell from home?
You can use this law to sell herb-infused honey and vinegars.
Limitations How will your home food business be restricted?
Business What do you need to do to sell food from home?
An On-Farm Home Processing License costs $30. To apply for a license, contact the health department.
If you are only selling baked goods, naturally acid canned foods (jams, jellies, fruit butters, some canned fruits, etc), and unflavored honey from your farm or at a farmers market, you do not need to get this license. However, if you are selling acid foods, you may need to get an evaluation from the health department. All indirect sales (to restaurants and retail stores) require this license.
If you make canned acidified foods (e.g. pickles, green beans, etc), you must take a training course from a Better Process School. To find an approved course, contact the health department.
Workplace Are there any home kitchen requirements?
Ingredients and products for your business must be kept separate from those for personal use.
Resources Where can you find more information about this law?
- Department
- Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
- dhmh.envhealth@maryland.gov
- Telephone
- (410) 767-8400
- Fax
- (410) 333-8931
- Address
- 6 St. Paul Street, Suite 1301
Baltimore, MD 21202
Office of Food Protection
- February 2005
- On-Farm Food Processing
- June 2006
- SB 1049