Arizona Cottage Food Laws
Everything home food sellers in Arizona need to know to legally sell food from home — permit requirements, sales limits, allowed foods, labeling, and sales channels.
Law
Arizona Home Baked & Confectionery Goods Program
Annual sales limit
No limit
Permit
Registration with AZDHS + food handler card
State
Arizona (AZ)
Arizona's Home Baked & Confectionery Goods Program is registration-based with no annual sales cap. Home bakers, candy makers, and chocolate producers can register once and sell statewide.
Phoenix, Tucson, and the East Valley have some of the busiest home bakery scenes in the Southwest.
Registration & permit steps
- Earn an Arizona food handler card (~$8–$15).
- Complete the AZDHS Home Baked & Confectionery Goods registration (free).
- Print labels with the required AZ disclaimer.
- Start selling.
Allowed foods
- Baked goods that don't require refrigeration (cookies, breads, muffins, biscotti)
- Candies, chocolates, and confections
- Jams, jellies, and preserves (high-acid fruits)
- Dry goods (granola, trail mix, dry herb blends, popcorn)
- Roasted coffee beans and dry tea blends
- Dried pasta and dehydrated foods
Prohibited foods
- Foods that require refrigeration (cream-filled pastries, cheesecake, custard pies)
- Meat, poultry, and seafood products
- Low-acid canned goods (canned vegetables, salsa in some states)
- Dairy products such as fresh milk, butter, or soft cheeses
Labeling requirements
- Name and address of the cottage food operation
- Common name of the product
- Complete ingredient list in descending order by weight
- Allergen disclosure (milk, eggs, wheat, soy, peanuts, tree nuts, fish, shellfish, sesame)
- Net weight or volume
- A disclaimer such as "Made in a home kitchen that is not subject to state inspection"
Allowed sales channels
- Direct in-person sales to consumers
- Farmers markets and community events
- Online ordering with local pickup or hand delivery
- Roadside stands and home-based pickup
Important restrictions
- No wholesale sales to restaurants or grocery stores
- Sales typically limited to in-state customers only
- Mail order or interstate shipping is usually not allowed
- Cannot operate as a retail food establishment from your home
Official state resource
Official Arizona cottage food resource
Always verify the current law with the official Arizona agency before launching. Laws change.
This page is editorial content for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Confirm requirements with Arizona's Department of Health, Department of Agriculture, or a licensed attorney.