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πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors/Food Truck Permits

Food Truck Permits: Jurupa Valley vs Riverside

How do food truck permits rules compare between Jurupa Valley, CA and Riverside, CA?

Jurupa Valley and Riverside have similar restriction levels.

Jurupa Valley, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Mobile food facilities operating in unincorporated Riverside County must obtain an annual health permit from the Riverside County Department of Environmental Health, pass initial and periodic inspections, operate from a permitted commissary, and comply with California Retail Food Code (CalCode). Additional zoning and vending-location rules apply under county Ordinance 580 and Ordinance 348.

View full Jurupa Valley rules β†’

Riverside, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Riverside Municipal Code Chapter 5.36 (Regulation of Mobile Food Vendors) regulates all mobile food trucks operating in the city. Operators need a City Mobile Vending Permit, a Riverside business tax certificate (RMC Title 5), and a Riverside County Department of Environmental Health (DEH) Mobile Food Facility permit.

View full Riverside rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactJurupa ValleyRiverside
--
City mobile vending permit-Required (RMC Ch. 5.36)
Business tax certificate-Required (RMC Ch. 5.04)
County health permit-Required (Riverside County DEH)
Residential-area hours-Sunrise to sunset
Other-area hours-Sunrise to midnight
Liability insurance-$1M minimum

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Jurupa Valley FAQ

Riverside FAQ

What permits do I need to operate a food truck in Riverside?

Four: (1) a City Mobile Vending Permit (RMC Chapter 5.36), (2) a Riverside business tax certificate (RMC Chapter 5.04), (3) a Riverside County DEH Mobile Food Facility permit, and (4) a California Seller's Permit for taxable goods.

What hours can I operate?

RMC Chapter 5.36 limits operation in residential-only areas to sunrise to sunset, and in commercial/industrial areas to sunrise to midnight.

Can I set up tables and chairs next to my truck?

Not in the public right-of-way. RMC Chapter 5.36 forbids placing signs, chairs, tables, umbrellas, or other obstructions in the right-of-way.

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