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Cottage Food Operations: Orland Park vs Schaumburg

How do cottage food operations rules compare between Orland Park, IL and Schaumburg, IL?

Orland Park and Schaumburg have similar restriction levels.

Orland Park, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Illinois's Cottage Food and Home Kitchen Operations Act (Public Act 102-0633) allows Orland Park residents to sell certain homemade shelf-stable foods directly to consumers without a commercial kitchen. Annual gross sales are capped at $75,000 for cottage food operations. Required labeling applies, and Orland Park home occupation rules still restrict signage and customer traffic.

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Schaumburg, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Illinois's Cottage Food and Home Kitchen Operations Act (Public Act 100-0580, amended by PA 103-0154) allows Schaumburg residents to sell certain homemade food products directly to consumers without a commercial kitchen. Annual gross sales are capped at $75,000 for cottage food operations. Products must be non-potentially-hazardous baked goods, jams, candies, and similar shelf-stable items. Labeling requirements apply.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactOrland ParkSchaumburg
Revenue Cap$75,000/year$75,000/year (cottage food)
Home Kitchen Cap$50,000/year$50,000/year
RegistrationCook County Health required-
LabelingRequired on all productsRequired on all products
Sales MethodDirect to consumerDirect to consumer only
Inspection-Not required for cottage food

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Orland Park FAQ

Can I sell homemade food from my home in Orland Park?

Yes. Illinois's Cottage Food Act allows sale of approved shelf-stable foods directly to consumers with annual gross sales up to $75,000. Required labeling and Cook County Health registration are needed.

What foods can I sell under the cottage food law?

Shelf-stable baked goods without cream fillings, jams, jellies, candy, dried herbs, roasted coffee, popcorn, and granola. Potentially hazardous foods require a home kitchen operation license.

Can customers pick up food at my Orland Park home?

Technically yes under state law, but Orland Park's home occupation rules restrict customer traffic. Selling through the Orland Park Farmers Market or direct delivery is the preferred route.

Schaumburg FAQ

Can I sell homemade food from my home in Schaumburg?

Yes. Illinois's Cottage Food and Home Kitchen Operations Act allows residents to sell approved shelf-stable foods directly to consumers with annual gross sales up to $75,000 without a commercial kitchen. Required labeling must be on all products.

What foods can I sell under the cottage food law?

Non-potentially-hazardous items including baked goods without cream fillings, jams, jellies, candy, dried herbs, roasted coffee, popcorn, and granola. Potentially hazardous foods like those requiring refrigeration need a home kitchen operation license with additional requirements.

Do I need a health department inspection?

No. Cottage food operations are exempt from health department kitchen inspections. However, you must follow labeling requirements and sell only approved product types. Home kitchen operations allowing hazardous foods require a food service sanitation manager certificate.

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