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

Food Truck Permits: Seminole vs St. Petersburg

How do food truck permits rules compare between Seminole, FL and St. Petersburg, FL?

Seminole and St. Petersburg have similar restriction levels.

Seminole, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Food trucks in Seminole must hold Florida DBPR mobile food dispensing vehicle licensing and a local business tax receipt. Florida law preempts most operational regulation, though local zoning, parking, and event permits still apply.

View full Seminole rules β†’

St. Petersburg, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Mobile food trucks in St. Petersburg need a city permit under Section 16.50.440, plus a state DBPR mobile food dispensing vehicle license, and must follow location, hours, signage, and waste rules tied to a Class I, II, or III designation.

View full St. Petersburg rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSeminoleSt. Petersburg
State preemptionFS 509.102-
DBPR licenseRequired statewide-
Local BTRRequired in Seminole-
Zoning rulesStill apply locally-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Seminole FAQ

Do food trucks need a Seminole permit?

Florida law preempts local MFDV permits, but Seminole can require a business tax receipt and enforce zoning, parking, and signage rules of general applicability.

Can a food truck park on any street in Seminole?

No. Trucks must follow general parking ordinances, may not block right-of-way, and typically operate on private property with the owner's written permission.

St. Petersburg FAQ

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