New Jersey enacted a Home Baker Rule in 2021 (N.J.A.C. 8:24-10.3) after a decade-long legal battle, making it the last state to allow home-baked food sales. Monmouth County home bakers must register with NJ Department of Health, follow product restrictions (shelf-stable baked goods only), label properly, and observe $50,000 annual revenue cap. Home kitchens are NOT licensed food establishments.
New Jersey was the final U.S. state to legalize home-baked food sales, enacting the Home Baker Rule (N.J.A.C. 8:24-10.3) effective October 2021 following a successful 2020 NJ Superior Court case (Heffner v. Murphy). Monmouth County home bakers must comply with these state rules. Permitted products: shelf-stable (non-potentially hazardous) baked goods including breads, cakes, cookies, muffins, scones, biscotti, granola, dry mixes, candies (excluding chocolates requiring tempering), jams and jellies (if using USDA tested recipes), and dry herbs. Prohibited: products requiring refrigeration including cream pies, cheesecakes, custards, meat pies, soft cheeses, raw milk products, and low-acid canned goods. Annual gross sales cap: $50,000. Registration required with the NJ Department of Health Consumer Health Services (no fee). Labels must include: product name, ingredients in descending order, net weight, allergen statement per FDA rules, and the statement Made in a home kitchen that is not subject to inspection by the state or local health authority. Sales channels allowed: direct-to-consumer at farmers markets, online with local delivery, and in-person sales. Prohibited: wholesale/retail store sales, restaurants, or interstate sales. Monmouth County Health Department (Freehold) registers home bakers. Farmers markets in Red Bank, Asbury Park, Long Branch, Freehold, and Middletown accept home bakers with Health Department registration. Municipal home occupation zoning still applies (see home-business/zoning); most Monmouth towns allow food preparation as permitted home occupation. Kosher and Halal certification handled separately. ServSafe training recommended but not required.
Selling non-permitted foods: cease and desist from NJ DOH or Monmouth County Health. Exceeding $50,000 revenue cap: must upgrade to licensed commercial kitchen ($2,000-$10,000+ costs). Labeling violations: warnings then fines $100 to $500. Foodborne illness from non-compliant product: civil liability plus potential criminal charges under N.J.S.A. 2C:12.
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