Florida's Cottage Food Law (F.S. 500.80) allows Miami Beach residents to sell homemade food products with annual gross sales up to $250,000 without a state license or inspection. The city requires a Business Tax Receipt, though Florida law prohibits local governments from imposing additional regulations on cottage food products themselves.
Florida Statute 500.80 governs cottage food operations statewide, allowing residents to produce and sell certain homemade food products from their home kitchen without a state license, permit, or inspection. Annual gross sales must not exceed $250,000. Approved cottage food products include breads, rolls, cakes, pastries, cookies, candies, jams, jellies, preserves, fruit pies, dried fruits, dry herbs, seasonings, homemade pasta, cereals, trail mixes, granola, nuts, vinegar, popcorn, and honey. Products must be labeled with the cottage food operator's name, address, product name, ingredients, allergen warnings, and the statement that the product was made in a home kitchen not inspected by the state. Florida law explicitly prohibits municipalities from creating additional regulations on cottage food products, though operators must comply with local zoning requirements for home-based businesses. Miami Beach and Miami-Dade County require a Business Tax Receipt (approximately $25-$100/year) for home-based food businesses. Direct sales only are permitted at farmers markets, roadside stands, online with direct delivery, and from the home.
Cottage food operations violating the $250,000 annual cap or selling non-approved products may face enforcement from the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Operating without a Business Tax Receipt may result in a local code violation.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Miami-Dade County.
See how other cities in Miami-Dade County handle cottage food operations.
See how Miami Beach's cottage food operations rules stack up against other locations.
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