Florida Statute 500.80 (the Cottage Food Law, expanded by HB 663 of 2021 to $250,000 in annual gross sales) preempts all local regulation of cottage food operations. Palm Coast cannot prohibit a cottage food operation or regulate its preparation, processing, storage, or sale. The city retains only general zoning authority over traffic, parking, signage, and noise β and even those at residential standards under FS 559.955.
Florida's Cottage Food Law at FS 500.80 was substantially expanded by HB 663 (2021), which raised the annual gross sales cap to $250,000 and added an explicit preemption clause stating: 'The regulation of cottage food operations is preempted to the state. A local law, ordinance, or regulation may not prohibit a cottage food operation or regulate the preparation, processing, storage, or sale of cottage food products by a cottage food operation.' Cottage food operations may sell shelf-stable, non-potentially hazardous foods β including baked goods, breads, jams, jellies, honey, dried herbs, candies, fruit pies, and similar items β that do not require time/temperature control for safety. Products must be prepackaged with a label bearing the operator's name and address, product name, ingredients in descending order by weight, net weight/volume, allergen information, and the disclaimer 'Made in a cottage food operation that is not subject to Florida's food safety regulations' in at least 10-point type. Sales may be in person, online, by mail, or at events, but wholesale sales (sales for resale) are prohibited. No state license or inspection is required. Cottage food operations must also comply with the home-based business standards in FS 559.955 β meaning Palm Coast may apply general zoning, signage, parking, and nuisance rules at residential standards under LDC Section 4.12, but cannot require a cottage-food-specific permit or impose food-safety requirements. ITT/HOA covenants on Palm Coast lots are not preempted and may restrict on-site sales.
State preemption means Palm Coast cannot fine a cottage food operator for the act of selling cottage foods. Selling foods outside the cottage food exemption (potentially hazardous items like meat, dairy, custards) is enforceable by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services under the broader food protection statutes. Local violations of the home occupation standards in LDC Section 4.12 remain enforceable at residential standards.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Palm Coast, FL
Solar installations in Palm Coast require a building permit through the Palm Coast Building Division (386-986-3780) and must comply with the Florida Building...
Palm Coast, FL
Florida Statute Β§ 509.102 forbids Palm Coast from prohibiting food trucks 'within the entirety of the entity's jurisdiction,' which preempts citywide bans an...
Palm Coast, FL
Florida Statute Β§ 509.102 (enacted as HB 1193 in 2020) preempts local regulation of mobile food dispensing vehicle licenses, registrations, permits, and fees...
Palm Coast, FL
U.S. airspace is federally regulated by the FAA (Part 107 for commercial; 49 U.S.C. Β§ 44809 for recreational flyers). Florida Statute Β§ 330.41 (the Unmanned ...
Palm Coast, FL
Under Chapter 16 (Businesses, Business Regulations), Article V (Garage Sales) of the Palm Coast Code of Ordinances, each property is limited to no more than ...
Palm Coast, FL
Palm Coast applies the same property-maintenance standards to vacant and occupied lots: grass, weeds, and underbrush may not exceed 10 inches in height under...
See how Palm Coast's cottage food operations rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.