Crosodocrosodo
Business8 min read·July 2, 2026
Sarah Baker · Crosodo Editor

Can I sell dried tea from home? A 50-state guide.

Dried tea under US cottage food law: 51 states allow it outright, 0 allow it with conditions, 0 prohibit it. Full national breakdown with statute links and the food-safety reasoning behind each verdict.

The short version — dried tea
Dried tea is allowed everywhere. Yes in 51 of 51 US jurisdictions, conditional in 0, prohibited in 0. See the full state-by-state table in the dried tea guide, or download the dried tea PDF.

Every cottage food question comes down to two things: what's your state's tier, and does the food you want to sell fit inside it. Dried tea is a good example because even though nearly every state permits it, the labeling, cap, and sales-channel rules still vary in ways that catch new bakers off guard.

dried tea is a straightforward yes in all 51 US jurisdictions we track — every state's cottage food law covers this category outright.

Why the law treats it this way

Low water activity (aw < 0.85) or high sugar concentration (> 65% by weight) prevents microbial growth. Honey, chocolate, roasted nuts, and dry mixes are inherently self-preserving. No refrigeration or pH control needed.

What can go wrong in a home kitchen

Moisture ingress if poorly packaged (mold on granola, staleness). Cross-contamination in a home kitchen shared with fresh produce. Allergen labeling for tree nuts / peanuts / soy.

Every state allows dried tea

All 51 US jurisdictions we track — every state plus DC — allow dried tea outright under their cottage food exemption. There is no state where you need a scheduled process, an acidified-foods license, or a commercial kitchen just to sell dried tea direct to consumers. The remaining variation is in sales caps, labeling requirements, and whether online orders or shipping are permitted.

What to do next

  1. Check your state's tier. State cottage food law is the floor; find your state on the state directory and confirm the tier plus the sales cap.
  2. Read your specific verdict. The dried tea state-by-state table tells you exactly what your state allows and links to the statute.
  3. Verify with your local health department. Even in states that allow dried tea outright, county zoning and city home-occupation rules can add a permit or restriction. State law rarely preempts local zoning.
  4. Label correctly. Every cottage food state requires a labeled product: business name, address, ingredient list, allergen disclosure, and a "made in a home kitchen" disclaimer. Exact wording varies — see our state labeling breakdown for your state.
  5. Stay under the cap. Most states cap annual gross sales under the cottage food exemption. Track revenue from day one; graduating to a licensed kitchen is a real cost and a real transition, not something to trip into.
See the full dried tea state-by-state guide
All 51 US jurisdictions, statute links, and the food-safety reasoning behind each verdict
Download the dried tea PDF report
5-page printable — verdict tiles, safety block, and the complete national table
Or grab the full 42-food Cottage Food Rulebook
100+ pages, every food, every state, every verdict — one PDF

Crosodo Blog entries are recipe and craft notes from working cottage bakers. Recipes assume working with an active starter and basic equipment. Cottage food sales are governed by your state's law — see our state directory for legal details.