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Business7 min read·June 27, 2026
Sarah Baker · Crosodo Editor

How to label cottage food in Oregon (2026 guide)

A plain-English, label-by-label walkthrough of Oregon's cottage food labeling rules under ORS §616.723 — required elements, the exact disclaimer, the 9 federal allergens, and a copy-paste label template.

If you sell baked goods from your home in Oregon, every item you sell has to be labeled correctly. Oregon's cottage food law — ORS §616.723 — is a solid, workable law, but the labeling rules are specific, and getting them wrong means you lose the protection the law gives you.

This guide walks through exactly what goes on a Oregon cottage food label, gives you a copy-paste template, and covers the edge cases that trip people up. It mirrors our most popular label walkthrough — how to label cottage food in Texas — adapted to Oregon's rules.

Not legal advice. We're a small apparel brand that cares about home bakers. For anything serious, read the law directly or call Oregon Department of Agriculture.

What every label must include

Per Oregon's cottage food labeling rules, every product label must include:

  1. The common or usual name of the product (e.g. “Classic Sourdough Loaf” — a brand name alone is not enough).
  2. Your business name and home address — or a state-issued ID / registration / permit number in place of your address (most home bakers use the ID to keep their home address off every package).
  3. An ingredient list in descending order by weight (major allergens called out).
  4. Net weight or volume.
  5. Allergen disclosure for any of the 9 federal major allergens present.
  6. The state's required disclaimer statement, verbatim (exact wording below).

What Oregon law actually says

Each product label must include: the statement 'This product is homemade, is not prepared in an inspected food establishment' (or equivalent), product name, ingredients in descending order by weight, net volume, name and phone number of the establishment, address or unique identification number, applicable allergen warnings, and presence of pets in the dwelling. If nutrient content or health claims are made, nutritional information is also required.

The 9 federal major allergens you must disclose

  • Milk
  • Eggs
  • Fish
  • Shellfish
  • Tree nuts
  • Peanuts
  • Wheat
  • Soy
  • Sesame (added federally in 2023 — frequently missed)

You don't have to list every ingredient in most states, but you must explicitly name any of these allergens that are present. “May contain” hedging isn't a substitute — if it's in there, name it. Sesame became the 9th federal major allergen in 2023 and is the one most older label templates miss.

The required disclaimer

Oregon requires this statement, word for word, on the label:

This product is homemade, is not prepared in an inspected food establishment

Copy-paste label template

Product name
SOURDOUGH BOULE
Made by
Jane's Sourdough Co.
Address / ID
your home address or state ID number
Ingredients
bread flour, water, salt, sourdough culture (wheat)
Allergens
Contains: WHEAT
Disclaimer
This product is homemade, is not prepared in an inspected food establishment

Print it on a sticker, put it on the bag. Adjust the ingredient and allergen lines for each product.

Common labeling mistakes to avoid

  1. Forgetting sesame as a major allergen (added federally in 2023 — many older templates list only 8).
  2. Using “may contain” when the product actually contains the allergen. Name it if it's present.
  3. Leaving off the required disclaimer because you printed small business-card-style labels. The disclaimer is non-negotiable.
  4. Handing out unlabeled samples. If you're giving a free taste at a market, the rules still apply.
  5. Using a P.O. Box where Oregon requires a physical address (or use your state-issued ID number instead where allowed).

Quick checklist before you print

  • Product common name (not just a brand name)
  • Business name on label
  • Address or state ID number on label
  • All 9 major allergens disclosed if present (including sesame)
  • Required disclaimer statement, verbatim
  • Ingredients in descending order by weight
  • Packaging prevents contamination

Official sources

For the full breakdown of Oregon's rules — sales cap, registration, county zoning — see the Crosodo Oregon state guide. If your Oregon county is missing from our directory, tell us and we'll add it next.

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.