Ouachita County cottage food law.
Ouachita County is a county in Arkansas (pop. 22,606). Arkansas has a Freedom-tier cottage food law — no sales cap and broad product freedom — so Ouachita County's local zoning and health department rules are the main constraints for home bakers. County research shows: home kitchen allowed, inspection not required, home occupation permit not required. Arkansas Food Freedom Act (Act 1040 of 2021, A.C.A. §20-57-201) is one of the most permissive cottage food laws in the US. It expressly preempts local government restrictions. No county-specific regulations found or applicable. Allowed foods: nonperishable, non-potentially hazardous foods including baked goods, candy, condiments, dry goods, preserves, fermented foods, carbonated drinks. Prohibited: perishable baked goods, low-acid canned goods, nut butters, oils, meat jerkies. Acidified foods require pH testing. No sales cap, no registration, no inspection required. Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.
Ouachita County cottage food reports
Full statute, all counties in Arkansas, and authoritative source URLs.
State PDFZoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Ouachita County.
County PDFTier: Freedom
Arkansas has a Freedom-tier cottage food law — sell almost anything direct to consumer with no sales cap. The state baseline is permissive, so local zoning is usually the main constraint to navigate.
View state law →Health department
Many states delegate cottage food registration and inspection to the county health department. Contact theirs for the local process.
Home occupation rules
The county or city zoning code governs whether you can run a home-based food business — customer visits, signage, employees, floor area.
Home kitchen, inspection, and zoning rules for Ouachita County
State baseline: A.C.A. §20-57-201 (Act 1040 of 2021)
- Home kitchen allowed
- Yes
- Restrictions
- Must operate from a primary residence kitchen; commercial kitchen use is prohibited under the Food Freedom Act. State law expressly preempts local government restrictions on home food producers.
- Separate dedicated kitchen
- No
- Pet restrictions
- Not specified in state statute; good manufacturing practices apply
- Water supply
- Potable water required; residential water supply acceptable
- Handwashing
- Standard sanitary practices required; dedicated handwashing sink not mandated by statute
- Food storage
- Safe food storage practices required; no separate storage room mandated
- Inspection required
- No
- Inspection trigger
- No routine inspection required under Act 1040; complaint-based investigation possible
- Home occupation permit
- No — state law preempts local restrictions
- Permit details
- A.C.A. §20-57-201 explicitly preempts both state and local government from restricting home food producers; no county-level home occupation permit required for cottage food
- Local business license
- No — preempted by state law
- On-site customer pickup
- Yes
- On-site signage
- Yes
- Delivery / pickup
- Direct sales permitted; indirect sales through retail/wholesale allowed; interstate sales permitted
- Max employees in home
- No statutory limit specified
- Relevant code section
- N/A — state preemption applies; no applicable county code
Arkansas Food Freedom Act (Act 1040 of 2021, A.C.A. §20-57-201) is one of the most permissive cottage food laws in the US. It expressly preempts local government restrictions. No county-specific regulations found or applicable. Allowed foods: nonperishable, non-potentially hazardous foods including baked goods, candy, condiments, dry goods, preserves, fermented foods, carbonated drinks. Prohibited: perishable baked goods, low-acid canned goods, nut butters, oils, meat jerkies. Acidified foods require pH testing. No sales cap, no registration, no inspection required.
Arkansas Food Freedom Act (SB 248 / Act 1040)
Full Arkansas state report (with PDF download) →Verbatim excerptSB248 - TO CREATE THE FOOD FREEDOM ACT; AND TO EXEMPT CERTAIN PRODUCERS OF HOMEMADE FOOD OR DRINK PRODUCTS FROM LICENSURE, CERTIFICATION, AND INSPECTION. Under the food freedom law, producers can sell their homemade food almost anywhere, including sales through grocery and retail stores. Even interstate sales are allowed. Producers can sell almost any type of nonperishable food, though producers who sell acidified foods (e.g. pickles) must follow additional requirements. There is no sales limit, and a producer does not need to get a permit from the health department. The food freedom law specifically prevents state and local governments from restricting home food producers. Products must be sold to an informed end consumer. For instance, a grocery or retail store could sell your products to their customers, who are end consumers and can see your product labels. If you want to sell pickles or other acidified foods, you must ensure that the final pH level of the product is 4.6 or below by doing one of the following: Use a recipe from an approved source; Get your product tested in a lab; Test each batch with a calibrated pH meter.
Source: arkleg.state.ar.us/Bills/Detail?ddBienniumSession=2021%2F2021R&measureno=SB248 →
Ouachita County cottage food — FAQ
Is a home kitchen allowed for cottage food in Ouachita County, Arkansas?
According to our research: home kitchen is allowed. Restrictions: Must operate from a primary residence kitchen; commercial kitchen use is prohibited under the Food Freedom Act. State law expressly preempts local government restrictions on home food producers.
Is a health inspection required for home bakers in Ouachita County?
Inspection: No. Trigger: No routine inspection required under Act 1040; complaint-based investigation possible.
Do I need a home occupation permit in Ouachita County?
Home occupation permit: No — state law preempts local restrictions. A.C.A. §20-57-201 explicitly preempts both state and local government from restricting home food producers; no county-level home occupation permit required for cottage food
What is the Arkansas cottage food sales cap?
Arkansas state law caps cottage food sales at None. County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.
Where to verify Ouachita County rules
Compare neighboring counties
Other Arkansas counties
Ouachita County vs. bordering counties
| Regulation | Ouachita County This county | Calhoun County | Clark County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home kitchen allowed | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Separate dedicated kitchen | No | No | No |
| Pets allowed | Not specified in state statute; good manufacturing practices apply | No specific restriction under state law; standard food safety sanitation practices apply. | No specific restriction under state law; standard food safety sanitation practices apply. |
| Inspection required | No | No | No |
| On-site customer pickup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| On-site signage | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Delivery / pickup | Direct sales permitted; indirect sales through retail/wholesale allowed; interstate sales permitted | May be sold in person, by telephone, or online. Delivery by producer, producer's agent, or commercial carrier. Sales allowed at farmers mar… | May be sold in person, by telephone, or online. Delivery by producer, producer's agent, or commercial carrier. Sales allowed at farmers mar… |
| Home occupation permit | No — state law preempts local restrictions | Conditional | Conditional |
| Local business license | No — preempted by state law | Varies | Varies |
| Restrictions | Must operate from a primary residence kitchen; commercial kitchen use is prohibited under the Food Freedom Act. State law expressly preempt… | Must be produced at producer's private residence. Foods must be non-TCS (non-time/temperature control for safety). Labeling required: produ… | Must be produced at producer's private residence. Foods must be non-TCS (non-time/temperature control for safety). Labeling required: produ… |
| Food storage | Safe food storage practices required; no separate storage room mandated | Non-TCS foods only — must not require refrigeration to prevent pathogen growth. Acidified foods (pickles, salsas, sauces) require pH testin… | Non-TCS foods only — must not require refrigeration to prevent pathogen growth. Acidified foods (pickles, salsas, sauces) require pH testin… |
| Population | 22,606 | 4,773 | 21,469 |
Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to Arkansas's department of agriculture, your local health department, and your county or city's planning office. Crosodo is a clothing brand for cottage bakers, not a law firm.