Teller County cottage food law.
Teller County is a county in Colorado (pop. 24,758). Colorado's Great-tier law gives home bakers a high or unlimited sales cap and multiple sales channels; Teller County adds its own permit, inspection, and zoning requirements on top. County research shows: home kitchen restricted, inspection not required, home occupation permit not required. No Teller County-specific cottage food or home occupation ordinance surfaced in search. State baseline (C.R.S. §25-4-1614) governs. Food safety training required before operations. Per-product $10,000 annual cap. Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.
Teller County cottage food reports
Full statute, all counties in Colorado, and authoritative source URLs.
State PDFZoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Teller County.
County PDFTier: Great
Colorado's cottage food law is permissive (Great tier) — high or no sales cap, broad product list, and multiple sales channels allowed. The state baseline is workable for full-time operations; the county still controls zoning and inspection.
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 Teller County
State baseline: C.R.S. §25-4-1614; CO tier: Great
- Home kitchen allowed
- True
- Restrictions
- —
- Separate dedicated kitchen
- False
- Pet restrictions
- No specific county rule; standard CO cottage food applies
- Water supply
- No state or county-specific requirement for cottage food
- Handwashing
- Good manufacturing practices expected per CDPHE guidance
- Food storage
- Standard sanitary storage; no additional county requirement found
- Inspection required
- Upon-complaint only
- Inspection trigger
- CDPHE complaint-based inspection under C.R.S. §25-4-1614
- Home occupation permit
- Likely; verify with Teller County Planning
- Permit details
- No county-specific home occupation code located. Teller County includes Cripple Creek (gaming district) and Woodland Park. Confirm with Teller County Planning & Zoning.
- Local business license
- Possibly; verify with Teller County Clerk or relevant municipality
- On-site customer pickup
- True
- On-site signage
- No specific county restriction found; state disclaimer placard required at point of sale
- Delivery / pickup
- Direct-to-consumer only; no wholesale; may sell from residence, farmers markets, online (CO only)
- Max employees in home
- sole proprietor or LLC of 2 or fewer owners per state law
No Teller County-specific cottage food or home occupation ordinance surfaced in search. State baseline (C.R.S. §25-4-1614) governs. Food safety training required before operations. Per-product $10,000 annual cap.
Colorado Cottage Foods Act
Full Colorado state report (with PDF download) →Verbatim excerpt25-4-1614. Home kitchens - exemption - food inspection - short title - definitions - rules. (2)(b)(I) A producer is permitted under this section to sell only a limited range of foods that have been produced, processed, or packaged that are nonpotentially hazardous and do not require refrigeration. These foods include pickled fruits and vegetables, spices, teas, dehydrated produce, nuts, seeds, honey, jams, jellies, preserves, fruit butter, flour, and baked goods, including candies, fruit empanadas, and tortillas and other nonpotentially hazardous foods. (2)(c) A producer must take a food safety course that includes basic food handling training and is comparable to, or is, a course given by the Colorado state university extension service or a state, county, or district public health agency and must maintain a status of good standing in accordance with the course requirements. (2)(e) This section applies only to producers who earn net revenues of ten thousand dollars or less per calendar year from the sale of each eligible food product produced in the producer's home kitchen. (3)(a) A food product sold under this section must have an affixed label that includes at least: the name of the food product; the producer's name, the address at which the food was prepared, and the producer's current telephone number or electronic mail address; and a statement that reads: "This product was produced in a home kitchen that is not subject to state licensure or inspection. This product is not intended for resale."
Source: leg.colorado.gov/bill_files/40283/download →
Teller County cottage food — FAQ
Is a home kitchen allowed for cottage food in Teller County, Colorado?
According to our research: home kitchen True.
Is a health inspection required for home bakers in Teller County?
Inspection: Upon-complaint only. Trigger: CDPHE complaint-based inspection under C.R.S. §25-4-1614.
Do I need a home occupation permit in Teller County?
Home occupation permit: Likely; verify with Teller County Planning. No county-specific home occupation code located. Teller County includes Cripple Creek (gaming district) and Woodland Park. Confirm with Teller County Planning & Zoning.
What is the Colorado cottage food sales cap?
Colorado state law caps cottage food sales at Tiered (see notes). County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.
Where to verify Teller County rules
Compare neighboring counties
Other Colorado counties
Teller County vs. bordering counties
| Regulation | Teller County This county | Park County | Fremont County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home kitchen allowed | True | True | Yes |
| Separate dedicated kitchen | False | False | No |
| Pets allowed | No specific county rule; standard CO cottage food applies | No specific county rule; standard CO cottage food applies | Not specified in state cottage food law. |
| Inspection required | Upon-complaint only | Upon-complaint only | Upon-complaint |
| On-site customer pickup | True | True | Yes |
| On-site signage | No specific county restriction found; state disclaimer placard required at point of sale | No specific county restriction found; state disclaimer placard required at point of sale | Conditional |
| Delivery / pickup | Direct-to-consumer only; no wholesale; may sell from residence, farmers markets, online (CO only) | Direct-to-consumer only; no wholesale; may sell from residence, farmers markets, online (CO only) | Direct-to-consumer sales only. Online sales allowed within Colorado. No indirect sales through retailers or wholesale. No out-of-state ship… |
| Home occupation permit | Likely; verify with Teller County Planning | Likely; verify with Park County Planning | Conditional |
| Local business license | Possibly; verify with Teller County Clerk or relevant municipality | Possibly; verify with Park County Clerk | Varies |
| Restrictions | — | — | Must register with CDPHE (free registration). Non-PHF foods only. $10,000 annual cap per product (not total revenue). Allowed foods: baked … |
| Food storage | Standard sanitary storage; no additional county requirement found | Standard sanitary storage; no additional county requirement found | Products must be non-PHF and shelf-stable; no refrigeration required. |
| Population | 24,758 | 17,597 | 49,107 |
Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to Colorado'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.