Chattahoochee County cottage food law.
Chattahoochee County is a county in Georgia (pop. 9,402). Georgia's Okay-tier law caps sales (often under $25K) and may limit channels. Chattahoochee County bakers need to navigate both state limits and local rules carefully. County research shows: home kitchen allowed, inspection not required, home occupation permit not required. Chattahoochee County contains Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning), a major Army installation. This makes it unusual — operators on military installation property are subject to federal/DoD rules rather than local county zoning. For off-base residents, standard GA cottage food rules apply. County is very small. Defaulted to GA state baseline (post-HB 398) with medium confidence. Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.
Chattahoochee County cottage food reports
Zoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Chattahoochee County.
County PDFTier: Okay
Georgia has an Okay-tier cottage food law — meaningful sales caps and/or limited channels. Operable for a side business, but you'll likely outgrow the rules if you want to go full-time.
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 Chattahoochee County
State baseline: O.C.G.A. §26-2-470 et seq. (eff. July 2025); prior: GA R&R 40-7-19
- Home kitchen allowed
- Yes
- Restrictions
- Must be produced in operator's primary domestic residence home kitchen only. Secondary homes, vacation homes, or motor homes do not qualify. Only non-potentially hazardous foods permitted.
- Separate dedicated kitchen
- No
- Pet restrictions
- Not specified in state law; products must not be contaminated
- Water supply
- Potable water required; annual coliform testing required if using a private well
- Handwashing
- Standard sanitation practices required; ANSI-accredited food safety training required
- Food storage
- Ingredients and finished products must be stored appropriately in the domestic residence
- Inspection required
- Upon-complaint
- Inspection trigger
- Complaint-based only under HB 398 (eff. July 2025). GDA may enter premises upon complaint or public health emergency.
- Home occupation permit
- Conditional
- Permit details
- Georgia state law does not preempt local zoning. Cottage food operators must check with Chattahoochee County to determine if a home-based business is allowed in their zoning district and whether a home occupation permit is required. Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning) is located in Chattahoochee County; operators on military installation land should confirm applicable rules.
- Local business license
- Varies
- On-site customer pickup
- Yes
- On-site signage
- Conditional
- Delivery / pickup
- Under HB 398 (eff. July 2025): direct-to-consumer sales, online sales, sales to retail stores, restaurants, and interstate sales are all permitted. Events and farmers markets permitted.
- Max employees in home
- unknown
- Relevant code section
- O.C.G.A. §26-2-470 et seq.; local zoning must be checked independently
Chattahoochee County contains Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning), a major Army installation. This makes it unusual — operators on military installation property are subject to federal/DoD rules rather than local county zoning. For off-base residents, standard GA cottage food rules apply. County is very small. Defaulted to GA state baseline (post-HB 398) with medium confidence.
Georgia Code O.C.G.A. §§26-2-470 through 26-2-478 (enacted by HB 398, 2025); formerly Georgia Rules and Regulations Chapter 40-7-19 (Cottage Food Regulations)
Full Georgia state report (with PDF download) →Verbatim excerptRule 40-7-19-.01 Purpose: The purpose of this Chapter is to allow individuals using home kitchens to prepare, manufacture, and sell non-potentially hazardous foods to the public. Rule 40-7-19-.02 Definitions: (3) 'Cottage food operator' means a person who produces cottage food products only in the home kitchen of that person's primary domestic residence and only for sale directly to the consumer. (4) 'Cottage food products' means non-potentially hazardous baked goods, jams, jellies, preserves, and other non-potentially hazardous foods produced in the home kitchen of a domestic residence. (11) 'Home kitchen' means a kitchen primarily intended for use by the residents of a home. It may contain one or more stoves or ovens, which may be a double oven, designed for residential use. It must not include commercial types of equipment. Rule 40-7-19-.05 Cottage Food Limitations: (1) May only produce non-potentially hazardous foods. Examples include: (a) Loaf breads, rolls, and biscuits; (b) Cakes (except those that require refrigeration due to cream cheese icing, fillings, or high moisture content such as tres leche); (c) Pastries and cookies; (d) Candies and confections; (e) Fruit pies; (f) Jams, jellies, and preserves; (g) Dried fruits; (h) Dry herbs, seasonings and mixtures; (i) Cereals, trail mixes, and granola; (j) Coated or uncoated nuts; (k) Vinegar and flavored vinegars; (l) Popcorn, popcorn balls, and cotton candy.
Source: rules.sos.ga.gov/gac/40-7-19 →
Chattahoochee County cottage food — FAQ
Is a home kitchen allowed for cottage food in Chattahoochee County, Georgia?
According to our research: home kitchen is allowed. Restrictions: Must be produced in operator's primary domestic residence home kitchen only. Secondary homes, vacation homes, or motor homes do not qualify. Only non-potentially hazardous foods permitted.
Is a health inspection required for home bakers in Chattahoochee County?
Inspection: Upon-complaint. Trigger: Complaint-based only under HB 398 (eff. July 2025). GDA may enter premises upon complaint or public health emergency..
Do I need a home occupation permit in Chattahoochee County?
Home occupation permit: Conditional. Georgia state law does not preempt local zoning. Cottage food operators must check with Chattahoochee County to determine if a home-based business is allowed in their zoning district and whether a home occupation permit is required. Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning) is located in Chattahoochee County; operators on military installation land should confirm applicable rules.
What is the Georgia cottage food sales cap?
Georgia state law caps cottage food sales at None. County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.
Where to verify Chattahoochee County rules
Compare neighboring counties
Other Georgia counties
Chattahoochee County vs. bordering counties
| Regulation | Chattahoochee County This county | Marion County | Stewart County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home kitchen allowed | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Separate dedicated kitchen | No | No | No |
| Pets allowed | Not specified in state law; products must not be contaminated | No specific state prohibition, but pets should be excluded from food prep areas per good manufacturing practices. | No explicit pet restriction in Georgia HB 398 cottage food law. |
| Inspection required | Upon-complaint | Upon-complaint | Upon-complaint |
| On-site customer pickup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| On-site signage | Conditional | Conditional | Conditional |
| Delivery / pickup | Under HB 398 (eff. July 2025): direct-to-consumer sales, online sales, sales to retail stores, restaurants, and interstate sales are all pe… | Under HB 398, sales permitted via wholesale, retail, online, and direct. Delivery allowed. No geographic sales restriction within Georgia; … | Georgia HB 398 allows all sales channels including direct from home, online, through retailers, restaurants, wholesalers, and interstate sa… |
| Home occupation permit | Conditional | Varies | Conditional |
| Local business license | Varies | Yes | Varies |
| Restrictions | Must be produced in operator's primary domestic residence home kitchen only. Secondary homes, vacation homes, or motor homes do not qualify… | Georgia HB 398 (eff. July 1, 2025) dramatically expanded cottage food rules. No license or fee required. Complaint-based inspections only. … | Georgia HB 398 (effective July 1, 2025): no license or fee required, complaint-based inspections only, interstate sales allowed, all sales … |
| Food storage | Ingredients and finished products must be stored appropriately in the domestic residence | All cottage food products must be stored to prevent contamination; non-TCS foods only. | Non-TCS foods only. Standard GMP storage. |
| Population | 9,402 | 7,508 | 5,689 |
Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to Georgia'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.