Boone County cottage food law.
Boone County is a county in Iowa (pop. 26,700). Iowa has a Good-tier law with a solid baseline (often $50K+ cap). Boone County bakers should check both state registration and local health department permitting. County research shows: home kitchen allowed, inspection not required, home occupation permit not required. Iowa state baseline applies. Iowa Code §137F.20 expressly preempts local governments from restricting cottage food operations beyond state law. No Boone County-specific cottage food ordinance found. County zoning may require a home occupation permit for the business aspect but cannot add food safety restrictions beyond state law. Iowa DIAL reorganized in 2023 but cottage food rules unchanged. Medium confidence — county zoning ordinance text not directly retrieved. Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.
Boone County cottage food reports
Zoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Boone County.
County PDFTier: Good
Iowa has a Good-tier cottage food law — solid baseline with moderate restrictions, typically a high sales cap (often $50K+) and standard direct-to-consumer rules. Workable for most home bakers with reasonable scale plans.
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 Boone County
State baseline: Iowa Code §137F.1 / §137F.20
- Home kitchen allowed
- Yes
- Restrictions
- No license, registration, or inspection required under Iowa cottage food exemption (Iowa Code §137F.20). Allowed non-TCS foods include baked goods, candies, condiments, dried goods, pastries, preserves, and snacks. Acidified foods (pickles, salsas) allowed if each batch is pH-tested (pH ≤4.6) or water-activity tested (Aw ≤0.85) with production date labeled. Iowa Code §137F.20(1) expressly preempts local governments from adding restrictions beyond state law.
- Separate dedicated kitchen
- No
- Pet restrictions
- No state or county-specific rule found; good practice is to exclude pets from food prep areas.
- Water supply
- No specific private water testing required under Iowa cottage food law.
- Handwashing
- Standard handwashing practices expected; no formal county requirement beyond state food safety guidance.
- Food storage
- Cottage food products must be stored to prevent contamination; TCS foods not permitted under the cottage food exemption.
- Inspection required
- No
- Inspection trigger
- No routine inspection. Iowa DIAL (Dept. of Inspections, Appeals, and Licensing) may investigate upon complaint of foodborne illness.
- Home occupation permit
- Conditional
- Permit details
- Iowa rural county zoning ordinances typically require a home occupation permit or conditional use approval for home-based businesses in unincorporated areas. Business must be incidental to residential use with no exterior evidence of commercial activity and limited customer traffic. Iowa Code §137F.20(1) preempts food-specific restrictions; Iowa Code §414.33 preempts city-level home business restrictions. County zoning governs unincorporated areas.
- Local business license
- No
- On-site customer pickup
- Yes
- On-site signage
- Conditional
- Delivery / pickup
- Direct-to-consumer sales only under the cottage food exemption. Customers may pick up at home, or operator may sell at farmers markets, roadside stands, or events. No wholesale or retail indirect sales under the cottage food exemption (separate HFPE license required for indirect sales).
- Max employees in home
- No specific limit under Iowa cottage food law; county home occupation rules may limit non-resident employees.
- Relevant code section
- Iowa Code §137F.20 (state preemption of local cottage food restrictions); county zoning ordinance home occupation provisions
Iowa state baseline applies. Iowa Code §137F.20 expressly preempts local governments from restricting cottage food operations beyond state law. No Boone County-specific cottage food ordinance found. County zoning may require a home occupation permit for the business aspect but cannot add food safety restrictions beyond state law. Iowa DIAL reorganized in 2023 but cottage food rules unchanged. Medium confidence — county zoning ordinance text not directly retrieved.
Iowa Code Chapter 137F — Food Establishments and Food Processing Plants, Section 137F.20 — Cottage Food Requirements
Full Iowa state report (with PDF download) →Verbatim excerpt137F.20 Cottage food — requirements. 1. Cottage food is exempt from all licensing, permitting, inspection, packaging, and labeling laws of the state if the food is sold and delivered by the producer directly to the consumer, or delivered by mail or an agent of the producer such as an employee. A producer may sell food to the consumer in person, remotely, by telephone, by internet, or by an agent of the producer. 2. Cottage food sold pursuant to this section shall be affixed or labeled with all of the following information: a. Information to identify the name and address, phone number, or electronic mail address of the person preparing the food. b. The common name of the food. c. The ingredients of the cottage food in descending order of predominance. d. The following statement: "This product was produced at a residential property that is exempt from state licensing and inspection." If the cottage food contains one or more major food allergens, an additional allergen statement must be included on the label identifying each major allergen contained in the food by the common name of the allergen. 137F.1 Definitions (excerpt): "Cottage food" means the production and sale of food produced at a private residence other than time/temperature control for safety food as provided in section 137F.20 and food for resale that is not time/temperature control for safety food. "Cottage food" includes home-processed and home-canned pickles, vegetables, or fruits that have a finished equilibrium pH value of four and six-tenths or lower or a water activity value of eighty-five hundredths or less for which each batch has been measured by a pH meter or a water activity meter and each container that is sold or offered for sale contains the date the food was processed and canned.
Source: legis.iowa.gov/docs/code/137F.pdf →
Boone County cottage food — FAQ
Is a home kitchen allowed for cottage food in Boone County, Iowa?
According to our research: home kitchen is allowed. Restrictions: No license, registration, or inspection required under Iowa cottage food exemption (Iowa Code §137F.20). Allowed non-TCS foods include baked goods, candies, condiments, dried goods, pastries, preserves, and snacks. Acidified foods (pickles, salsas) allowed if each batch is pH-tested (pH ≤4.6) or water-activity tested (Aw ≤0.85) with production date labeled. Iowa Code §137F.20(1) expressly preempts local governments from adding restrictions beyond state law.
Is a health inspection required for home bakers in Boone County?
Inspection: No. Trigger: No routine inspection. Iowa DIAL (Dept. of Inspections, Appeals, and Licensing) may investigate upon complaint of foodborne illness..
Do I need a home occupation permit in Boone County?
Home occupation permit: Conditional. Iowa rural county zoning ordinances typically require a home occupation permit or conditional use approval for home-based businesses in unincorporated areas. Business must be incidental to residential use with no exterior evidence of commercial activity and limited customer traffic. Iowa Code §137F.20(1) preempts food-specific restrictions; Iowa Code §414.33 preempts city-level home business restrictions. County zoning governs unincorporated areas.
What is the Iowa cottage food sales cap?
Iowa state law caps cottage food sales at None. County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.
Where to verify Boone County rules
Other Iowa counties
Boone County vs. bordering counties
| Regulation | Boone County This county | Greene County | Hamilton County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home kitchen allowed | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Separate dedicated kitchen | No | No | No |
| Pets allowed | No state or county-specific rule found; good practice is to exclude pets from food prep areas. | No state or county-specific rule found; good practice is to exclude pets from food prep areas. | No state or county-specific rule found; good practice is to exclude pets from food prep areas. |
| Inspection required | No | No | No |
| On-site customer pickup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| On-site signage | Conditional | Conditional | Conditional |
| Delivery / pickup | Direct-to-consumer sales only under the cottage food exemption. Customers may pick up at home, or operator may sell at farmers markets, roa… | Direct-to-consumer sales only under the cottage food exemption. Customers may pick up at home, or operator may sell at farmers markets, roa… | Direct-to-consumer sales only under the cottage food exemption. Customers may pick up at home, or operator may sell at farmers markets, roa… |
| Home occupation permit | Conditional | Conditional | Conditional |
| Local business license | No | No | No |
| Restrictions | No license, registration, or inspection required under Iowa cottage food exemption (Iowa Code §137F.20). Allowed non-TCS foods include bake… | No license, registration, or inspection required under Iowa cottage food exemption (Iowa Code §137F.20). Allowed non-TCS foods include bake… | No license, registration, or inspection required under Iowa cottage food exemption (Iowa Code §137F.20). Allowed non-TCS foods include bake… |
| Food storage | Cottage food products must be stored to prevent contamination; TCS foods not permitted under the cottage food exemption. | Cottage food products must be stored to prevent contamination; TCS foods not permitted under the cottage food exemption. | Cottage food products must be stored to prevent contamination; TCS foods not permitted under the cottage food exemption. |
| Population | 26,234 | 8,888 | 14,773 |
Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to Iowa'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.