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County · Seat: Brevard

Transylvania County cottage food law.

North Carolina·Pop. 33,131

Transylvania County is a county in North Carolina (pop. 33,131). North Carolina has a Good-tier law with a solid baseline (often $50K+ cap). Transylvania County bakers should check both state registration and local health department permitting. County research shows: home kitchen allowed, inspection required, home occupation permit not required. No county-specific cottage food ordinance found for Transylvania County. Western NC mountain county near Brevard. State baseline (02 NCAC 09C .0307) applies. Annual kitchen inspection and pet disqualification rules apply statewide. Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.

Free downloads

Transylvania County cottage food reports

Cover of North Carolina cottage food law PDF report
North Carolina state report

Full statute, all counties in North Carolina, and authoritative source URLs.

State PDF
Cover of Transylvania County county cottage food report
Transylvania County county report

Zoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Transylvania County.

County PDF
State law applies

Tier: Good

North Carolina 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 →
County registration

Health department

Many states delegate cottage food registration and inspection to the county health department. Contact theirs for the local process.

Local zoning

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.

County rules

Home kitchen, inspection, and zoning rules for Transylvania County

State baseline: 02 NCAC 9C.0307

Home kitchen
Home kitchen allowed
Yes
Restrictions
NC state law requires annual home kitchen inspection by NCDA&CS. Pets in the home disqualify the applicant entirely. Shelf-stable, low-risk foods only. Registration required with NC Department of Agriculture. No sales cap.
Separate dedicated kitchen
No
Pet restrictions
No pets allowed in the home at all — presence of pet animals in the home disqualifies the applicant under GMP requirements (21 CFR 117 Subpart B as incorporated by 02 NCAC 09C .0307).
Water supply
Must use an approved water supply; well water may require testing.
Handwashing
Adequate handwashing facilities required as part of the kitchen inspection.
Food storage
Shelf-stable storage required; products must be non-refrigerated.
Inspection & permitting
Inspection required
Yes
Inspection trigger
Annual inspection of home kitchen by NCDA&CS required before registration renewal each year.
Home occupation permit
Varies
Permit details
Transylvania County has a Unified Development Ordinance that may include home occupation provisions. Operators should contact Transylvania County Planning for requirements.
Local business license
Varies
Customer-facing
On-site customer pickup
Yes
On-site signage
Conditional
Delivery / pickup
Sales permitted at farms, farm stands, farmers markets, craft fairs, home delivery, and online (within NC). Indirect sales to stores permitted under state law.
Max employees in home
Not specified in state rule; household members may assist.
Zoning code
Relevant code section
Transylvania County Unified Development Ordinance (home occupation provisions); no specific cottage food county code identified.
Local notes

No county-specific cottage food ordinance found for Transylvania County. Western NC mountain county near Brevard. State baseline (02 NCAC 09C .0307) applies. Annual kitchen inspection and pet disqualification rules apply statewide.

North Carolina statute (state law)

02 NCAC 09C .0307 Registration (North Carolina Administrative Code, Title 02 Agriculture and Consumer Services, Chapter 09 Food and Drug Protection, Subchapter C)

Citation: 02 NCAC 9C.0307
Verbatim excerpt

Starting a home-based food business If you are interested in producing and selling food products for human consumption from your home, you will need to first have your home kitchen inspected before doing so. This includes anyone selling to retail stores, restaurants, or directly to consumers. This also includes anyone opening and repackaging food products or ingredients purchased from other locations. Low risk foods are the only products allowed to be processed in your home kitchen. Low risk food products are items that are shelf stable and do not require refrigeration or freezing. These low-risk food products may include: Baked goods that do not require refrigeration; Jams, jellies, and preserves; Candies; Dried mixes/Spices; Some liquids (i.e. ice tea, coffee, lemonade, etc.); Some sauces (i.e. balsamic dressing, etc.); Acid and acidified foods (i.e. pickles, BBQ sauce, etc.); Freeze dried fruits/vegetables. High risk food products ARE NOT PERMITTED to be produced in your home kitchen and can only be produced commercially under our routine inspection program.

Source: ncagr.gov/divisions/food-drug-protection/food-program/fdpd-food-program-home-processer
Full North Carolina state report (with PDF download) →
Common questions

Transylvania County cottage food — FAQ

Is a home kitchen allowed for cottage food in Transylvania County, North Carolina?

According to our research: home kitchen is allowed. Restrictions: NC state law requires annual home kitchen inspection by NCDA&CS. Pets in the home disqualify the applicant entirely. Shelf-stable, low-risk foods only. Registration required with NC Department of Agriculture. No sales cap.

Is a health inspection required for home bakers in Transylvania County?

Inspection: Yes. Trigger: Annual inspection of home kitchen by NCDA&CS required before registration renewal each year..

Do I need a home occupation permit in Transylvania County?

Home occupation permit: Varies. Transylvania County has a Unified Development Ordinance that may include home occupation provisions. Operators should contact Transylvania County Planning for requirements.

What is the North Carolina cottage food sales cap?

North Carolina state law caps cottage food sales at None. County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.

Nearby in North Carolina

Compare neighboring counties

Quick comparison

Transylvania County vs. bordering counties

RegulationTransylvania County
This county
Jackson CountyHaywood County
Home kitchen allowedYesYesYes
Separate dedicated kitchenNoNoNo
Pets allowedNo pets allowed in the home at all — presence of pet animals in the home disqualifies the applicant under GMP requirements (21 CFR 117 Subp…No pets allowed in the home at all — presence of pet animals in the home disqualifies the applicant under GMP requirements (21 CFR 117 Subp…Pets in the home DISQUALIFY the applicant entirely from the NC Home Processor program
Inspection requiredYesYesYes
On-site customer pickupYesYesConditional
On-site signageConditionalConditionalConditional
Delivery / pickupSales permitted at farms, farm stands, farmers markets, craft fairs, home delivery, and online (within NC). Indirect sales to stores permit…Sales permitted at farms, farm stands, farmers markets, craft fairs, home delivery, and online (within NC). Indirect sales to stores permit…Direct and indirect sales allowed; no sales cap; products must be shelf-stable
Home occupation permitVariesVariesVaries
Local business licenseVariesVariesVaries
RestrictionsNC state law requires annual home kitchen inspection by NCDA&CS. Pets in the home disqualify the applicant entirely. Shelf-stable, low-risk…NC state law requires annual home kitchen inspection by NCDA&CS. Pets in the home disqualify the applicant entirely. Shelf-stable, low-risk…NC requires annual inspection by NCDA&CS. Pets in the home disqualify applicants. Kitchen must meet GMP requirements. No sales cap.
Food storageShelf-stable storage required; products must be non-refrigerated.Shelf-stable storage required; products must be non-refrigerated.Shelf-stable low-risk foods; proper storage required
Population34,38543,98562,152
Important

Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to North Carolina'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.