Polk County cottage food law.
Polk County is a county in Tennessee (pop. 17,620). Tennessee has a Good-tier law with a solid baseline (often $50K+ cap). Polk County bakers should check both state registration and local health department permitting. No Polk County-specific cottage food or zoning rules found in 1-2 searches. Defaulting to Tennessee state baseline (Food Freedom Act, Tenn. Code §53-1-125). Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.
Polk County cottage food reports
Full statute, all counties in Tennessee, and authoritative source URLs.
State PDFZoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Polk County.
County PDFTier: Good
Tennessee 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 Polk County
No Polk County-specific cottage food or zoning rules found in 1-2 searches. Defaulting to Tennessee state baseline (Food Freedom Act, Tenn. Code §53-1-125).
Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 53 – Food, Drugs and Cosmetics, Chapter 1 – General Provisions, Part 1, Section 53-1-125 (Tennessee Food Freedom Act, Public Chapter No. 862, SB 693)
Full Tennessee state report (with PDF download) →Verbatim excerptBE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE: SECTION 1. This act is known and may be cited as the "Tennessee Food Freedom Act." ... SECTION 3. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 53, Chapter 1, Part 1, is amended by adding the following as a new section: (a) Notwithstanding part 2 of this chapter, or another law to the contrary, except as provided in this section, the production and sale of homemade food items under this chapter are exempt from all licensing, permitting, inspecting, packaging, and labeling laws of this state, except when the department of health is investigating a reported foodborne illness. (b) The exemption under subsection (a) only applies if the following conditions are satisfied: Non-time/temperature control for safety food homemade food items must be sold either by: The producer to the consumer in person or remotely... county, municipal, and other political jurisdictions [may not restrict] production and sale of homemade food items.
Source: publications.tnsosfiles.com/acts/112/pub/pc0862.pdf →
Polk County cottage food — FAQ
What is the Tennessee cottage food sales cap?
Tennessee state law caps cottage food sales at None. County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.
Where to verify Polk County rules
Compare neighboring counties
Other Tennessee counties
Polk County vs. bordering counties
| Regulation | Polk County This county | Monroe County | Bradley County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home kitchen allowed | — | — | Yes |
| Separate dedicated kitchen | — | — | No |
| Pets allowed | — | — | No specific state restriction in the Food Freedom Act. |
| Inspection required | — | — | No |
| On-site customer pickup | — | — | Yes |
| On-site signage | — | — | Conditional |
| Delivery / pickup | — | — | All sales channels permitted for non-TCS foods: direct-to-consumer, online, wholesale, retail, delivery. No sales cap. |
| Home occupation permit | — | — | Conditional |
| Local business license | — | — | Varies |
| Restrictions | — | — | Tennessee's Food Freedom Act (eff. July 1, 2022) broadly deregulates non-TCS homemade food. No license, permit, inspection, or labeling req… |
| Food storage | — | — | Non-TCS foods only. TCS foods (requiring time/temperature control for safety) are not covered and require standard food establishment licen… |
| Population | 17,620 | 46,489 | 108,859 |
Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to Tennessee'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.