Willacy County cottage food law.
Willacy County is a county in Texas (pop. 20,308). Texas's Great-tier law gives home bakers a high or unlimited sales cap and multiple sales channels; Willacy County adds its own permit, inspection, and zoning requirements on top. County research shows: home kitchen allowed, inspection not required, home occupation permit not required. Willacy County is a rural Rio Grande Valley county (county seat Raymondville) in deep South Texas near the Gulf Coast. No county zoning authority outside incorporated municipalities. Defaulted to state baseline. Use the links below to check current requirements before you bake.
Willacy County cottage food reports
Zoning, permits, health department rules, and local sources for Willacy County.
County PDFTier: Great
Texas'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 Willacy County
State baseline: Tex. Health & Safety §437.001 et seq.
- Home kitchen allowed
- Yes
- Restrictions
- Texas cottage food law (SB 541, effective Sept 1 2025) allows sale of nearly all non-TCS foods plus TCS foods directly to consumers. Annual gross income cap $150,000 (CPI-indexed). No permit, license, or inspection fee may be required by any local or county authority. Willacy County is a rural Rio Grande Valley county with no county zoning code; state law governs.
- Separate dedicated kitchen
- No
- Pet restrictions
- No specific pet restriction in state cottage food law.
- Water supply
- No specific state cottage food water testing requirement.
- Handwashing
- No specific state cottage food handwashing mandate beyond food safety education requirement.
- Food storage
- Non-TCS foods unrestricted; TCS foods must be held at proper temperatures (≤41°F or ≥135°F).
- Inspection required
- No
- Inspection trigger
- No routine inspection. DSHS or local health authority may act only to prevent an immediate and serious threat to human life or health.
- Home occupation permit
- No
- Permit details
- Texas law explicitly prohibits local health departments and county governments from requiring cottage food producers to obtain any license, permit, or pay any fee. Willacy County has no county zoning ordinance for unincorporated areas.
- Local business license
- No
- On-site customer pickup
- Yes
- On-site signage
- Yes
- Delivery / pickup
- Direct-to-consumer sales anywhere in Texas including home pickup, farmers markets, events, and online (with personal delivery). Non-TCS foods may be sold wholesale through registered cottage food vendors. No interstate shipping.
- Max employees in home
- Not specified in state statute.
- Relevant code section
- No county zoning ordinance identified for unincorporated Willacy County. State law preempts local cottage food regulation.
Willacy County is a rural Rio Grande Valley county (county seat Raymondville) in deep South Texas near the Gulf Coast. No county zoning authority outside incorporated municipalities. Defaulted to state baseline.
Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter 437 – Regulation of Certain Foods, Subchapter A – Cottage Food Production Operations
Full Texas state report (with PDF download) →Verbatim excerpt(2-b) "Cottage food production operation" means an individual, operating out of the individual's home, or a nonprofit organization that: (A) produces at the individual's home or the home of an individual who is a director or officer of the nonprofit organization, as applicable, any food other than: (i) meat, meat products, poultry, or poultry products; (ii) seafood, including seafood products, fish, fish products, shellfish, and shellfish products; (iii) ice or ice products, including shaved ice, ice cream, frozen custard, popsicles, and gelato; (iv) low-acid canned goods; (v) products containing cannabidiol or tetrahydrocannabinol; or (vi) raw milk and raw milk products; (B) has an annual gross income of $150,000 or less from the sale of food described by Paragraph (A), as the department annually adjusts for inflation using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U); (C) sells the foods produced under Paragraph (A) directly to consumers or to a cottage food vendor; and (D) delivers products to the consumer or cottage food vendor at the point of sale or another location designated by the consumer or cottage food vendor.
Source: capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/89R/billtext/html/SB00541F.htm →
Willacy County cottage food — FAQ
Is a home kitchen allowed for cottage food in Willacy County, Texas?
According to our research: home kitchen is allowed. Restrictions: Texas cottage food law (SB 541, effective Sept 1 2025) allows sale of nearly all non-TCS foods plus TCS foods directly to consumers. Annual gross income cap $150,000 (CPI-indexed). No permit, license, or inspection fee may be required by any local or county authority. Willacy County is a rural Rio Grande Valley county with no county zoning code; state law governs.
Is a health inspection required for home bakers in Willacy County?
Inspection: No. Trigger: No routine inspection. DSHS or local health authority may act only to prevent an immediate and serious threat to human life or health..
Do I need a home occupation permit in Willacy County?
Home occupation permit: No. Texas law explicitly prohibits local health departments and county governments from requiring cottage food producers to obtain any license, permit, or pay any fee. Willacy County has no county zoning ordinance for unincorporated areas.
What is the Texas cottage food sales cap?
Texas state law caps cottage food sales at 150000. County rules may add permits or zoning limits on top.
Where to verify Willacy County rules
Compare neighboring counties
Other Texas counties
Willacy County vs. bordering counties
| Regulation | Willacy County This county | Kenedy County | Cameron County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home kitchen allowed | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Separate dedicated kitchen | No | No | No |
| Pets allowed | No specific pet restriction in state cottage food law. | No specific state restriction on pets in home for cottage food operations. | No specific state restriction in cottage food law. |
| Inspection required | No | No | No |
| On-site customer pickup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| On-site signage | Yes | Conditional | Conditional |
| Delivery / pickup | Direct-to-consumer sales anywhere in Texas including home pickup, farmers markets, events, and online (with personal delivery). Non-TCS foo… | Sales allowed direct-to-consumer, at farmers markets, online (statewide), fairs, roadside stands, and through nonprofit organizations (SB 5… | Direct-to-consumer and some indirect sales allowed. Online sales and mail delivery permitted. Products may be sold at direct sales only cha… |
| Home occupation permit | No | No | Varies |
| Local business license | No | No | Varies |
| Restrictions | Texas cottage food law (SB 541, effective Sept 1 2025) allows sale of nearly all non-TCS foods plus TCS foods directly to consumers. Annual… | Texas allows cottage food from residential home kitchens. Annual gross income cap of $150,000 (SB 541, 2025). No registration, permit, or i… | Texas cottage food law (Tex. Health & Safety §437.001 et seq.) requires no license, permit, or registration. No state inspection. Annual gr… |
| Food storage | Non-TCS foods unrestricted; TCS foods must be held at proper temperatures (≤41°F or ≥135°F). | Non-TCS products must be shelf-stable. TCS foods allowed under SB 541 with registration. Proper storage to prevent contamination required. | Non-TCS shelf-stable products. Acidified and fermented foods allowed. |
| Population | 20,308 | 404 | 421,854 |
Cottage food law and municipal zoning interact in non-obvious ways. Before investing in equipment or marketing, talk to Texas'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.