Cottage Food Laws

Cottage Food Laws in South Carolina

Learn the cottage food laws in South Carolina — annual sales limits, license and permit requirements, allowed sales channels, and where you can legally sell homemade food.

At a Glance

🏠
Home Kitchen
Allowed
💰
Annual Sales Limit
No annual sales limit (2026)
📋
License / Permit
Not Required
🌐
Online Sales
Allowed
🌡️
TCS / Refrigerated Foods
Not Allowed

Where You Can Sell

South Carolina cottage food vendors are permitted to sell through the following channels:

Direct to Consumer Farmers Markets Roadside Stands Online / Internet Retail Stores
Pop-Up / Craft Fairs
Allowed
🌎
Interstate Sales
In-State Only
🏪
Wholesale — Important Restrictions

Sources conflict on whether wholesale to retail stores is permitted in South Carolina. Some sources indicate direct-to-consumer only; others indicate wholesale to retail stores is allowed with proper labeling. Verify the current rule directly with the South Carolina Department of Agriculture or SCDHEC before selling to any retail store or restaurant.

Online Sales & Shipping

📦
Carrier Shipping (In-State)
Allowed
🤝
In-Person Transaction Required
No
ℹ️

Online sales and in-state shipping allowed in South Carolina.

License & Permit Requirements

🎓
Food Safety Course
Not Required
🔍
Kitchen Inspection
Not Required

Annual Sales Limits

🎉
No Annual Sales Cap — South Carolina places no limit on your cottage food revenue. Grow as big as your kitchen (and your schedule) can handle!

Acidified & Fermented Foods

Acidified foods include pickles, hot sauces, salsas, fermented vegetables, and other products with a pH at or below 4.6. These are regulated separately in most states.

🫙
Acidified foods are allowed under South Carolina's cottage food law.
No special acidified food course is required in South Carolina.

Important Notes

South Carolina removed its annual sales cap in 2026 and allows both direct sales AND wholesale to retail stores — one of the most vendor-friendly states in the South. No permit or registration required. Online sales with in-state delivery are allowed.

Official Sources

Always verify cottage food laws directly with your state agency — laws change, and we want you selling with confidence.

Information last updated: June 15, 2026. Cottage food laws change frequently — always confirm with your state.

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Step 1

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Step 2

List what you make

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Step 3

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REady When You Are.

It’s free to get started

We know you'll love it here. If you already have a cottage food business, or ready to start one, come on over to Butter & Sage Market. We're connecting neighbors with their local food makers.