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Can You Legally Sell Cottage Food to a Restaurant or Grocery Store? (Only 6 States Say Yes)

artisan cottage food products including preserves and packaged baked goods arranged on wood surface

Written by: Amy Larsen

Amy Larsen spent 25 years as a marketing executive helping mutiple industries develop growth strategies - including Food & Beverage. A health scare changed how she thought about food. She founded Butter & Sage Market to rebuild the connection between local food makers and the communities around them. She lives in Round Rock, TX.

Published: June 27, 2026

The dream is real: walk into your favorite local café, hand them a box of sea-salt shortbread, and walk out with a wholesale account. The reality is that for most cottage food vendors in most states, it's not legally possible — yet.

Here's the honest breakdown of who can, who can't, and what your options are if you're not in one of the lucky six.

Why most cottage food laws exclude wholesale

Cottage food laws are designed for direct-to-consumer sales — meaning you sell to the person who eats the product. A restaurant or grocery store is an intermediary: it buys from you and sells to someone else. That's wholesale, and most state cottage food exemptions specifically exclude it.

The reasoning is regulatory. When you add a middleman, food safety accountability gets complicated. Restaurants and retailers are subject to their own commercial food regulations. Stocking a home-kitchen product creates liability that most states haven't been comfortable extending to the cottage food exemption.

That's not a permanent reality — the laws are moving. But it's the current one for most of the country.

The 6 states where cottage food wholesale is currently legal

These are the only states where selling your cottage food products to a restaurant, café, or grocery store is permitted under the cottage food framework — each with important conditions:

California — Class B Cottage Food Operations can sell wholesale, but only within the home county. A kitchen inspection is required to obtain Class B status. TCS foods remain direct-to-consumer only.

Georgia — HB 398 (effective July 1, 2025) opened retail sales to grocery stores and specialty shops. Retailers must display cottage food products in a clearly labeled, separate section. ANSI food safety training is now mandatory for all cottage food operators in Georgia.

Hawaii — Act 195 (effective August 2025) permits wholesale and third-party sales for non-TCS products. TCS foods remain direct-to-consumer only. Registration with HDOA is required.

New York — Wholesale is allowed within New York state. Chocolate-covered items are not permitted in wholesale channels.

Tennessee — Non-perishable products only. Sales are limited to retail stores and specialty shops — not directly to restaurants, caterers, or institutional buyers.

Texas — Non-TCS foods only, and technically the wholesale permission extends to other DSHS-registered cottage food vendors, not to grocery stores or restaurants under the standard cottage food exemption. The rules are nuanced — read your state statute carefully.

If your state isn't on this list, here's what you can do

First and most importantly: don't try to do it anyway. Getting caught selling cottage food products to a restaurant in a state that prohibits it can result in fines, loss of your cottage food status, and food safety scrutiny you absolutely don't need.

Here are legitimate paths worth exploring instead:

Get licensed as a commercial food producer. Most states allow wholesale from a licensed commercial kitchen — renting commissary space might be worth it if wholesale is your real business goal.

Build the relationship now, while you wait. Cottage food wholesale laws are expanding state by state. Introduce yourself to the café owner. Let them taste your product. Tell them you're watching the legislation. When your state opens up, you'll already have a warm lead.

Sell direct to the people who work there. You, at a farmers market or through your online shop, selling to individuals — who happen to work at a restaurant — is still direct-to-consumer. Plenty of vendors have built loyal followings this way.

If you're ready to start selling to real buyers right now, take a look at what direct-to-consumer can do for your business. We've also got a detailed guide on how to approach restaurants and specialty stores when you're in a state that does allow it.

Butter & Sage Market

Reach Buyers Who Are Already Looking for You

While wholesale rules vary by state, direct-to-consumer sales are open to cottage food vendors across the country. Open your Butter & Sage Market shop and connect with buyers in your community who can't wait to find someone exactly like you.

Open Your Shop

Fresh. Local. Sustainable.

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