Start with a menu draft, equipment list, and site plan. Contact the health department for the latest forms, then submit at least four weeks before service. Expect clarifying questions, especially for novel processes or off-site prep. If fire permits are needed, coordinate concurrently. Book your commissary early and collect signatures. Set reminders for payments and follow-ups. By week five, you should have approvals, equipment ready, staff trained, and a rehearsal run scheduled to validate your flow.
Fees vary widely. Some places charge per event day; others offer seasonal or annual temporary permits that reduce cost if you operate frequently. Ask about nonprofit or farmer’s market rates. Consider a lower-risk menu to reduce inspection burdens and equipment needs. Share a commissary with another vendor to split costs. Track expenses to evaluate whether a recurring market or rotating series of events yields better permit value relative to sales, weather patterns, and staff availability.
If your products qualify as shelf-stable and low risk under local rules, you might operate with simplified permissions or alternative registrations. Not every jurisdiction offers this path, and labeling standards still apply, but the savings can be meaningful. Consider pre-packaged, sealed items with controlled ingredients. Start lean, validate demand, then move into a higher-risk menu with proper hot or cold holding once revenue supports additional equipment, training, and expanded inspection requirements without straining your team.