2026 guide
Cottage food laws in North Carolina (2026).
Sales caps, label requirements, shipping rules, and what you can sell from your home kitchen.
Annual cap
None
Online orders
Allowed
Shipping
Allowed
Permit
Inspection
The short version
No annual cap in North Carolina. Track sales for your books, but the state doesn't throttle you. You can ship. Online orders are fine. Home Processor inspection required. No cap.
What you can sell in North Carolina
Cottage food laws generally allow non-potentially-hazardous foods — items that don't require refrigeration for safety. Common allowed items include:
- Cookies, brownies, biscotti
- Breads, rolls, bagels
- Cakes (no cream/custard fillings)
- Pies (fruit, not cream)
- Jams, jellies, fruit butters
- Granola, trail mix, candy
- Dry mixes & spice blends
- Roasted coffee beans
Items requiring refrigeration (cream pies, cheesecakes, meat) are typically prohibited. Confirm specifics with your state agency.
Every label in North Carolina must include
- Producer name & address
- Product name
- Ingredients
- Allergens
- Net weight
Skip the formatting headache.
Siftii auto-generates North Carolina-compliant labels from your recipes — ingredients in descending weight, allergen statements, the works.
Generate compliant labelsTracking your sales
North Carolina doesn't cap your sales, but you still need clean records for taxes and audits. Siftii logs every order automatically — markets, online, custom — so you have a defensible number when the IRS or state asks.
Frequently asked questions
+ What's the cottage food sales limit in North Carolina for 2026?
North Carolina has no annual cap on cottage food sales as of 2026.
+ Do I need a permit to sell baked goods from home in North Carolina?
Yes. North Carolina requires a kitchen inspection before selling.
+ Can I ship baked goods from North Carolina?
Yes. North Carolina allows cottage food shipping in 2026. Check carrier requirements for perishables.
+ Can I take online orders in North Carolina?
Yes. You can take orders online for in-person pickup or delivery (and shipping where allowed).
+ What has to be on my label?
North Carolina requires: Producer name & address; Product name; Ingredients; Allergens; Net weight.
+ Is this legal advice?
No. This page summarizes public guidance. Confirm details with the North Carolina Department of Agriculture or Health before selling.
Nearby states
Run your North Carolina cottage bakery like a real business.
Siftii is the bakery OS for cottage operators — orders, labels, sales tracking, and compliance, all in one place. Free to start.
Create a free accountInformational only — not legal advice. Last reviewed 2026. Verify with the North Carolina Department of Agriculture or Health before selling.