Buy Local Ohio

Note: This article was updated May 3, 2023

Direct marketing at farmers markets is a great way to sell your products and connect with your local community, and we have seen a booming interest when it comes to selling and buying locally over the past three years. On this Legal with Leah, Ohio Farm Bureau’s Policy Counsel, Leah Curtis fills us in on what we need to know as far as licensing goes for selling at a farmers market or even for goods made and sold from home.

Ohio Farm Bureau · Legal With Leah – Farmers Markets And Direct Marketing

Listen to Legal with Leah, a podcast featuring Ohio Farm Bureau’s Policy Counsel Leah Curtis discussing topics impacting farmers and landowners.

Transcript

Ty Higgins [00:00:00] Direct marketing at farmers markets. A great way to sell your products and connect with your local community. And we’ve seen an interest boom when it comes to selling and buying locally over the past three years. On this Legal with Leah, find out what you need to know as far as licensing goes for selling at a farmers market or even for food you make and sell from your home. To walk us through the do’s and don’ts, we have Ohio Farm Bureau Policy Counsel Leah Curtis joining us.

Ty Higgins [00:00:25] My first question is very general: Do you need any sort of license to sell food at a farmers market?

Leah Curtis [00:00:31] So it is going to depend on what you’re going to sell. So favorite lawyer answer: It depends. Generally, when someone’s selling food, they need a retail food establishment license from the local health department. However, there are exceptions from that requirement that are particular to selling at farmers markets, particularly when you’re limiting your sales to certain products.

Ty Higgins [00:00:54] So what are the products we can sell without a license?

Leah Curtis [00:00:56] So a farmer can sell fresh and unprocessed fruits and vegetables, properly labeled maple syrup, sorghum or honey, certain amounts of commercially prepackaged food, so long as they are less than 100 cubic feet of your space and they’re non-hazardous, which kind of generally means they don’t require any sort of temperature or time control. And then any products that are deemed to be cottage foods. Those things can all be sold at a farmers market without having that retail food license.

Ty Higgins [00:01:24] All right. So let’s unpack a few of those foods. Fresh and unprocessed fruits and vegetables would mean what?

Leah Curtis [00:01:31] So this means that you are selling the fruit or vegetable in its whole form. You’ve not cut it. You’ve not processed it into any other product. So, for example, if you have whole tomatoes, you have full watermelons, that’s fine. If you are slicing any of those in half, putting wrap around them and then selling them, that’s not going to be okay. So you do have to sell them in that kind of whole form without any additional processing to them.

Ty Higgins [00:01:53] You mentioned the term cottage foods. What’s that?

Leah Curtis [00:01:56] So cottage foods are distinct list of food types that because they have a low food safety risk, you are permitted to make them in your home and sell them without any sort of license. So a few examples are baked goods like cookies or breads, candies, jams, jellies, fruit butters, granola, popcorn, dry cereal, nut and snack mixes, dry baking mixes, dry herbs, seasoning blends and tea blends. So the Department of Agriculture does have a fact sheet available on its website that has a full list of those cottage foods. But generally, they’re things that are dry, they don’t have to be refrigerated and they have a very low food safety risk.

Ty Higgins [00:02:32] Really easy to find that PDF online. If you just Google Ohio Cottage Food Law, you’ll find that ODA website and all those items that Leah was discussing. A lot of people, as I mentioned over the past three years, they are finding more avenues to sell direct to consumer. They want to sell their livestock products that way as well. Meats, eggs at a farmers market… How can those type producers do that?

Leah Curtis [00:02:55] So livestock products are going to be a little bit different. If you want to sell meat or eggs at a farmers market, you’re going to need to obtain a retail food establishment license from the local health department. Many people that are going to sell those things at a farmers market will get what’s called a mobile license, so that can allow them to move between multiple markets. Those products are generally going to require some sort of refrigeration or temperature control. So they should certainly talk to their health department about what is going to be necessary to meet those requirements, and with meat, it’s generally going to need to come from an inspected facility and be labeled properly to be sold. So you’ll want to make sure you check all those boxes if you want to sell those livestock products.

Labor has always been an issue, mainly because we are a seasonal operation. So that's a challenge finding somebody who only wants to work three months out of a year, sometimes up to six months.
Mandy Way's avatar
Mandy Way

Way Farms

Farm Labor Resources
I appreciate the benefit of having a strong voice in my corner. The extras that are included in membership are wonderful, but I'm a member because of the positive impact to my local and state agricultural communities.
Ernie Welch's avatar
Ernie Welch

Van Wert County Farm Bureau

Strong communities
I see the value and need to be engaged in the community I live in, to be a part of the decision-making process and to volunteer with organizations that help make our community better.
Matt Aultman's avatar
Matt Aultman

Darke County Farm Bureau

Leadership development
Farm Bureau involvement has taught me how to grow my professional and leadership experience outside of the workforce and how to do that in a community-centric way.
Jaclyn De Candio's avatar
Jaclyn De Candio

Clark County Farm Bureau

Young Ag Professionals program
With not growing up on a farm, I’d say I was a late bloomer to agriculture. I feel so fortunate that I found the agriculture industry. There are so many opportunities for growth.
Jenna Gregorich's avatar
Jenna Gregorich

Coshocton County Farm Bureau

Growing our Generation
Knowing that horticulture is under the agriculture umbrella and having Farm Bureau supporting horticulture like it does the rest of ag is very important.
Jared Hughes's avatar
Jared Hughes

Groovy Plants Ranch

Groovy Plants Ranch
If it wasn't for Farm Bureau, I personally, along with many others, would not have had the opportunity to meet with our representatives face to face in Washington.
Austin Heil's avatar
Austin Heil

Hardin County Farm Bureau

Washington, D.C. Leadership Experience
So many of the issues that OFBF and its members are advocating for are important to all Ohioans. I look at OFBF as an agricultural watchdog advocating for farmers and rural communities across Ohio.
Mary Smallsreed's avatar
Mary Smallsreed

Trumbull County Farm Bureau

Advocacy
Suggested Tags: