What mobile food vendors in Georgia actually face.
Georgia food service license
State food service license issued by the Georgia health or agriculture department. Required before any food sales. Distinct from local health permits.
Mobile vendor permit PER city
Most cities and counties require a mobile vendor permit for trucks operating within their jurisdiction. Permits typically annual, $100-$1,000+ each. A truck operating across multiple cities accumulates permits quickly.
Commissary requirement
Most jurisdictions require food trucks to have a contracted commissary: a licensed kitchen for food prep, cleaning, water resupply, waste disposal, and overnight truck storage. Commissaries typically charge $300-$800/month plus per-use fees.
Health inspection
Pre-opening inspection by the local health department. Re-inspections annually or biannually. Standards cover food handling, equipment, water systems, refrigeration, pest control, employee health.
Sales tax + lodging exemptions
Food sold from a truck is generally subject to state and local sales tax. Some jurisdictions exempt cold takeout food but tax hot prepared food differently. Verify with the Georgia Department of Revenue.
Commercial auto + general liability
Standard auto policies typically exclude commercial use. Food trucks need commercial auto + general liability + product liability (foodborne illness claims). Specialty insurers (Insureon, FLIP, Mobile Food Service Insurance) typical premium $1,500-$3,500/yr.
A clean handoff, in 7 steps.
Form the LLC
Articles filed with Georgia SOS. $100 state fee.
Get EIN + bank account
Required for all licensing applications and POS processing.
Apply for state food service license
Georgia health or agriculture department. Required before first food sale.
Contract a commissary
Find a licensed commissary BEFORE applying for local permits: most localities require commissary contract as part of the mobile vendor permit application.
Get mobile vendor permits per city
Apply in every city / county you plan to operate. Each has its own permit fee, food handler card requirements, and zone restrictions.
Pass health inspection
Pre-opening inspection. Schedule it BEFORE you start advertising or scheduling events.
Set up insurance
Commercial auto + general liability + product liability + workers comp (if employees). Standard stack runs $1,500-$3,500/yr.
Formation is free. Everything else is optional.
We do not charge a service fee to form your LLC or Corporation. State filing fees still apply and pass through at cost. Add the Compliance Bundle to handle the year-one filings everyone needs.
- LLC or Corporation formation (any state)
- EIN application with the IRS
- Articles of Organization or Incorporation drafted and filed
- Free BOS dashboard for ongoing visibility
- Filing receipts to your document vault
- Everything in Free Formation (no add-on fee)
- Registered Agent service in your state (1 entity)
- Annual Report AutoFile, filed every year on time
- Certificate of Good Standing (1 included per year)
- 1 Amendment included per year (address, member, name)
- Operating Agreement (LLC) or Bylaws (Corp)
- Deadline monitoring across all your filings
Common questions.
Do I need an LLC for my food truck in Georgia?
Yes, for most. Food service carries real liability, foodborne illness, burns, traffic and parking incidents, so a Georgia LLC separating your personal assets matters, and it helps with permits, financing, and event contracts. The formation cost is small next to one claim, so we handle the Georgia LLC so the truck and its risks sit with the business, not you personally.
What is a commissary and why do I need one?
A commissary is a licensed commercial kitchen where food trucks prep, store, and clean, and most Georgia health departments require you to have a commissary agreement because home kitchens are not permitted for commercial food. It is often a surprise cost and a licensing prerequisite. We flag the Georgia commissary requirement so you line one up before applying for permits rather than after a rejection.
Do I need a separate permit for each city my truck operates in?
Often yes: while Georgia sets the food-safety license, individual cities and counties usually require their own mobile-vendor or health permits, so operating across a metro can mean several local permits. This patchwork trips up new operators. We map the Georgia state license plus the local permits for the areas you plan to serve so you are not shut down at a new location.
How much does it cost to start a food truck?
Beyond the truck and equipment, budget for the Georgia food service license, local vending permits, a commissary agreement, insurance, and the LLC, which together are meaningful before your first sale. State and local fees vary, so current service pricing is on the pricing page, and we itemize the Georgia and local permit costs so there are no surprises.
Do I need workers' comp for my food truck?
Once you have employees, Georgia generally requires workers' comp, and a hot, moving kitchen is a real injury risk, so coverage matters practically. A solo operator with no staff often is not required to cover themselves. We flag the Georgia rule so you add workers' comp when you bring on help rather than discovering the gap after a burn or a fall.
Can I prep food at home for my food truck?
Almost never: Georgia health rules generally prohibit preparing commercial food in a home kitchen, which is exactly why the commissary requirement exists. Prepping at home can fail inspection and shut you down. We flag the Georgia rule so you build your prep around a licensed commissary from the start rather than assuming your home kitchen will pass.
Does my truck need a ServSafe or food handler certification?
Yes: Georgia typically requires at least one certified food-protection manager, ServSafe Manager satisfies this, and food handler cards for staff who handle food. It is the same food-safety bar as a restaurant. We flag the Georgia certification requirements so your team is credentialed before the health inspection rather than scrambling to comply after.
Are food sales subject to sales tax in Georgia?
Often yes: prepared food sold from a truck is taxable in most states, and Georgia usually treats ready-to-eat food as taxable even where grocery food is exempt. You collect and remit like any seller. We check Georgia's treatment of prepared food and handle the sales tax registration so you charge correctly from your first event.
Can I work at events and festivals with my truck?
Yes, and it is a major revenue channel, but events usually require their own temporary permits, proof of your Georgia license and insurance, and sometimes a fee or revenue share to the organizer. Each event has its own paperwork. We make sure your Georgia entity, permits, and insurance are in order so you can say yes to events without a compliance scramble each time.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here: we keep the rest tracked.