How to Start a Food Truck in Massachusetts (2026)



Last updated: February 25, 2026

Starting a food truck in Massachusetts requires navigating permits from multiple agencies at the state and local level. There is no single statewide food truck permit – you need a separate Mobile Food Establishment (MFE) permit from the local Board of Health in every city and town where you operate. Massachusetts also requires mandatory allergen awareness training (unique to MA), a 6.25% meals tax on all prepared food (plus up to 0.75% local surcharge), and a commissary kitchen agreement in most metro-area municipalities. LLC formation costs $500-$520 – among the highest in the nation. This guide covers every requirement from official Massachusetts sources.

Food Truck Requirements in Massachusetts at a Glance

Requirement Agency Cost Timeline
LLC Formation (Certificate of Organization) Secretary of the Commonwealth $500-$520 1-2 business days (online)
Mobile Food Establishment Permit Local Board of Health (each city/town) $100-$500+ per municipality 2-4 weeks per municipality
Certified Food Protection Manager (ServSafe) DPH / ANSI-accredited exam $170-$200 Valid 5 years
Allergen Awareness Training DPH ~$22 Required before operating
Hawker & Peddler License Division of Standards $62/year 2-4 weeks
Fire Safety Inspection Local Fire Department $150 (Boston) Before operating
Workers’ Compensation Insurance DIA (private carriers) Varies by payroll Before hiring first employee
General Liability Insurance Private Carrier ~$1,000-$3,000/year Before starting operations
Commercial Auto Insurance Private Carrier ~$2,000-$4,000/year Before operating vehicle
Federal EIN IRS Free Immediate (online)

How to Start a Food Truck in Massachusetts (Step by Step)


Step 1: Form Your Business Entity

Register an LLC with the Secretary of the Commonwealth ($500 by mail, $520 online). Apply for a free federal EIN from the IRS. File a Business Certificate with your city/town clerk if operating under a trade name ($25-$65).

Step 2: Get Food Safety Certified

Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM): At least one person in charge must hold a valid food safety certification from an ANSI-accredited program (ServSafe Manager is the most common). Cost: $170-$200 for course + exam. Valid for 5 years.

Allergen Awareness Training: Massachusetts is one of the few states that mandates allergen awareness training. At least one CFPM must complete this training. You must also display a DPH-approved allergen awareness poster in your truck and advise customers to notify staff of allergies. The ServSafe Allergens (MA-specific) course costs about $22 online.

Step 3: Secure a Commissary Kitchen

Most Massachusetts municipalities in the Boston metro area require food trucks to operate from a licensed commissary kitchen. Under 105 CMR 590, the local Board of Health determines whether your operation needs a servicing area based on your plans and menu. In Boston, a commissary is mandatory – you must have a written agreement with a certified kitchen and report to it twice daily. Typical commissary rental: $500-$2,000/month.

Step 4: Apply for Local Permits

Mobile Food Establishment (MFE) Permit: There is no statewide food truck permit. You need a separate permit from the local Board of Health in every city/town where you plan to operate. Each municipality sets its own fees and requirements. The Board of Health inspects your truck before issuing the permit. See the Mass.gov MFE Q&A for state standards.

Hawker & Peddler License: Required from the Division of Standards ($62/year). Requires a Certificate of Character signed by your local Chief of Police.

Fire Safety Inspection: If your truck has grease-producing appliances (grills, stoves, fryers), you need a UL 300 wet chemical fire suppression system (NFPA 96 compliant) and a fire department inspection. In Boston, the fire permit inspection costs $150. Propane limits in Boston: maximum 200 lbs aggregate (two 100-lb tanks).

Boston-specific: Food truck permit ($500/year), health permit ($100/year), fire inspection ($150). Public spots are assigned by lottery. Apply at boston.gov.

Step 5: Get Insurance Coverage

General liability insurance is required by most municipalities and event organizers. Typical minimum: $1 million per occurrence. Cost: $1,000-$3,000/year.

Commercial auto insurance is required by Massachusetts law for all commercial vehicles. State minimums: $25,000/$50,000 bodily injury + $30,000 property damage. Cost: $2,000-$4,000/year.

Workers’ compensation is mandatory for any employer with employees through DIA-regulated private carriers.

Step 6: Register for Meals Tax

All prepared food sales from food trucks are subject to the 6.25% Massachusetts meals tax. Municipalities that have adopted the local option add up to 0.75% (maximum combined rate: 7.0%). Food trucks are explicitly classified as restaurants under Massachusetts tax law. Register through MassTaxConnect and file monthly returns by the 30th of the following month.

Cost to Start a Food Truck in Massachusetts

Item Cost Notes
LLC Certificate of Organization $500-$520 One-time filing fee
Annual Report $500-$520/year Due annually on formation anniversary
Business Certificate (DBA) $25-$65 Filed with city/town clerk
Federal EIN Free IRS, immediate online
ServSafe Manager certification $170-$200 Valid 5 years
ServSafe Allergen training (MA) ~$22 Massachusetts requirement
Hawker & Peddler License $62/year Division of Standards
Boston food truck permit $500/year Other cities vary
Boston health permit $100/year Other cities vary
Boston fire inspection $150 Required if grease-producing appliances
General liability insurance $1,000-$3,000/year $1M per occurrence
Commercial auto insurance $2,000-$4,000/year Required by MA law
Workers’ comp insurance Varies Required at 1+ employees
Commissary kitchen rental $500-$2,000/month Required in most metro areas

Estimated total first-year regulatory costs (permits, licenses, insurance only): $8,000-$15,000+ (does not include food truck vehicle, equipment, inventory, or operating capital)



Related Massachusetts Business Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a statewide food truck permit in Massachusetts?

No – there is no single statewide permit. You need a separate Mobile Food Establishment (MFE) permit from the local Board of Health in every city and town where you operate. Each municipality has its own fees, requirements, and application process.

Do I need a commissary kitchen for a food truck in Massachusetts?

In most Boston-area municipalities, yes. Boston requires a written commissary agreement with a certified kitchen (report twice daily). Cambridge also requires a licensed commissary. The local Board of Health determines the requirement based on your truck’s capabilities and menu. Typical rental: $500-$2,000/month.

What is the meals tax rate for food trucks in Massachusetts?

All prepared food sales are subject to the 6.25% Massachusetts meals tax. Cities that have adopted the local option add up to 0.75% for a maximum combined rate of 7.0%. Food trucks are explicitly classified as restaurants under Massachusetts tax law.

Is allergen training required for food trucks in Massachusetts?

Yes. Massachusetts mandates allergen awareness training for at least one Certified Food Protection Manager. You must also display a DPH-approved allergen awareness poster and advise customers to notify staff of food allergies.

What fire safety equipment do I need for a food truck in Massachusetts?

If your truck has grease-producing appliances (grills, fryers, stoves), you need a UL 300 wet chemical fire suppression system (NFPA 96 compliant), plus a fire extinguisher. Semi-annual professional inspection is required. In Boston, propane is limited to 200 lbs aggregate.

How much does it cost to start a food truck in Massachusetts?

First-year regulatory costs (permits, licenses, insurance) typically run $8,000-$15,000+ before the cost of the truck itself ($30,000-$175,000), equipment, inventory, and operating capital. Massachusetts has some of the highest LLC fees ($500 formation + $500/year annual report) in the country.


Robert Smith
About the Author

Robert Smith has run a licensed private investigation firm for 8 years from the Florida-Georgia state line - where he learned firsthand how wildly business licensing rules differ between states just miles apart. He personally researched requirements across all 50 states and D.C., reviewing hundreds of government sources over hundreds of hours to build guides he wished existed when he started. Not a lawyer or accountant - just a business owner who has done the research so you don't have to.