How to Start a Food Truck in New Jersey (2026)




Last updated: May 3, 2026

How to Start a Food Truck in New Jersey (2026)

Two structural realities define starting a food truck in New Jersey. First, NJ delegates retail food licensing to the local board of health in each municipality – the NJ Department of Health (DOH) maintains the statewide Retail Food Establishments code at Chapter 24 of the State Sanitary Code (N.J.A.C. 8:24), but the actual licenses are issued and inspected by each town. Operating in Newark, Hoboken, and Jersey City on different days requires three separate retail-food licenses, often three plan reviews, and three sets of fees. Most NJ food trucks pick a home county, license there for the lower fee, and add municipal permits one-by-one as their route expands. There is no statewide reciprocity – this is meaningfully different from Texas (HB 2844 reciprocity) or Utah (UCA 11-56 reciprocity).

Second, the commissary requirement under N.J.A.C. 8:24 is enforced more strictly in NJ than in many states. Mobile food units must operate from an approved fixed servicing area (commissary) and return to it daily for cleaning, waste discharge, water-tank refilling, and food restocking. The commissary itself must be a NJ-licensed retail food establishment – parking the truck overnight in a residential driveway and using a home kitchen for food prep is not acceptable. Commissary rates in NJ run $400-$1,200/month depending on metro – a meaningful operating-cost line.

NJ Food Truck Requirements at a Glance

Requirement Agency / Statute Cost Timeline
Mobile Retail Food Establishment License Local board of health (varies by municipality) under N.J.A.C. 8:24 $150-$600 license + $100-$400 plan review 2-6 weeks per municipality
Commissary / Servicing Area Must be NJ-licensed retail food establishment $400-$1,200/month rent Required before licensing
Certified Food Protection Manager ANSI-accredited program (ServSafe / Prometric / NRFSP) $125-$200 per certification 5-year certification cycle
Newark Mobile Peddler License Newark Office of Central Licenses & Permits $600-$1,500 in combined fees Processing only Feb-April annually; 3-6 weeks
Jersey City Mobile Vendor Permit Jersey City Department of Health & Human Services $300-$800 3-5 weeks
Atlantic City Mobile Food Operations Atlantic City municipal licensing $300-$700 Seasonal cycles common
NJ LLC + NJ-REG NJ DORES + Division of Revenue $125 LLC + $75/year annual report NJ-REG within 60 days
Sales Tax Certificate of Authority NJ Division of Taxation Free; collect 6.625% on food sales Before first sale
Workers Compensation Any NJ-licensed carrier (NCCI 9082) $800-$2,500/year per W-2 employee Before first employee

How to Start a Food Truck in New Jersey (Step by Step)

Step 1: Form Your NJ LLC and File NJ-REG

Most NJ food trucks form an LLC for liability protection – $125 Certificate of Formation with NJ DORES, $75 annual report each formation anniversary month. Within 60 days file Form NJ-REG to establish:

  • Sales Tax Certificate of Authority: NJ taxes prepared food and beverage sales at the standard 6.625% sales tax. UEZ reduced rate of 3.3125% does NOT apply to food service – only to qualifying retail tangible personal property in the 32 designated UEZ municipalities.
  • Gross Income Tax withholding for any W-2 staff
  • UI / TDI / FLI accounts: NCCI class code 9082 (Restaurant NOC) or 9079 (Fast Food/Limited Service) typically applies for WC. UI new employer combined rate 2.8% on the first $44,800 of wages per employee.

Step 2: Secure Your Home-County Mobile Retail Food License

Apply through the local board of health in your home municipality. NJ delegates retail food licensing to local boards under N.J.A.C. 8:24, but the substantive food code is statewide. The application typically requires:

  • Plan review: Floor plan of the truck showing equipment layout, water-tank capacity (typically 30-100 gallon potable water + 30-100 gallon waste water), three-compartment sink for warewashing, hot-hold and refrigeration equipment, exhaust hood for cooking, and fire-suppression equipment
  • Equipment specification sheets for refrigerators, freezers, hot-hold cabinets, grills, fryers, and chest freezers – inspector verifies NSF/ANSI certification
  • Menu list with detailed food descriptions for each item to determine the risk tier (low, medium, high)
  • Commissary agreement showing the licensed servicing area where the truck will be cleaned, waste discharged, and supplies restocked
  • Food Protection Manager certification (CFPM)
  • Vehicle inspection – the inspector physically examines the truck before issuing the license

License fees vary by municipality from $150 to $600. Plan review is typically a separate $100-$400 fee. Annual renewal is required and includes re-inspection.

Step 3: Establish Your Commissary or Servicing Area

Under N.J.A.C. 8:24, every NJ mobile food vendor must operate from an approved fixed servicing area (commissary) and return daily for:

  • Cleaning of the food preparation surfaces and equipment
  • Discharging waste water and grease
  • Refilling potable water tanks
  • Restocking food supplies
  • Empty refuse and used cooking oil collection
  • Securing the truck overnight

The commissary itself must be a NJ-licensed retail food establishment with the appropriate facilities. Home kitchens are not acceptable. Common commissary options:

  • Dedicated commissary kitchen networks: Pilotworks (Newark), Common Catering Spaces (Jersey City), Central NJ Commissary (Carteret), Atlantic City commissary spaces
  • Underutilized restaurant space: Many NJ restaurants license a portion of their kitchen as a commissary servicing area for 1-3 food trucks
  • Catering company kitchens: Often have spare licensed capacity
  • Church / community center kitchens: Possible if licensed as retail food establishments

Monthly commissary rates: $400-$700 in suburban areas, $800-$1,200 in Hudson County and shore peak season. Plan to lock in your commissary BEFORE applying for the truck license – inspectors verify the commissary agreement at plan review.

Step 4: License the Truck in Every NJ Municipality Where You Operate

This is the structural twist that catches NJ food truck operators most often. NJ has no statewide reciprocity for mobile food licensing. Every municipality where the truck operates requires its own permit. Operating in Newark on Mondays, Jersey City on Wednesdays, and Hoboken on Fridays = three separate permits.

Newark Mobile Peddler License

Newark issues mobile peddler / food truck permits through the Office of Central Licenses & Permits within the Department of Finance. Significant Newark twists:

  • Application processing window: February through April only – applications submitted outside that window are held until the next cycle
  • Vehicle plate inspection: The applicant must bring the truck to the city’s processing center for physical inspection; Newark affixes a city vendor plate after approved inspection
  • Separate license per cart/truck and per agent: Each truck/cart needs its own license, and every agent or representative working under the license needs their own peddler card
  • Combined fees: $600-$1,500 first year including license, plate, agent cards, and processing fees
  • Timeline: 3-6 weeks from complete application to license issuance

Jersey City Mobile Vendor Permit

Jersey City permits mobile vendors through the Department of Health and Human Services. Restrictions include limited approved vending zones (parts of the Newport waterfront, Liberty State Park area, Journal Square commercial corridor) and seasonal scheduling. Fees typically run $300-$800 per truck per year.

Atlantic City Mobile Food Operations

Atlantic City handles mobile food permits through municipal licensing. The shore-season pattern dominates – most AC mobile food vendors operate Memorial Day through Labor Day with limited shoulder operations. Fees run $300-$700. The casino-corridor street vending is heavily regulated; brand or franchise operators often partner with casino operators rather than operate independent street routes.

Hoboken seasonal Mobile Vendor permits

Hoboken issues seasonal mobile vendor permits with restrictions on hours, locations (excluding most of Washington Street and Pier A Park during peak hours), and noise. Fees $200-$500. Hoboken’s Restaurant Row makes mobile vending difficult to scale beyond a few locations.

Other municipalities

Smaller towns (Princeton, Morristown, Red Bank, Asbury Park, Wildwood) typically have simpler permit processes with $100-$400 fees. Many shore towns issue summer-only seasonal permits. Always verify with the specific town’s clerk or board of health before scheduling routes.

Step 5: Certify Your Food Protection Manager

Every NJ Mobile Retail Food Establishment must have at least one Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM) whose certification comes from an ANSI-accredited program. Approved options:

  • ServSafe Manager (National Restaurant Association) – most common
  • Prometric Food Safety Manager Certification
  • National Registry of Food Safety Professionals (NRFSP) Food Protection Manager
  • 360training Food Manager Certification

Certification is good for 5 years. Cost runs $125-$200 per certification. The CFPM does not have to be physically present on the truck at all times but must be an employee of the operation and reachable for compliance questions during operating hours. Larger operations typically have multiple certified managers to cover schedule rotation.

Step 6: Get Insurance

  • General Liability ($1M typical, $2M for event-heavy operations): Required by most municipalities, commissaries, and event organizers
  • Commercial Auto with Mobile Food Truck endorsement: Standard auto insurance won’t cover business use; the food-truck endorsement adds 30-50% to premium
  • Equipment / Inland Marine: Covers the truck and its equipment for damage, theft, fire (the truck itself is high-value collateral – $50K-$150K replacement cost)
  • Workers Compensation: Required at 1+ employee under N.J.S.A. 34:15. NCCI class code 9082 (Restaurant NOC) or 9079 (Fast Food/Limited Service) – typical premium $800-$2,500/year per W-2 employee
  • Product Liability (often included in GL): Foodborne illness coverage

Step 7: Operate Within NJ’s Seasonal Pattern

NJ food trucks face a strong seasonal pattern. Year-round-viable markets:

  • Newark / Jersey City / Hoboken: Year-round office and university foot traffic; outdoor weather affects volume but base demand is consistent
  • Princeton corridor / New Brunswick: Year-round demand from pharma campuses and Rutgers
  • Major NJ events: Atlantic City conventions, MetLife Stadium events, Bergen and Hudson summer concerts

Highly seasonal markets:

  • Shore counties (Cape May, Atlantic, Ocean, Monmouth): Memorial Day through Labor Day plus shoulder weeks. Many shore food trucks earn 70%+ of annual revenue in these 14-16 weeks. Ocean City, Wildwood, Seaside Heights, Long Branch, and Belmar are core markets.
  • Festival routes: Spring through fall NJ event circuit (Atlantic City Airshow, Newark Greek Festival, Jersey Shore Food Truck Festival, Battle Hill Food Truck Festival, etc.) drives lump-sum revenue but has gaps

NJ Food Truck Market Context: Where the Demand Is

NJ’s small-state geography concentrates food truck demand in three distinct market zones:

  • Hudson + Essex urban core (Newark, Jersey City, Hoboken): Year-round corporate lunch traffic, university/student demand at Rutgers Newark and NJIT, heavy event scene. Newark food trucks operate year-round with peak season May-October.
  • Princeton + corporate corridor (Mercer, Middlesex, Somerset): Pharma campus lunch programs, Rutgers, Princeton University. Many corporate campuses run scheduled food truck rotations.
  • Shore (Cape May, Atlantic, Ocean, Monmouth): Heavy summer-season market driven by Jersey Shore tourism. Atlantic City casinos drive year-round but shoulder-season (Sept-April) volume drops sharply outside the casino corridor. Ocean City, Wildwood, Seaside Heights, and Long Branch are top boardwalk and beach markets.

NJ food truck industry data: established multi-truck operators in Newark and Jersey City gross $300K-$600K/year per truck; shore-season trucks gross $150K-$350K in 4-6 months of peak operation. Solo-operator startup trucks often hit $90K-$180K in their first year as routes stabilize.

Cost to Start a Food Truck in New Jersey (Estimate)

Cost Category Used Truck (refurbished) New Custom Truck
Truck purchase + customization $25,000-$60,000 $80,000-$200,000
NJ LLC + first-year admin $200-$500 $200-$500
Local Mobile Retail Food license + plan review $300-$1,000 $300-$1,000
Newark / Jersey City / Atlantic City permits (1 metro) $600-$1,500 $600-$1,500
Commissary first 3 months rent $1,500-$3,500 $1,500-$3,500
CFPM certification $125-$200 $125-$200
Insurance (GL + Auto + Inland Marine + WC) $2,500-$8,000 $3,500-$10,000
Initial inventory (food, packaging, propane) $2,000-$5,000 $2,000-$5,000
POS / payment processing setup $500-$2,000 $500-$2,000
Marketing + first 3 months working capital $3,000-$10,000 $3,000-$10,000
Approximate first-year minimum $35,000-$95,000 $95,000-$235,000

Recurring costs after year one: commissary rent (~$5,000-$14,000/year), municipal license renewals, vehicle fuel and maintenance, insurance premiums, and ongoing food/supply inventory turnover. Most NJ food trucks reach cash-flow positive within 4-12 months of opening; the shore-season pattern means shore trucks compress the entire annual cycle into roughly 6 months.

Related New Jersey Business Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

What licenses do I need for a NJ food truck?

NJ does not issue a single statewide mobile-food license. You need: (1) NJ LLC or other entity registered with DORES; (2) NJ-REG to set up sales tax (6.625% on prepared food); (3) Mobile Retail Food Establishment license from the local board of health in the municipality where you base your truck (under N.J.A.C. 8:24); (4) separate municipal Mobile Food Vendor permits in each town where you actually operate (Newark, Jersey City, Atlantic City, Hoboken, Trenton, etc. – no statewide reciprocity); (5) commissary agreement with a NJ-licensed retail food establishment; and (6) Certified Food Protection Manager.

Do I really need a separate permit in every NJ town I operate in?

Yes. NJ has no statewide reciprocity for mobile food licensing – this is meaningfully different from states like Texas (HB 2844) or Utah (UCA 11-56). Each municipality’s board of health licenses food trucks independently under the local jurisdiction’s authority. Operating in Newark, Hoboken, and Jersey City on different days of the week requires three separate permits and three plan reviews. Some adjacent towns share licensing arrangements (some Cape May County beach towns coordinate), but most operate independently.

What is the NJ commissary requirement?

Under N.J.A.C. 8:24, every NJ mobile food vendor must operate from an approved fixed servicing area (commissary) and return daily for cleaning, waste discharge, water-tank refilling, and food restocking. The commissary itself must be a NJ-licensed retail food establishment – home kitchens are not acceptable. Commissary rates run $400-$1,200/month depending on metro area. Major commissary networks include Pilotworks Newark, Common Catering Spaces Jersey City, and several Atlantic City and Carteret options. Lock in your commissary BEFORE applying for the truck license.

Are food truck sales taxable in New Jersey?

Yes. NJ taxes prepared food and beverage sales at the standard 6.625% sales tax rate under N.J.S.A. 54:32B. The Urban Enterprise Zone reduced rate (3.3125%) does NOT apply to food service – only to qualifying retail tangible personal property in the 32 designated UEZ municipalities. Food trucks should configure their POS systems to charge 6.625% on every prepared-food sale and remit through their NJ Sales Tax filings. Tipping/gratuities paid voluntarily are not taxable.

Does NJ require a Food Protection Manager certification?

Yes. Every NJ Mobile Retail Food Establishment must have at least one Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM) with certification from an ANSI-accredited program: ServSafe Manager, Prometric, NRFSP, or 360training. The certification is good for 5 years. The CFPM does not have to be onboard the truck at all times but must be an employee of the operation and reachable for compliance questions during operations.

What is the Newark food truck permitting process?

Newark Mobile Peddler licensing runs through the Office of Central Licenses & Permits within the Department of Finance. Applications are processed only February through April annually – missing the window means waiting until the next cycle. Each truck requires physical inspection at the city’s processing center, and Newark affixes a vendor plate after approved inspection. Combined fees run $600-$1,500 first year. A separate license is required for each cart/truck plus separate agent cards for every employee working under the license.

Can I run a NJ food truck without an employee?

Yes. Sole-operator NJ food trucks are common. Without W-2 employees you avoid the workers comp / TDI / FLI / ESSL stack on the employee side, though your own self-employment continues. The trade-off is operating capacity – solo-operator trucks typically run lunch service only or single-shift event work. Adding even one part-time employee triggers the full payroll-tax stack including 1+ employee workers comp under N.J.S.A. 34:15. Many NJ shore-season trucks staff up only for the 3-4 month peak and run solo in shoulder season.

Where do NJ food trucks make the most money?

The two highest-revenue zones are the NYC commuter shed (Newark / Jersey City / Hoboken) which supports year-round corporate-lunch and event volume, and the shore counties (Cape May, Atlantic, Ocean, Monmouth) which deliver compressed but very intense Memorial Day-to-Labor Day demand. Ocean City, Wildwood, Seaside Heights, and Long Branch are top boardwalk and beach markets. Atlantic City casino events and MetLife Stadium event days produce some of the highest single-day revenue numbers in the state.


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.