City Guide

ยท 7 min read ยท StreetLegal Team

Coral Springs Food Truck Permit Guide (2026)

Operating a food truck in Coral Springs, FL means navigating both Broward County and city-level requirements. This guide covers the permits you need, how to sequence them, and what to prepare before you apply. Always confirm current fees directly with the issuing agencies before submitting.

Permits Required in Coral Springs

Coral Springs food truck operators need permits at two levels: Broward County and the city itself. Here are the key approvals you need before opening day:

  • Broward County Mobile Food Unit Permit โ€” issued by the Broward County Health Department (BCHD). This is your primary operating permit and requires a health inspection.
  • Coral Springs Business Tax Receipt โ€” the city's local business license, required for any commercial operation in Coral Springs.
  • Commissary Agreement โ€” a signed agreement with a Broward County-approved commissary kitchen. Required before BCHD issues your mobile unit permit.
  • Florida DBPR Food Service License โ€” if operating at temporary events or catering, DBPR may require a separate Temporary Food Service Establishment permit.
  • Vehicle Registration & Commercial Auto Insurance โ€” required for your food truck vehicle. Confirm minimum coverage requirements with the city.

Fee Schedule

Permit / Fee Type Estimated Amount Renewal
Broward County Mobile Food Unit Permit$350โ€“$600Annual
Coral Springs Business Tax Receipt$75โ€“$150Annual (Oct 1)
Commissary Kitchen Access$300โ€“$900/moMonthly
Health Inspection FeeIncluded in BCHD permitAnnual
Estimated Total First Year (excl. commissary)$425โ€“$750โ€”

Fees are estimates based on Broward County and city schedules. Confirm current amounts with BCHD and the Coral Springs Business Tax Division before applying.

Commissary Requirement

Florida requires all mobile food units to operate from an approved commissary kitchen โ€” no exceptions. The commissary must be permitted by the Broward County Health Department and must provide:

  • Food prep and cold storage space
  • Potable water for filling your truck's onboard tank
  • Wastewater disposal (greywater dump)
  • Cleaning facilities for equipment and utensils

Your commissary agreement must be submitted with your BCHD mobile unit permit application. Lock this down first โ€” it's the most common bottleneck.

Launch Timeline

Step Action Est. Time
1Secure commissary agreement1โ€“2 weeks
2Submit BCHD Mobile Food Unit application + pay fees1 week
3Schedule and pass BCHD health inspection2โ€“4 weeks
4Obtain Coral Springs Business Tax Receipt1โ€“2 weeks
5Confirm location approvals / event permitsOngoing

What to Prepare Before You Apply

Before submitting anything to Broward County or Coral Springs, make sure your truck setup, menu, certifications, and support documents all align. Mismatches between your commissary agreement, equipment list, insurance certificate, and application forms are the most common cause of permit delays โ€” and they create rework even in cities that are otherwise straightforward to navigate.

It also pays to call the Broward County Health Department before treating any checklist as final. Food truck rules shift through fee updates, form revisions, inspection policy changes, and routing changes between city and county offices. StreetLegal helps you organize the stack, but confirm the latest official instructions right before you file.

If you plan to serve at events, food truck parks, or private property beyond your regular spots, each venue type may require its own location approval or temporary event permit. Build that into your timeline โ€” don't assume your mobile unit permit alone covers every location.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a separate permit for each event in Coral Springs?

For private property and food truck parks, your BCHD mobile unit permit typically covers you. For public city events and permitted festivals, the event organizer often pulls a temporary food permit covering all vendors. Always confirm with the event organizer before assuming you're covered.

Can I operate in other Broward County cities with one permit?

The BCHD Mobile Food Unit permit covers operations across Broward County, but some cities (Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood) have additional local requirements. Check with each city's business tax division before vending there.

What's the renewal schedule for Coral Springs food truck permits?

The BCHD permit renews annually. The Coral Springs Business Tax Receipt renews October 1 each year. Mark both in your calendar โ€” operating with an expired permit is an immediate stop-sell violation.

Auto-fill your Coral Springs permit application

StreetLegal can pre-fill your Broward County and city permit forms using your truck profile and uploaded documents.

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Have more questions about food truck permits?

Check out our complete FAQ for answers on costs, timelines, commissary requirements, and how StreetLegal can help.

People also ask about Coral Springs food truck permits

How much does a food truck permit cost in Coral Springs?
Food truck permit costs in Coral Springs vary by permit type. Most operators spend $1,500โ€“$5,000+ in their first year covering health permits, business licenses, fire inspections, and commissary fees. Check the full cost breakdown in our Coral Springs permit guide for exact numbers.
How long does it take to get a food truck permit in Coral Springs?
The full permitting process in Coral Springs typically takes 3โ€“8 weeks depending on inspection scheduling and application completeness. Health department permits usually take the longest. Starting with the right documents in order saves significant time.
Do I need a commissary kitchen to operate a food truck in Coral Springs?
Most Coral Springs food truck operators need a commissary kitchen agreement before the health department will issue their permit. The commissary is your base for food prep, cleaning, and wastewater disposal. Browse commissary kitchens near Coral Springs.
What documents do I need for a Coral Springs food truck permit?
Common documents include your business license, health permit application, commissary agreement, proof of insurance (COI), fire suppression system certificate, vehicle registration, and food handler/manager certification. StreetLegal can help you track all your documents in one place.