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Β· Β· StreetLegal Team

How to Get a Food Truck Permit in Charlotte, NC (2026 Guide)

Food truck parked in Charlotte serving customers

Charlotte's food truck scene has grown significantly with the city's broader expansion β€” but the permitting system is split between multiple agencies that catch first-time operators off guard. This guide covers every permit you need, realistic fees, commissary requirements, and the real rules for where you can set up in the Queen City.

North Carolina Disclaimer

Food truck requirements in Charlotte span both city and county jurisdiction. Mecklenburg County handles health permits; the City of Charlotte handles business and zoning approvals. Always verify current requirements with each agency directly, as fees and rules change.

In This Guide

Use the section headings below to jump through the guide quickly.

The Charlotte Food Truck Licensing Landscape

Operating a food truck in Charlotte means navigating both city and county layers. Charlotte sits mostly in Mecklenburg County, and the county's Environmental Health Department is your first stop β€” they handle all food establishment inspections and permitting. The city then requires a business license and zoning compliance.

  • Mecklenburg County Environmental Health (MCEH) β€” Food establishment permit and health inspections for all food trucks
  • City of Charlotte β€” Business license/registration and zoning approval for any fixed or regular location
  • Charlotte Fire Department β€” Fire safety inspection for propane and open-flame cooking equipment
  • NC Department of Revenue β€” State sales tax registration

Charlotte does not require food trucks to operate within a fixed geographic zone, but you need zoning compliance for any single location you use regularly. One-off private events and roving operations have more flexibility.

What Licenses Do You Actually Need?

License / Permit Issuing Authority Fee Renewal
Food Establishment Permit (Mobile) Mecklenburg County Environmental Health $200–$325/year Annually (Jan. 1)
Charlotte Business License City of Charlotte $50–$100 Annually
NC Food Handler Certification NCDHHS-approved provider $10–$25 per person Every 3 years
Food Protection Manager Cert ANAB-accredited (ServSafe, etc.) $35–$125 Every 5 years
Charlotte Fire Safety Inspection Charlotte Fire Department $75–$150 Annually (for propane units)
NC Sales Tax Registration NC Department of Revenue Free Permanent (file returns)

Step 1: Get Your Mecklenburg County Food Establishment Permit

This is your primary operating permit. Mecklenburg County Environmental Health classifies mobile food units (MFUs) separately from brick-and-mortar restaurants, but the health standards are the same. Your truck must pass a physical inspection before the permit is issued.

What You Need to Apply

  • Completed application (available through Mecklenburg County Environmental Health's online portal)
  • Equipment list with manufacturer specifications for all cooking and refrigeration equipment
  • Menu β€” full list of food items you'll prepare and serve
  • Commissary kitchen agreement (signed contract with a licensed commissary in Mecklenburg County or an adjacent county)
  • Food Protection Manager certificate (at least one person on the truck)
  • North Carolina food handler certifications for all employees who handle unpackaged food

The Inspection

After your application is reviewed, an inspector will schedule a physical inspection of your truck. They check handwashing station setup, water supply (potable water tank sizing), wastewater capacity, temperature control, and equipment sanitation. Plan 2–3 weeks for scheduling. If you fail, you'll typically get 10–14 days to correct deficiencies before a re-inspection.

Step 2: Obtain Your Charlotte Business License

Before you can legally operate in Charlotte, you need a business license from the City of Charlotte. This is separate from your Mecklenburg County health permit and must be obtained through the city's business portal.

What You Need

  • Registered business entity (LLC or sole proprietorship) β€” register with the NC Secretary of State if forming an LLC
  • Federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the IRS β€” free, takes minutes online
  • NC Sales & Use Tax registration with the NC Department of Revenue β€” free, required before your first sale
  • Charlotte business license application submitted through the City of Charlotte's online portal

Business license fee: $50–$100/year

Charlotte business licenses renew annually. Apply before you open β€” operating without one carries fines. NC sales tax registration is free and permanent; you'll file quarterly returns after that.

If you plan to hire employees, also register for NC withholding tax with the NC Department of Revenue. This step adds a few days but is straightforward.

Step 3: Secure Your Commissary Kitchen

North Carolina requires all mobile food units to operate from a licensed commissary kitchen. The commissary must hold a current Mecklenburg County food establishment permit (or equivalent county permit). Your application is incomplete without a signed commissary agreement.

Commissary requirements in NC

  • Must be a licensed food establishment β€” shared kitchen spaces, restaurant kitchens, or dedicated commissaries all qualify
  • Must provide storage space for your truck's supplies and ingredients
  • Written commissary agreement is required β€” verbal arrangements are not accepted
  • Commissary must have adequate utilities for cleaning your truck's equipment and disposing of wastewater

Charlotte has a handful of shared commercial kitchens that rent to food truck operators. Expect $250–$500/month for a commissary membership with storage, or $20–$40/hour for occasional use.

Step 4: Pass the Charlotte Fire Department Inspection

If your truck uses propane or has open-flame cooking equipment, the Charlotte Fire Department will conduct an annual inspection. Key items they check:

  • Ansul wet chemical fire suppression system (installed and current inspection tag β€” typically required every 6 months)
  • LP gas connections, shutoff valve accessibility, and ventilation
  • Class K fire extinguisher for cooking areas, ABC for general use
  • Hood and grease-trap setup
  • Electrical safety for any onboard generator or shore power connections

Schedule the fire inspection only when your truck is fully built out and all equipment is installed. A failed first inspection typically means a 2–3 week wait for rescheduling.

Where Can Food Trucks Operate in Charlotte?

Best Operating Locations

  • Private lots with owner permission: The most reliable model in Charlotte β€” written permission is required; many operators set up in parking lots of apartment complexes, office parks, and breweries
  • Charlotte Food Truck Friday: The city-organized weekly food truck event downtown β€” rotating vendors, free to attend for customers, apply through the city's event vendor program
  • Uptown corridor corporate lunch spots: High demand, but typically private property requiring permission from building management
  • Plaza Midwood, NoDa, and South End: High foot traffic neighborhoods where food trucks thrive at breweries and entertainment venues with written permission
  • Catering and private events: Corporate events, weddings, and private parties β€” permits typically covered under your existing food establishment permit; confirm with MCEH if you operate outside Mecklenburg County

Zoning Restrictions

  • Residential-zoned areas are generally off-limits for commercial food truck operations without special approval
  • Parking in city rights-of-way requires a right-of-way encroachment permit from the City of Charlotte β€” these are not routinely issued for food trucks
  • Operating at any fixed location regularly may trigger zoning review; check with Charlotte's Zoning Administration before establishing a regular spot
Charlotte food truck permit costs infographic

First-Year Cost Breakdown

Cost Item Low High Notes
MCEH Food Establishment Permit $200 $325 Prorated if applying mid-year
Charlotte Business License $50 $100 Annual
Fire Inspection $75 $150 Plus Ansul service $150–$350
Ansul System Service $150 $350 Required before fire inspection
Commissary Kitchen (monthly) $250/mo $500/mo Full membership with storage
Food Handler Certs (3 staff) $30 $75 NC-approved online courses available
ServSafe Food Manager Cert $35 $125 Required, 5-year validity
General Liability Insurance $700/yr $1,800/yr Most venues require $1M policy
NC LLC Formation $125 $125 NC Secretary of State filing

Total first-year estimate (excluding vehicle and commissary): roughly $1,365–$3,050 in permits, licenses, certifications, and insurance. With commissary costs, plan for $4,500–$9,000 in year-one operating overhead before food and labor.

Realistic Timeline

1

Weeks 1–2: Entity + insurance + commissary

Form your NC LLC ($125, online with SoS), get your insurance binder, and lock in a commissary agreement. You need these before applying for the health permit.

2

Weeks 2–5: MCEH application and inspection

Submit your Mecklenburg County food establishment permit application. An inspector will schedule your physical truck inspection β€” often 2–3 week wait.

3

Weeks 4–6: Charlotte Fire inspection

Schedule fire inspection with Charlotte Fire Department. Service your Ansul system beforehand to avoid a failed inspection and the rescheduling delay.

4

Week 5–7: Charlotte business license

Apply for your city business license once the health permit is in process. This is typically fast β€” 1–2 weeks once submitted.

βœ“

Week 7–10: Operational

With all permits in hand, you're legal to operate. Keep your health permit and business license visibly posted inside the truck.

Key Tips for Charlotte Food Truck Operators

  • Renewals all happen on January 1 β€” the MCEH permit renews at the start of the year regardless of when you first applied. If you start in October, you're paying again in January. Budget accordingly.
  • South End is competitive but worth it β€” the light rail corridor through South End (LYNX Blue Line) brings consistent foot traffic. Competition for good spots is real; build relationships with property owners early.
  • Brewery partnerships are a proven model β€” Charlotte has 50+ breweries, many of which don't have kitchen facilities. A regular brewery spot with a revenue share or flat weekly fee is one of the most stable revenue streams in the market.
  • Mecklenburg County requires separate permits if you operate in other counties β€” if you take an event in Union County or Gaston County, you need those counties' permits too. NC doesn't have statewide reciprocity for mobile food units.
  • Keep digital copies of all permits β€” Charlotte inspectors may check on-site during high-traffic events. Having PDFs on your phone is faster than fumbling for paper.

Charlotte Food Truck Permit FAQ

What permits do I need?

MCEH Mobile Food Unit (health permit), Charlotte Business Privilege License, and NC sales tax permit. Plus MCFD fire inspection and a commissary agreement.

How much does it cost?

MCEH permit: $200-$325/year. Business license: $50-$100. Total first-year: typically $1,500-$2,000 including commissary and setup.

When does the permit renew?

January 1 every year. If you start in October, renewal is due in January. Set a November reminder.

Can I operate in other NC counties?

No β€” NC has no statewide reciprocity. Each county requires its own health permit.

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