Vendor Temperature & Allergen Rules - Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California enforces food-safety standards that affect street vendors, temporary food stands, mobile food facilities and other food service operations. This guide summarizes temperature control obligations, allergen disclosure practices, permitting pathways and enforcement contacts that apply within the Los Angeles area. Where the city delegates public-health enforcement to Los Angeles County or follows the California Retail Food Code, the cited official pages are referenced for requirements and inspections. Read the action steps to keep food safe, inform customers about allergens, and maintain required records.
Temperature & Allergen Requirements
Temperature control for potentially hazardous foods follows California retail food standards: cold holding at 41 F or below and hot holding at 135 F or above when food is kept out of time as a public health control. For allergen disclosure, vendors must be prepared to identify major food allergens on request and follow any labeling requirements applicable to prepackaged foods. Specific operational requirements depend on the permit type and local inspection rules referenced below [1] [2].
Penalties & Enforcement
Enforcement responsibility for food-safety and vending compliance in Los Angeles typically rests with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Environmental Health Division, unless the City specifies another delegated agency. Inspectors may order corrective actions, seize unsafe food, suspend or revoke permits, and refer matters for civil or criminal prosecution when there is imminent health risk or repeated noncompliance.
- Fines and monetary penalties: amounts not specified on the cited pages; see official enforcement pages for fee schedules and penalties.
- Non-monetary sanctions: corrective orders, closure of operations, permit suspension or revocation, and seizure of unsafe food.
- Complaint and inspection pathway: complaints and routine inspections are handled by Los Angeles County Environmental Health; contact details appear on the cited enforcement pages [2].
- Appeal and review: appeal routes and time limits are administered per the enforcing agency s procedures; specific appeal deadlines are not specified on the cited pages.
Applications & Forms
The primary permit types are Temporary Food Facility permits and Mobile Food Facility permits. Application instructions, required checklists, and submission portals are published by Los Angeles County Environmental Health and by the California Department of Public Health for code reference [2] [1]. If no specific form is required by the city, the county permit will usually apply.
- Temporary Food Facility permit: name and submission method are provided on the county page; fees and forms vary by event and are listed on the county portal.
- Mobile Food Facility permit: application and requirements are listed by the enforcing agency; check the official county instructions for plan review and vehicle requirements.
Common Violations
- Improper temperature control of potentially hazardous foods.
- Operating without a required temporary or mobile food permit.
- Poor allergen communication or failure to identify ingredients on request.
- Failure to comply with an inspector s corrective order.
FAQ
- Do temperature standards apply to street vendors?
- Yes. Vendors handling potentially hazardous foods must maintain safe cold and hot holding temperatures and use approved refrigeration or hot-holding equipment.
- Must vendors label allergens on foods sold to consumers?
- Vendors should be able to identify major food allergens and follow labeling rules for prepackaged foods; specific local labeling rules depend on permit type and are set by the enforcing agency.
- Who inspects food vending in Los Angeles?
- Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Environmental Health Division is the primary inspector for many food vendors in the city; check local city pages if the city issues separate permits.
How-To
- Confirm the permit type you need: temporary food facility or mobile food facility, and review the application checklist on the county site.
- Equip your unit with calibrated thermometers and approved temperature-control equipment; document daily temperature logs for inspections.
- Train staff to answer allergen inquiries and keep ingredient records accessible for consumers and inspectors.
- Schedule any required plan review or inspection and respond promptly to corrective actions to avoid suspension or fines.
Key Takeaways
- Maintain 41 F or below for cold holding and 135 F or above for hot holding as a baseline.
- Obtain the correct temporary or mobile food permit before operating.
- Prepare allergen information and ingredient records for customers and inspectors.
Help and Support / Resources
- Los Angeles County Department of Public Health - Environmental Health
- California Department of Public Health - Food and Drug Branch
- City of Los Angeles - City Clerk (ordinances and municipal code)