How to Start a Food Truck Business

How do I start a food truck business? To start a food truck business, choose your concept and menu, write a business plan, form an LLC, secure a commissary kitchen, buy or lease a truck, get all required licenses (business, health department, food handler, mobile vendor), buy insurance, and launch on a tested route or event schedule.

Launching a food truck business is the fastest way into the restaurant industry β€” typical startup cost is $50,000–$200,000 vs. $300,000–$1M for a brick-and-mortar restaurant, and you can be serving paying customers within 60–120 days of forming the business. The trade-off: tight margins, intense health-department regulation, long days, and serious weather and location risk that brick-and-mortar restaurants do not face. This guide walks through every step to start a food truck legally and profitably, what the real costs are, and the mistakes that sink first-year operators.

Step-by-Step: How to Start a Food Truck Business

  1. Choose your concept and menu. Pick a focused theme (tacos, BBQ, gourmet grilled cheese, vegan bowls, Korean fusion) rather than trying to serve everything to everyone. A tight menu speeds prep, reduces waste, and helps customers remember you.
  2. Validate the demand. Pop-ups, catering gigs, or a friend’s restaurant lunch service can test menu interest and operational readiness before you commit to buying or leasing a truck.
  3. Write a business plan. Lenders will require one. See how to write a business plan.
  4. Form an LLC. Personal liability protection is essential in a high-risk industry. See how to start an LLC.
  5. Secure a commissary kitchen. Most cities require trucks to be based out of a licensed commissary for food prep, dishwashing, water filling, and waste handling. Cost: $400–$1,500/month.
  6. Buy or lease a truck. Used trucks $25,000–$75,000. New custom builds $75,000–$200,000. Leases $2,000–$5,000/month.
  7. Get every license and permit. Business license, health department permit, mobile food vendor permit, food handler certifications, sales tax permit, fire safety inspection, parking permits where required.
  8. Buy insurance. General liability, commercial auto, workers’ comp if you have employees, product liability.
  9. Hire and train. Most food trucks run with 1–3 people on board at a time.
  10. Plan your route or event schedule. Office lunch districts, weekend events, breweries, festivals.
  11. Launch with a soft opening. A friends-and-family event tests every system β€” food prep, payments, POS, service speed β€” before you face paying customers in public.

Startup Cost Breakdown

ItemCost
LLC formation$50 – $500
Business license + DBA$50 – $400
Mobile food vendor permit$200 – $1,500/year
Health department permit$200 – $1,000/year
Food handler certification$10 – $25 per person
Truck (used)$25,000 – $75,000
Truck (new custom)$75,000 – $200,000
Commissary kitchen rental$400 – $1,500/month
Initial inventory$1,500 – $5,000
Insurance (annual)$3,000 – $8,000
POS system + payment processing$200 – $2,000 setup
Marketing and branding$1,000 – $5,000
Operating reserve (3 months)$15,000 – $30,000

Total realistic startup: $50,000 – $200,000. Used trucks plus aggressive cost control bring the low end to $30,000–$40,000 in a few markets.

Licenses and Permits Required

  • General business license in your home city/county
  • Mobile food vendor permit from each city/county where you operate
  • Health department permit (state or county) β€” requires kitchen inspection
  • Food handler certificate for every person preparing or serving food
  • Food manager certificate (ServSafe Manager or equivalent) for the owner or lead
  • Fire safety inspection certificate
  • Commercial driver’s license if the truck weighs over 26,000 lbs (most do not)
  • Sales tax permit from your state β€” see sales tax permit guide
  • Parking permits for fixed locations (varies by city)
  • Event-specific permits for fairs, festivals, sporting events

Some cities (Los Angeles, New York, Chicago) have lottery systems or annual caps on mobile food permits β€” apply early or buy an existing operator’s truck with permits attached. See our full guide on how to get a business license.

Choosing a Truck

  • Buying used: Cheapest entry. Look at FoodTrucksForSale.com, RoamingHunger marketplace, and local Craigslist. Inspect for transferred permits, propane and electrical compliance, and equipment condition.
  • Buying new: Custom builds from companies like Cruising Kitchens, Prestige Food Trucks, M Design Vehicles, or local custom welders. 4–6 month build time. Quality control is critical.
  • Leasing: Lower upfront cost, monthly $2,000–$5,000 plus a security deposit. Good for testing the concept before committing six figures to a custom build.
  • Conversion: Buy a used step van, box truck, or trailer and convert it. Cheapest path if you can DIY the build, but takes 3–9 months and requires every permit and inspection a custom build does.

Health Department Compliance

Mobile food units are inspected frequently β€” often quarterly, sometimes monthly in high-volume markets. Common health department requirements:

  • Three-compartment sink for dishwashing
  • Separate handwashing sink with hot water
  • Refrigeration that keeps food below 40Β°F
  • Hot-holding equipment that keeps food above 135Β°F
  • NSF-certified equipment
  • Pest control plan and grease management
  • Daily temperature logs
  • Commissary agreement on file
  • Food handler and food manager certifications posted

Setting Your Menu and Pricing

The economics of running a food truck are tight and depend on tight cost discipline. Target food cost at 28–35% of revenue, labor at 25–30%, leaving 30–40% for fixed costs and profit. For a $12 menu item, food cost should land at $3.50–$4.20. Most successful trucks keep 6–10 menu items, with 2–3 “hero” items that 60%+ of customers order β€” focus your prep and marketing on those.

Finding Locations and Routes

  • Office lunch districts: Best Monday–Friday 11am–2pm. Build a regular weekly schedule so office workers know exactly when and where to find you.
  • Breweries and taprooms: Predictable Friday and Saturday evenings. Brewery partnerships are mutually beneficial β€” they need food to keep drinkers on premises, you get a captive crowd.
  • Events and festivals: High volume, high one-day revenue, high competition. Many events require multi-vendor applications submitted months in advance.
  • Catering and private events: Highest margin per hour of work. Build a catering menu, a price-per-person calculator, and a standard contract template.
  • Schools, hospitals, large workplaces: Negotiated long-term contracts with predictable weekly revenue and a captive lunch audience.
  • Sporting events and concert venues: Big revenue days but irregular schedule.

Insurance for Food Trucks

  • General liability: Required by most events and venues. $1M minimum.
  • Commercial auto: Required by law. Standard $500k–$1M coverage.
  • Product liability: Covers foodborne illness claims. Often bundled into general liability.
  • Workers’ compensation: Required once you have employees in most states.
  • Equipment and inland marine: Covers the truck’s kitchen equipment.
  • Business interruption: Replaces lost revenue if the truck is out of service from a covered loss.

Typical annual premium: $3,000–$8,000. See our full guide on business insurance for an LLC.

Marketing a Food Truck

  • Instagram is essential β€” daily location posts and high-quality food photos drive the majority of new-customer discovery in most markets.
  • Twitter/X for real-time location updates.
  • Google Business Profile with location pin updated daily.
  • Loyalty program (punch card, app, or simple stamp system) to build repeat customers and drive Tuesday/Wednesday traffic.
  • Local food blogger and influencer outreach for opening promotion.
  • Partnerships with complementary businesses (brewery, gym, office park, co-working space) that need food on a recurring schedule.
  • QR code menu and email signup at the truck window for repeat-customer marketing.

Hiring and Training

Most food trucks operate with 1–3 people on a shift. Typical roles: cook/owner, line cook, and cashier/runner. Pay scales typically $14–$22 per hour plus tips, depending on local minimum wage and competitive pressure. Most trucks use W-2 employees. Beyond pay:

  • Every employee needs a food handler certification before working.
  • Workers’ comp insurance is mandatory in most states.
  • Cross-train so the truck can operate even when someone calls out.
  • Standard operating procedures (SOPs) for food prep, service, and cleanup keep quality consistent.
  • Tip pooling and tip distribution policies should be written down to avoid wage disputes.

Use templates from our employment forms for offer letters, time sheets, and onboarding.

POS, Payments, and Bookkeeping

Modern food trucks run on cloud point-of-sale systems that handle orders, payments, inventory tracking, and tax reporting in one platform. Popular options include Square for Restaurants, Toast Go, Clover, and Lightspeed. Each one bundles a payment processor, so you can accept cards, Apple Pay, and Google Pay from day one. Pick the system based on monthly fees, processing rate (typically 2.4–2.9% plus $0.10 per transaction), and integration with your accounting software.

Set up a daily reconciliation: cash counted, card sales matched to POS reports, tips distributed, sales tax separated into a dedicated sub-account so you do not accidentally spend trust-fund money. The daily close is non-negotiable β€” falling behind even a few days makes recovery painful.

Daily and Weekly Operations

A profitable food truck runs on rhythm. A typical operating day: 7am prep at commissary, 10am drive to location, 11am-2pm service, 2pm-3pm reset and route to evening location, 4pm-8pm second service window, 9pm-10pm cleanup and commissary return, 10pm-11pm waste, dishwashing, restock. Weekly cycle: Monday-Thursday for office and brewery routes, Friday-Sunday for events and catering. Twelve-hour days are the norm; many owners reduce this only by hiring a second crew once revenue justifies it.

Common Food Truck Mistakes

  • Buying a new truck before validating the concept. Lease or rent for the first 6 months to test the menu and routes.
  • Overspending on the build-out. $200,000 trucks have the same revenue ceiling as $80,000 trucks.
  • Underestimating insurance and permits. Annual licensing and insurance run $5,000–$15,000.
  • Skipping the commissary. Required by most cities and absolutely required by the health department.
  • Long menu. Slows service, increases food waste, makes inventory harder, and dilutes brand identity.
  • No weather plan. Outdoor service means rain, extreme heat, and cold all hurt revenue. Plan indoor catering for winter.
  • Cash flow gap. Permits, insurance, commissary deposit, and initial inventory all hit your bank account before you serve a single paying customer. Plan for at least three months of operating reserve before launch day to absorb the cash flow gap.

Catering and Private Events

The highest-margin work for a food truck is private catering β€” corporate lunches, weddings, parties, sports team buyouts. Catering bookings typically pay a flat fee that includes labor and food, often $1,500–$5,000 per event. The truck operates with a captive audience, no line management, and no weather risk. Add a catering tab to your website and email list, and pursue local event planners and corporate office managers actively. Many successful food truck operators eventually generate more revenue from catering than from public service.

Seasonal and Weather Strategy

Outdoor service is fragile. Rain, heat, cold, and wind all cut into revenue. Successful trucks plan for seasonality by stockpiling catering bookings (indoor venues) for winter months, partnering with breweries (covered seating) for shoulder seasons, and using event applications to lock in summer festival revenue months in advance. Many trucks generate 60–70% of annual revenue between May and October β€” plan operating reserves accordingly.

How Much Can a Food Truck Make?

Annual gross revenue:

  • Part-time / weekend operator: $50,000 – $120,000
  • Full-time operator, one truck: $150,000 – $400,000
  • Top food trucks in major metros: $400,000 – $1M+
  • Multi-truck operators: $1M – $5M+

Net profit margins are tight β€” 10–20% in years 1–2, climbing to 15–25% once operations and routes are dialed in and food cost is under control. Multi-truck operators can hit 20–30% margins by spreading commissary and management costs across multiple revenue streams. For broader resources on launching, see the SBA launch guide, your local health department, and your city’s mobile vendor licensing office for the specific permits and rules in your area.

Documents to Keep

  • Articles of organization, EIN, operating agreement
  • Business license, mobile vendor permits, health permits
  • Sales tax permit
  • Food handler and food manager certifications
  • Truck title and registration, commercial auto insurance
  • Commissary kitchen agreement
  • All employee forms (W-4, I-9, food handler cert per employee)
  • Daily temperature logs and food safety records
  • Insurance certificates
  • POS sales reports and bookkeeping records

For the master checklist, see documents you need to start a business.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to start a food truck business?

Typical first-year budget runs $50,000–$200,000 depending on whether you buy used or new, lease vs. own, and how aggressive your build-out is. Scrappy founders launch for $30,000–$50,000 with used trucks.

Do I need a commissary kitchen?

Almost always yes. Most cities and counties require a commissary agreement for food trucks because the truck itself does not have the dish-washing, water storage, and food prep facilities the health department requires. Commissary rental runs $400–$1,500/month.

What is the most profitable food truck concept?

The most profitable trucks have low food cost (under 30%) and high per-customer ticket. Tacos, gourmet burgers, ramen, BBQ, and ice cream/dessert are perennially strong. Whatever your concept, long-term profitability depends more on operational discipline, route selection, and customer experience than the menu itself.

Next steps: see how to start an LLC, then secure your business and health licenses before any truck investment.