Food Truck Regulations

Zion Pet Mobiles: Custom Mobile Pet Grooming Trucks and Trailers

Home › Food Truck Regulations Zion Pet Mobiles Custom Mobile Pet Grooming Trucks and Trailers Built in Woodland Park, Colorado. Delivered across the western United States. The same shop and the same build standards behind 300+ food truck deliveries, applied to mobile pet grooming rigs that hold up to thousands of services. Get a Free […]

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How to Pass a Food Truck Health Inspection (4 Areas Inspectors Check)

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: a food truck health inspection covers four areas: equipment certification (NSF and UL), food safety (temperatures, hand washing, prep procedures), water and waste handling, and documentation. Pass rate on the first inspection is about 75 percent for first-time operators, 95 percent for operators with build documentation packets in

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How to Find a Commissary Kitchen Near Me (5 Methods)

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: there are five reliable ways to find a commissary kitchen near you. Start with The Food Corridor (an online directory that lists most U.S. shared kitchens), then check your county health department’s list of permitted commercial kitchens, then ask local food truck operators in city Facebook groups, then

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Why Food Trucks Fail: 5 Mistakes That Sink 60% of Operators

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: about 60 percent of food trucks fail within 5 years, but the failures cluster around the same five mistakes. Most are avoidable. Underspending on the build, picking the wrong location, having no marketing engine, running too many menu items, and skipping a financial cushion together account for 80

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Food Truck Marketing: How to Get Customers (and Keep Them)

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: food truck marketing has three legs that have to work together: location-based discovery (so people walking by find you), social media (so existing customers know where you’ll be next), and recurring location partnerships (so you have built-in customer base from venues that promote you). Spend $200-$500 a month

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Food Truck Business Plan: 6 Sections Banks Want to See

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: a food truck business plan should be 12-18 pages, written in plain English, and structured around six sections: executive summary, concept, market analysis, operations, financial projections, and funding request. The version you write for SBA lending is more detailed than the one you write for personal planning, but

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Food Truck Menu Design: 6 Rules for Maximum Throughput

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: a great food truck menu has 6-12 items, takes under 90 seconds per order to plate, uses 4-6 base ingredients across most items, and includes 2-3 high-margin add-ons. Designing the menu BEFORE the kitchen build is what separates the trucks doing $400/hour from the trucks doing $1,200/hour. The

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How to Choose a Food Truck Builder (10 Red Flags to Watch For)

Home › Food Truck Regulations Short answer: pick a builder based on five things in this order: their build portfolio, their willingness to share customer references, the kitchen layout they recommend (do they understand your menu?), the warranty and post-delivery support, and price. Price is last on the list because the cheapest builder is almost

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