New Catering Business Question
A friend and I are working on starting a small BBQ business in NY and I'm trying to figure out our budget. We want to get this started the right way and be totally legit. Besides the HD permits, insurance, and business registration, what is the rough cost of startup? What cooker would you recommend? Any info would be a big help.
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Step number 1
Go to the Health Department, in person, find out what the requirements are for what you want to do. Some require it all to be built from Stainless Steel. Find out what the Health Department laws are for where you live. They will likely have these regulation printed out...so you don't make any mistakes. Don't spend any money until you have talked to the Health Department. You don't want to spend money on equipment that you can't use. Don't assume that something is Legal and OK, because you saw somebody else on the street doing it. Some people avoid the Health Department regulations by only selling food on the weekends; when the Health Dept. is closed and they are unlikely to get caught. |
The HD is going to tell you that you need a commercial kitchen or commisary. Your home kitchen will not qualify! If you do not have something in the works, check with your church, fire dept, or butcher shop. The insurance that you mention does this include NYS disability? workmans comp? They are also required in addition to liability insurance. What type of catering are you offering? is all food to be cooked onsite? Do you intend to also have a BBQ stand that you sell out of? Grillman also made a valid point about not buying anything until you talk to the HD. GO There In Person. You will have a better understanding of the requirements when you leave. As far as start up cost, at the very minimum I would think you are looking at 8K-15K
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Matters not how you serve it, the HD will be involved if you go legit. My trailer passes HD, has refrigeration, an FEC500 and hot / cold water / 3 well, etc. $30,000 + $1500 a year in insurance and permits. Pellets at $700 a ton,....................etc
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you will still need a commisary or a vending truck/trailer that passes the HD requirements. You need this no matter when/where/how you serve
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The "private chef loophole" is a falsehood. Listen to chrome, looks like he's done this.
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If you are going the private chef route make sure you know the rules.
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I did it last winter, I spent about $30-35k if you count equipment I already had. The all season long it seemed I needed more and more so I spent another $5000 during the season. Now in winter I am looking at growing pains and could spend another $12,000 if I had it. I wouls say done on the cheap you could do it as cheap as $5000 and ski is the limit on the high end.
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try to find someone in your area that you wont be stealing thier customers and belly up to them and ask questions, help out on a busy night... |
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I also guess, I have never catered a single event :rolleyes: That term comes from my HD, not a term, I farted out my arse!:becky: Now, iffin he is doing drop off only, he will need to have a commisary. I digress! |
I'm with Big Brother Smoke, here in Va while the personal chef thing walks a fine line I was told pretty much by the HD that they would not have a problem if I cooked onsite but if I cooked and transported food that is where they get involved. If you do the personal chef way it would be a lot cheaper to start out. MY only concern is do you want to set up in a strangers yard the night before and cook all night and use thier kitchen?
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