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Commissary Kitchen Guide: What It Is & How to Find One
A commissary kitchen is one of the biggest ongoing costs most first-time food truck owners don't budget for. This guide explains exactly what commissaries do, what to look for in a contract, and how to find one in your area.
What Is a Commissary Kitchen?
A commissary kitchen — also called a shared commercial kitchen or base of operations — is a licensed, inspected commercial facility where mobile food vendors prepare food, store ingredients and supplies, clean equipment, and dispose of waste water. Health departments require food trucks to use an approved commissary because the truck itself typically lacks the facilities for complete food safety compliance (three-compartment sinks for dishwashing, proper grease trap access, adequate refrigeration, etc.).
Think of the commissary as your "home base" — you park your truck there at night, load up in the morning, return to wash dishes, and dispose of gray water. The commissary also gives inspectors a fixed, physical location to verify your operation.
Do You Actually Need One?
In most US cities: yes. Major metro health departments — Los Angeles, New York City, Chicago, Houston, Austin, Seattle — all require a commissary agreement as a condition of your mobile food facility permit. Some smaller or rural jurisdictions do not, especially if your truck has a fully self-contained three-compartment sink and sufficient fresh and gray water capacity.
How to check: Call your county health department and ask: "Do mobile food facility applicants need a commissary agreement? What are the commissary requirements?" Get the answer in writing (email or a printed policy document) before signing any lease.
Types of Commissaries
Not all commissaries are the same. Here are the most common types you'll encounter:
- Shared commercial kitchens: Purpose-built spaces rented by the hour or month, designed specifically for food businesses. Usually well-equipped with commercial ranges, walk-in coolers, and proper waste disposal. Often the most plug-and-play option. Examples: CloudKitchens, Kitchen United, and local co-op kitchens.
- Restaurant commissaries: An existing restaurant that rents its kitchen during off-hours (typically early morning before opening). Can be cheaper than shared kitchen facilities but hours are limited and access depends on the restaurant's schedule.
- Church & community center kitchens: Many religious and civic organizations have licensed commercial kitchens that they rent to food businesses. Often the most affordable option ($200–$400/month), though hours and amenities vary widely.
- Catering company facilities: Catering operations that use their kitchen space during their off days. Similar to restaurant commissaries — usually less expensive but less availability.
- Food truck parks: Some food truck parks include commissary services (parking, water hookup, electrical) as part of a park membership. Convenient if you're already operating at the park.
What Does a Commissary Cost?
| Type | Typical Monthly Cost | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Shared commercial kitchen | $400–$1,200/mo | Equipment, storage (sometimes), utilities |
| Restaurant off-hours | $200–$600/mo | Kitchen access, limited storage |
| Church / community kitchen | $150–$400/mo | Basic kitchen, limited hours |
| Food truck park membership | $300–$800/mo | Parking, water/power hookup, sometimes kitchen |
| Hourly rental | $20–$40/hr | Pay-as-you-go, no commitment |
How to Find a Commissary
- Ask your health department: Many county health departments maintain a list of approved commissaries. This is the fastest way to find a compliant facility.
- Search Yelp and Google: Search "shared commercial kitchen [your city]" or "commissary kitchen for food trucks [your city]." Read reviews from other food truck operators.
- Check local food truck Facebook groups: Other operators in your city will have commissary recommendations — and warnings about which ones to avoid.
- Commissary listing services: Sites like Kitchensurfer and The Kitchen Door aggregate shared kitchen availability in major markets.
- Contact restaurants directly: Cold-call or visit restaurants that are closed on the days you want to prep. Many are open to the extra revenue.
What to Look for in a Commissary Agreement
Before signing, review the commissary agreement carefully. Key things to confirm:
- Health department approval: The facility must be licensed and approved by the same health department that issues your MFF permit. Ask to see their current health permit before signing.
- Access hours: Do the commissary hours match your prep and service schedule? If you start service at 11 AM, you need commissary access by 8–9 AM at the latest.
- Dedicated storage: Confirm whether you get a dedicated refrigerator/ freezer space or just access to shared coolers. Shared coolers can create cross- contamination and theft issues.
- Gray water disposal: The commissary must have approved facilities to accept and dispose of your gray water (waste water from the truck). Confirm the process.
- Parking for your truck: Can you park the truck at the commissary overnight? Is there a secure, fenced lot? What are the overnight fees if any?
- Term and termination: Look for a short initial term (3–6 months) with renewal options. Avoid multi-year contracts until you know the commissary works for your operation.
- Insurance requirements: Most commissaries require you to carry general liability insurance and list the commissary as an additional insured. Confirm the required coverage amounts before applying for insurance.
Next Step
With your commissary locked in, the next major decision is your truck's equipment — specifically what NSF-certified cooking equipment you need, how to handle power, and the fire suppression requirements that most first-time buyers miss.
Read the Equipment & Safety Guide →