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Alaska Cottage Food Label Requirements

Selling homemade food in Alaska? Your package label has to carry a specific set of items — including Alaska’s required home-kitchen statement. Here’s exactly what goes on the label, and a free tool that builds it from your recipe.

The required Alaska label statement

This food was made in a home kitchen, is not regulated or inspected, except for meat and meat products, and may contain allergens.

This exact wording is prescribed by law. ✓ Verified against the official source.

Source: Alaska Statutes AS 17.20.332(e)(2), enacted by HB 251 (Chapter 34, SLA 24), 33rd Alaska Legislature, signed 2024-08-24. Enrolled text official text ↗

What your Alaska cottage food label must include

  • The common or usual name of the product
  • Net quantity (weight or volume) — in US customary and metric
  • The ingredient list, in descending order by weight
  • An allergen “Contains” statement (FDA major allergens present)
  • Your name and business address
  • The Alaska statement: This food was made in a home kitchen, is not regulated or inspected, except for meat and meat products, and may contain allergens.

Generate your Alaska label free

Enter your recipe once — MakeFoodLabel builds the whole label (ingredient list, allergen “Contains” line, net weight, and the Alaska home-kitchen statement) plus the FDA nutrition table if you need it. Free with a watermark; $29 once to remove it, unlimited labels.

Make my Alaska label →

Common questions

What must a cottage food label include in Alaska?

A Alaska cottage food label generally needs the product name, net weight, the full ingredient list in descending order by weight, an allergen statement, your business name and address, and the statement “This food was made in a home kitchen, is not regulated or inspected, except for meat and meat products, and may contain allergens.”. Rules can vary by food type and sales channel — confirm with your state authority.

Do I need a Nutrition Facts panel to sell cottage food in Alaska?

Usually not, unless you make a nutrient claim (like “low sugar”) or exceed your state’s cottage food limits. Many sellers add one anyway because stores and customers ask for it. MakeFoodLabel generates the FDA panel from your recipe if you need it.

Where does the “not inspected / home kitchen” wording come from?

From Alaska’s cottage food law — Alaska Statutes AS 17.20.332(e)(2), enacted by HB 251 (Chapter 34, SLA 24), 33rd Alaska Legislature, signed 2024-08-24. Enrolled text. Cottage food law changes often, so verify the current wording with your authority before printing.

This page is an estimation aid, not legal advice. Cottage food rules vary by state and change often; whether you need a nutrition panel, the exact disclaimer wording, sales limits and permitted foods all depend on your situation. Confirm current requirements with the Alaska authority before selling.

Cottage food labels by state