Why Food Handler Card Rules Are So Confusing
The short answer: there is no single national rule. Each state sets its own system — and most states delegate to counties.
State-Level Systems Vary Widely
Some states (California, Illinois, Texas) require food handler cards for all food workers statewide. Others (Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee) leave it entirely to counties. A few states have no requirement at all.
County Rules Create a Patchwork
In county-discretion states, the requirement in one county can be completely different from the county next door. A worker in Lexington, KY must hold a certified handler card. A worker across the county line in Nicholasville faces no such requirement.
Vendors Exploit the Confusion
Commercial training vendors sell food handler courses using language that implies universal legal requirement. In many states and counties, the card is entirely voluntary. This site gives you the actual rules — free of vendor incentive.
Browse by State
We're expanding to all 50 states. States below have full county-level coverage.
Kentucky
No statewide mandate. 120 counties, each with its own rules. 7 counties with required cards documented.
20 counties covered 🌻Ohio
No statewide mandate. 88 counties. No county in our directory currently requires an individual worker card.
15 counties covered 🎸Tennessee
No statewide mandate. 95 counties. Requirements vary — several major counties have established programs.
15 counties covered 🌽Indiana
No statewide mandate. 92 counties. Local health departments set food handler training policies independently.
12 counties covered ⛰️West Virginia
No statewide food handler card mandate. 55 counties. State food manager certification required per establishment.
10 counties coveredThe Two Things Every Food Worker Needs to Know
Food Handler Card
Varies by County/StateA basic training certificate for individual food workers. Required in some states statewide (CA, IL, TX). In other states, required only in certain counties. In many counties and states, entirely voluntary.
Cost: $10–$25 (online) or $15–$30 (in-person at health dept.)
Validity: 2–3 years (varies by jurisdiction)
How to get it: Short online or in-person training course + test
Food Manager Certification
Required EverywhereA higher-level credential required at the establishment level — not the worker level — in most U.S. states. At least one certified food protection manager (CFPM) per food establishment is required regardless of local handler card rules.
Cost: $130–$180 (proctored exam + prep)
Validity: ~5 years
Providers: ServSafe, Prometric, NRFSP (ANAB-accredited)
Essential Guides
Plain-language explanations of food handler certification rules across the U.S.
Food Handler Card vs. Food Manager Certification: What's the Difference?
One is county-optional; the other is required by state law at virtually every food establishment in the country.
National OverviewWhich States Require a Food Handler Card Statewide?
California, Illinois, Texas, and several others require cards for all food workers. Most states leave it to counties or employers.
Getting CertifiedOnline vs. In-Person: Which Training Is Accepted in Your Jurisdiction?
Some counties require in-person testing at the health department. Others accept any ANAB-accredited online course. Know before you pay.
ComplianceWhat Happens If You Work Without a Required Food Handler Card?
Penalties fall primarily on employers, but uncertified workers can be pulled from food-handling duties during inspections.
Manager CertificationThe Food Manager Certification Exam: What to Expect
Required at virtually every food establishment in the U.S. What's tested, how to study, approved providers, and exam day process.
RenewalHow to Renew Your Food Handler Card
Validity periods range from 2 to 3 years depending on jurisdiction. There's no shortcut — renewal means retaking the full course and test.