The baker in you wants to spend your days making chewy cookies and decadent cakes. The entrepreneur in you wants to be your own boss and call the shots. But the realist in you knows that you may not have the resources or the time to start your own retail bakery.
The solution could be a home-based bakery!
This type of small business lets you bake to your heartâs content, be your own boss, and work from home, instead of leasing an expensive storefront and hiring a squad of employees.
If youâre trying to figure out how to start a bakery business from home, youâre in the right place. Hereâs a step-by-step guide to turning your home kitchen into a small-batch production powerhouse.

1. Make Sure Youâre Legally Set Before Doing Anything Else
A home-based bakery is a business, which means itâs still subject to state and local laws around food, business licensing, and taxes. Additionally, there are nuanced laws surrounding the sale of food items from oneâs home.
Here are some general guidelines, but since laws vary from location to location, make sure to consult your local food and business regulatory agencies before moving forward!
Learn Your Local Cottage Food Laws
Home bakeries are generally covered by a section of law called cottage food. This classification separates home-based bakeries from commercial or retail operations that have designated storefronts or production kitchens. Commercial bakeries have to meet certain requirements for equipment and sanitation, while cottage-food operations are exempt from many of those rules.
Cottage food is regulated on a state-by-state basis, but itâs often limited to shelf-stable products that donât require refrigerationâŠperfect for baked goods!

To make sure these home-based food businesses donât get too large (in order to prevent large-scale operations from skirting the regulations of a retail bakery), cottage bakeries usually have a sales limitation. They also have rules regarding who you can sell to. A cottage bakery is generally for direct-to-consumer sales only, so you couldnât sell to a local grocery store or bakery.
The first step in the process is to assess the rules where you live. Your state and local health departments should be able to provide additional information on your areaâs cottage food laws.
Create a Business Entity and Get Licensed
When you start a home baking business, there are other legal issues to consider before you tie on your apron. Some states require you to carry a business license to operate your home bakery. You may need a food manager license from the health department as well, depending on your state.
You should also set up a business entity, like a limited liability company (LLC). Setting up a company, versus operating your business as an individual or sole proprietor, protects your personal assets from legal liability in the event of a lawsuit. You may also need an insurance policy. Make sure you check with a cottage food expert and/or an attorney for advice on the best way to proceed.
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Organize Your Finances and Plan for Taxes
One of the cardinal rules in business is to always keep your business banking separate from your personal banking. This means setting up a separate business bank account, which you can do once youâve created your company.
You may also have to charge sales tax and/or food tax on the items you sell. Youâll need to keep careful track of your sales and document their breakdowns so you can ensure you pay the proper amount of local and state taxes.

2. Plan Your Bakery Menu
Once you understand the rules and regulations and have your company set up, you can start the fun part!
Many home-based bakeries make cookies, breads, muffins, cupcakes, or cakes. As your own boss, you can choose to make whatever you like best (and choose not to make anything that you donât enjoy). Auguste Escoffier School of Culinary Arts baking and pastry student Katie Sualog makes legendary biscotti in her home-based bakery!
âRight now while Iâm in school, Iâm doing strictly cookies and biscotti [in my home-based bakery] so that I can still focus on my school and keep up my 4.0 and perfect attendance.â
Katie Sualog, Escoffier Associate Degree in Baking & Pastry Student*

Make sure to keep local laws in mind while planning your menu! Remember, in most cases the end-product must be shelf-stable, so anything that requires refrigeration is usually not an option.
One of the best things about a home bakery is that theyâre flexible. Letâs say you go to the farmers market one weekend to sell pre-cut slices of banana bread. You hear from a few people that they love your banana bread, and wish they could buy a whole loaf! Well thatâs easy for youânext weekend, you can offer both slices and whole loaves for those who want them, versus having to stick to a predetermined menu. You can also switch things up whenever you like, experimenting with different ingredients or scaling back when things get a bit too busy.
Not sure what to bake? An education in Baking & Pastry Arts from Escoffier introduces students to many different types of baked goods. And with the online program, students can practice their techniques right in their home kitchensâperfect for the aspiring home-based baker.
3. Get Your Equipment and Supplies
Once you know what youâll be making, you can get what you need to execute your offerings. Whether thatâs assorted cake or muffin tins, bread tins, cupcake wrappers, piping bags and tipsâmake sure you have everything ready to go and a place to store it all.
Some statesâ cottage food laws require that you keep your bakery equipment separate from your personal kitchen equipment, so keep those extra space needs in mind. Make sure to track the cost of all of your supplies, so you can account for them when you price your menu and do your taxes.
Which leads us toâŠ
4. Price Your Baked Goods to Ensure Profitability
Pricing your baked goods takes much more than simply looking at what your competitors charge and doing the same. Your baked goods must cover your costs of ingredients, labor, and additional overhead like business fees and farmers market fees, with some still left over for profit. But how do you figure out all of those numbers?
Calculate Your Food Costs
Build a spreadsheet of each ingredient that you use, plus the cost of each in common denominations. For example, you could list the costs of:
- a pound of flour
- a pound of sugar
- a dozen eggs
- a stick of butter
- a tin of baking soda
- and so on.
Then, use that information to calculate the food cost of each recipe.

Maybe you plan to sell cupcakes. Based on your spreadsheet, you can calculate the cost of the flour, sugar, baking soda, vanilla, eggs, etc. that go into your recipe for a single batch. If a dozen eggs cost $3 and you use two eggs in your recipe, youâll know that the cost of those two eggs is $.50.
Letâs estimate that your cost per batch of cupcakes is $5.00. Then, divide that total batch cost by the number of cupcakes in a batch. For a $5.00 batch that yields 24 cupcakes, your cost per cupcake would be $0.21 $5.00/24 cupcakes = $0.21 per cupcake. Remember, this is only the cost of the ingredients required to make the goods.
Calculate Your Labor Cost
Next, assess how long it takes you to make a batch of those cupcakes. Perhaps it takes you two total hours to mix the batter, bake, decorate, and package two dozen cupcakes.
How much could you expect to be paid hourly if you worked in a bakery? Letâs say you would be paid $15 per hour. So a total batch of your cupcakes is worth $30 of your time.
Now, we can figure out the labor per cupcake. Divide the total dollar value of your time by the number of cupcakes. $30/24 cupcakes = $1.25 labor per cupcake.
Calculate Your Overhead Costs
Consider what other expenses youâll incur for your business. This could include fixed costs like farmers market fees and a monthly website. It also includes variable fees that change based on how much you sell (like labels and packaging costs) plus cooking needs (think parchment paper and cupcake liners.)
These values can be hard to estimate before you have some experience and know approximately how many items youâll sell per month, but do your best to estimate a total monthly overhead, and divide it by the number of items you expect to sell per month. When getting your start, you may want to under-estimate your sales so you donât dig yourself into a hole from the get-go.
For easy math, letâs say your monthly costs are $100, and you sell 400 items per month, for an overhead cost of $0.25/item. $100 overhead/400 items = $0.25 per item.

Assess Your Cost of Goods Sold
Cost of goods sold (referred to in the industry as COGS) is the total cost of producing all the items you plan to sell. Add each of these individual costs up to get your cost of goods for a single cupcake!
In our example: $0.21 food cost + $1.25 labor cost + $0.25 overhead costs = $1.71 per cupcake.
Now you have an absolute baseline for your sales price. Anything under $1.71 and youâll lose money on every cupcake. Anything over $1.71 and youâll make money on every cupcake.
To get your shopâs COGS, repeat this process for each item you sell.
5. Ready, Set, Bake!
Bake plenty of your best treats, package them nicely, and head out to sell! Most home bakers sell their goods onsite at events like farmers markets and county fairs. Check your local and state regulations for where you can and canât sell home-based bakery goods.
You may (depending on state regulations) also be able to sell your baked goods online. If this applies to you, a simple website can let customers place orders throughout the week that you can deliver whenever itâs convenient for them. Be sure to include a disclaimer about how far in advance customers need to place orders to ensure theyâre delivered on time.

6. Promote Your Home Baking Business
Showing up with baked goods ready to sell is a start. But with some marketing and promotion, you can get people excited about finding your stand at the local farmerâs market.
A visual social media platform like Instagram is a great place to share images of your beautifully frosted cookies and cakes. You could promote a weekly special and encourage people to come to your stand week after week! TikTok is another platform that allows potential customers to view your behind-the-scenes process, although creating enticing baking videos may take a little extra skill. Donât forget to factor in the time you spend on marketing and promotion, as well as the costs of any digital tools you pay for, into your COGS.
You can also go old school and hand out punch cards to your loyal customers. Encourage them with a âbuy 9 cookies and get one freeâ offer. And to really draw them in, a few free samples never hurt. A taste of one of your perfect macarons and people will be eager for more.

Not Sure If Youâve Got the Skills to Start a Home Baking Business?
A home bakery is a business, just like a retail bakery. While it has its own set of rules and regulations, it must still abide by the same principles of great baking, customer service, cost control, and marketing.
5 Steps to Starting a Bakery Business From Home
- Create your business entity and acquire the proper licenses.
- Plan the bakery menu.
- Get the right equipment and supplies.
- Review your overhead costs and price your products accordingly.
- Start baking!
If youâre not sure if you have all of these skills, it may be time to invest in an education by attending pastry school to help you with both the pastry and business skills. With Escoffierâs online program in baking and pastry, you can earn a diploma or an associate degreeâfrom homeâin less than 60 weeks!
Contact our admissions department to learn more.
For more information on food entrepreneurshipâŠ
- The Complete Guide to Starting a Home-Based Catering Business
- 5 Tips for How to Become a Personal Chef
- 4 Roadmaps to Become a Food Entrepreneur
*Information may not reflect every studentâs experience. Results and outcomes may be based on several factors, such as geographical region or previous experience.
FAQs
How successfully run a bakery at home? âș
- Create your business entity and acquire the proper licenses.
- Plan the bakery menu.
- Get the right equipment and supplies.
- Review your overhead costs and price your products accordingly.
- Start baking!
Starting a home bakery is also a good option for those looking to get started in the restaurant industry, and bakers at home due to coronavirus. Usually smaller in scale than retail or wholesale bakeries, home bakeries allow bakers to sell products that are made in their own homes.
How do you describe a home bakery business? âșA home bakery business uses the kitchen in a house or apartment rather than renting commercial space. It produces bread, cakes, pies, muffins, pastries, cookies and similar items in relatively small amounts. Some entrepreneurs also make jellies or jams that complement their baked goods.
How do I start a successful small bakery business? âș- Keep a Close Eye on Rent and Overhead. ...
- Apply for Licenses and Permits, and Find a Lawyer. ...
- Hire and Train Bakery Staff. ...
- Track Food Cost and Revenue. ...
- Market Your Bakery and Attract New Customers. ...
- Bakery Interior Design and Atmosphere.
- Do not over-promise and under-deliver. ...
- Starting a Bakery? ...
- Give customers what they want, not what you THINK they want. ...
- Be a good listener â listen to customer feedback and act on it. ...
- Offer low prices for high-quality products. ...
- Make sure your food is fresh.
Using social media platforms, spreading business cards and flyers, receiving and posting positive customer reviews, and maintaining a delicious, consistent menu are all ways that will help attract customers to your home bakery.