Guides / San Francisco, CA

How to Start a Food Truck in San Francisco, CA (2026)

The permits, the best spots, and the launch checklist for starting a food truck in San Francisco — plus how to take online orders from your very first service.

The permits you'll need in San Francisco

Full state-level detail: see our California food truck permit guide — or start with the complete guide to starting a food truck.

Where food trucks do well in San Francisco

Launch checklist

  1. Register the business and line up your truck or trailer.
  2. Secure a commissary kitchen if required.
  3. Pass health and fire inspections; get the San Francisco vending permit.
  4. Set up your website and online ordering before opening day, so your first customers can find you again.
  5. Book your first brewery nights and events.
Hungry instead? Browse the free food truck directory for California — or add your truck to it.

San Francisco food truck FAQs

How much does it cost to start a food truck in San Francisco?

Most owners spend $30,000–$100,000 on a used truck or trailer and equipment (new builds run higher), plus permits and licensing. Nationally, trucks average roughly $28,000 a year on permits and compliance — confirm current San Francisco fees with the local health department.

Do I need a San Francisco-specific permit if I'm already licensed elsewhere in California?

Usually yes. San Francisco runs its own mobile vending program, so plan on a local vending permit and inspection even if you're already permitted in another California city.

How do customers in San Francisco find a truck that moves around?

Successful San Francisco trucks share one link that always shows today's location, menu, and online ordering. That's exactly what a Food Truck OS site does — update your spot from your phone in seconds.

Launching in San Francisco? Get your website & online orders ready in minutes

Food Truck OS builds your website, takes online orders, and keeps every permit in a vault. From $29/mo.

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General information, not legal or financial advice. Verify requirements with your local licensing authority.