๐Ÿ  Home-Based Business

Home Business License Guide โ€” Do You Need One?

Working from home is completely legal. But "home-based" doesn't mean "license-free" in most cities. Here's exactly what you need.

โœ… Usually yes โ€” but the rules vary a lot by city
๐Ÿ’ก Quick answer
Most home-based businesses need two things: (1) a regular business license from their city, AND (2) a home occupation permit that says your home address can be used for business activity.
Some cities combine these. Some waive the home occupation permit for very low-impact businesses. Read on to see what applies to you.

What is a home occupation permit?

A home occupation permit (also called a home business permit or zoning clearance) is a separate approval from your city's zoning or planning department. It confirms that:

1. Your residential property is zoned to allow business activity.
2. Your business is "compatible" with a residential neighborhood.
3. You won't create nuisances like noise, traffic, employees on-site, or commercial signage.

What cities typically restrict for home businesses

โŒ Common restrictions
No exterior business signs. No non-family employees working on site. No customer visits that create significant traffic. No storage of large inventory amounts. No mechanical equipment creating noise or fumes.
These rules protect the residential character of the neighborhood.
โœ… What's usually allowed
Using a room as a home office. Receiving occasional packages and deliveries. Phone calls and video meetings with clients. Running an online business entirely from home. Delivering products from your home address.

Which industries need extra approval from home?

๐Ÿ’…

Beauty and personal care

Hair stylists and estheticians working from home often need state cosmetology board approval AND city zoning clearance for salon use, on top of the regular business license.

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Home food businesses

Selling food made at home falls under cottage food laws. Most states allow this with restrictions. See the cottage food guide on this site.

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Pet care

Home doggy daycares may need city approval for the number of animals on site. Some residential zones prohibit commercial pet care entirely.

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Home daycare

Requires state childcare licensing, background checks, facility inspections, and sometimes neighborhood notification โ€” all on top of the business license.

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Trades / contractors

Their home office needs a business license even if all work is done at client sites. Storing commercial vehicles at home may also trigger zoning issues.

How to find out what YOUR city requires

1

Search for your city's home occupation rules

Search: "[your city] home occupation permit" โ€” look for the .gov website.

2

Apply for the home occupation permit first

From the zoning/planning department. Do this before (or at the same time as) your business license application.

3

Apply for your business license

From your city's finance or revenue office.

4

Check state-level requirements

Use the state guides on this site.

5

Check if you need a seller's permit

If you sell physical products from home, you need a state seller's permit in addition to local licensing.

โš ๏ธ

HOA rules can be more restrictive than city rules

If you live in a community with an HOA, their rules may prohibit any home business activity. Check your HOA agreement. City approval doesn't override HOA rules.

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Renters: check your lease too

Many leases prohibit running a business from the rental. Your landlord can evict you for violating a lease even if you have a valid city license.

Quick answers

In most cities, yes. The business license is about your business activity and income, not whether clients visit.
Usually yes. Be aware that in states where business licenses are public record, your home address will be publicly associated with your business.
A few packages per week is typically fine. If you're running a distribution operation with multiple daily deliveries, this may violate residential zoning rules.

Related guides

โš ๏ธ Not legal advice. Rules vary by location and change frequently. Always verify with your city, county, or state office before taking any action.

⚠️ Heads up: This site explains business licensing in plain English. Not legal advice. Rules change. Always verify with your actual city or state office. Affiliate disclosure.