Computed from 8,789 published municipal codes
Food truck ordinances, town by town
Every town writes its own rules about food trucks — mobile vending permits, locations, hours. The fastest way to know what YOUR town allows is to ask its code directly. Below: the towns that regulate food trucks most, straight from the law itself.
Ask your town about food trucks
Most municipal code about food trucks
| Municipality | mentions |
| 1 |
Mesquite, TX — ask its code → |
252 |
| 2 |
Harker Heights, TX — ask its code → |
218 |
| 3 |
Columbus, OH — ask its code → |
209 |
| 4 |
Long Beach, CA — ask its code → |
202 |
| 5 |
San Antonio, TX — ask its code → |
189 |
| 6 |
Burleson, TX — ask its code → |
176 |
| 7 |
Brentwood, TN — ask its code → |
175 |
| 8 |
Farmersville, TX — ask its code → |
170 |
| 9 |
Gallatin, TN — ask its code → |
168 |
| 10 |
Goodlettsville, TN — ask its code → |
164 |
Mesquite, TX leads the country with 252 mentions — see the
full ranking.
Strange food trucks codes
Lilburn, GA — Lilburn prohibits selling ice cream near schools.
“Sec. 42-8. - Ice cream sale near schools prohibited.”
Ch. 42
Pine Ridge, SC — Pine Ridge requires ice cream trucks to not park in a stationary location.
“Ice cream trucks shall not park in a stationary location.”
Ch. 300 (Zoning And Land Development)
Harper, KS — Harper, Kansas prohibits pouring the contents of ice cream containers onto park grass.
“from ice cream containers shall not be poured on the grass in any park.”
Ch. 36
See every food trucks rule in America at once
A Library Card searches all 8,789 codes in one query — every town that regulates food trucks, with the actual lines of law. $5 a year, first search free.
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