
Last verified: June 2026. Confirm with the New Jersey Department of Health or your municipality before paying.
New Jersey splits two ways: no statewide worker card, but specific municipalities (notably Newark) require one — and the state has its own twist on which manager certificates it accepts. Here’s the accurate picture.
Quick answer
New Jersey requires a certified Food Protection Manager at higher-risk establishments statewide, but leaves worker food handler permits to municipalities. There’s no statewide food handler card.
- Statewide manager: Risk Type 3 establishments must have a certified Food Protection Manager (Person in Charge level).
- NJ-accredited only: New Jersey accepts only Food Protection Manager certificates issued by NJ-accredited organizations.
- Newark: requires a Food Handler’s Permit within 30 days for kitchen employees handling unpackaged food; city-approved courses only; renew every 3 years.
- Bergen County: some municipalities require worker permits (rules vary — everyone, one-per-shift, or none).
Newark’s Food Handler’s Permit
This is the clearest local requirement. In Newark, all kitchen employees who handle unpackaged food served to the public must obtain a Food Handler’s Permit within 30 days of employment. Only city-approved courses count — the City of Newark Department of Health (in-person, ~$10), the National Registry of Food Safety Professionals, or ServSafe — and other certificates won’t be accepted by Newark inspectors. The permit renews every 3 years. Notably, Newark also requires a Food Handler’s Permit for any public food distribution, including food given to the homeless, so volunteers serving the public need it too.
Bergen County municipalities
Several Bergen County towns require food handler training, but the rules vary by municipality: some require it for everyone in the kitchen, some only one person per shift, and some not at all. Because local rules also dictate which provider you can use, confirm with your specific town’s health department.
The statewide manager requirement
Separate from municipal worker permits, New Jersey requires Risk Type 3 (higher-risk) establishments to have at least one certified Food Protection Manager as the Person in Charge. A key New Jersey-specific detail: the state accepts only certificates issued by NJ-accredited organizations — so confirm your exam provider is on New Jersey’s accepted list (the NJ DOH does not run courses itself). Cottage food operators, who run their own business, also need the Food Protection Manager certification.
Do regular workers need a food handler card?
Not statewide — it depends entirely on your municipality. In Newark (and some Bergen towns) yes; elsewhere it’s employer-driven. Where it’s not locally required, an ANAB-accredited course (typically valid 2–3 years) is the standard voluntary option — but if your town requires a specific approved provider, use that one.
What to do
- Check your municipality first — Newark and some Bergen towns require a specific permit from approved providers.
- Newark workers/volunteers: get the city Food Handler’s Permit within 30 days from an approved provider; renew every 3 years.
- Owner/manager: ensure a Food Protection Manager certified by an NJ-accredited organization at Risk Type 3 establishments.
New Jersey at a glance
| Statewide worker card? | No (municipal — e.g. Newark, some Bergen towns) |
| Statewide manager rule | Food Protection Manager at Risk Type 3 establishments |
| Accepted manager certs | NJ-accredited organizations only |
| Newark permit | Within 30 days; city-approved courses; 3-year renewal; covers public food distribution |
| Bergen County | Varies by municipality |
| Regulator | NJ Department of Health + municipalities |
This guide is general information, not legal advice. The New Jersey Department of Health and your municipality are the final word.
