
Last verified: June 2026. Confirm with the Wyoming Department of Agriculture or your local health district before paying.
Wyoming has one of the more unusual setups in the country: food safety is run by the Department of Agriculture (not a health department), and a food handler class becomes mandatory only as a consequence of failing an inspection or fumbling the inspector’s questions. Here’s the accurate picture.
Quick answer
Under the Wyoming Food Rule, each licensed establishment must have a Certified Food Protection Manager (CFPM) and a Person in Charge. There’s no statewide worker food handler card — but a food handler class can be triggered by inspection results.
- The requirement: at least one CFPM per licensed establishment (since Jan 1, 2015), via an ANSI-CFP accredited exam; valid 5 years.
- The PIC rule: every establishment must always have a Person in Charge.
- The trigger: if the PIC can’t answer basic food-safety questions and/or the establishment gets at least one critical violation, then at least one person per shift must have passed a food handler class.
- Regulator: Wyoming Department of Agriculture, Consumer Health Services (uses the 2017 FDA Food Code framework).
The “earn the requirement by failing” mechanism
This is what makes Wyoming distinctive. A food handler class isn’t required up front. Instead, it kicks in as a corrective measure: if your designated PIC can’t demonstrate food-safety knowledge when an inspector asks, or the establishment receives a critical violation, the rule then requires at least one person per shift to have completed a food handler class. In other words, good inspection performance keeps the requirement off; failing turns it on. The cleanest way to avoid the trigger is to have a knowledgeable, certified PIC on the floor.
The certified manager requirement
Since January 1, 2015, each licensed establishment must have at least one employee with supervisory and management responsibility who is a CFPM (passed an accredited exam). Establishments with limited food preparation may face a lesser requirement or be exempt. The certificate is valid 5 years.
Local variation — Teton County
Some districts go further than the state. In the Teton District (Jackson), having a CFPM on staff is flatly mandatory, and the district notes that if the PIC can’t answer basic questions and/or there’s a critical violation, at least one person per shift must have passed a food handler class. Check your local health district, as some may not accept the demonstration-of-knowledge exemption.
Cottage / homemade food
Under the Wyoming Food Freedom Act, homemade food producers aren’t required to have training, licensing, or inspections — though a voluntary food handler certificate is still recommended.
Do regular workers need a food handler card?
Not up front, and not statewide. A worker class only becomes mandatory after a triggering inspection result (or where a local district requires it). Voluntary ANAB-accredited training is still worthwhile and often expected by employers.
What to do
- Owner/manager: have a CFPM on staff and make sure your on-floor PIC can confidently answer an inspector’s food-safety questions — that’s what keeps the food-handler-class trigger from activating. Renew the CFPM every 5 years.
- Teton District: a CFPM is mandatory — don’t rely on the demonstration-of-knowledge route.
- Regular worker: no upfront card; a voluntary course helps and may become required after a violation.
Wyoming at a glance
| Statewide worker card? | No (can be triggered by inspection results) |
| State requirement | One CFPM per licensed establishment (since Jan 1, 2015) |
| The trigger | PIC can’t answer questions and/or a critical violation → food handler class per shift |
| Valid for (CFPM) | 5 years |
| Teton District | CFPM mandatory |
| Regulator | Wyoming Department of Agriculture (Consumer Health Services) |
This guide is general information, not legal advice. The Wyoming Department of Agriculture and your local health district are the final word.
End of document — 50 states · Verified June 2026 · getfoodhandlercard.com
