Food truck equipment setup determines your operational capability, food safety compliance, and daily efficiency. Every piece of equipment must fit within your truck's physical constraints while meeting health department requirements and supporting safe food production. From cooking systems and refrigeration to water tanks and ventilation, your equipment choices create the framework within which your entire food safety management system operates. This guide covers the essential equipment categories for food truck operations, with emphasis on the food safety considerations that health inspectors prioritize during their evaluations.
Your cooking equipment must match your menu requirements while fitting safely within your mobile kitchen's footprint. The placement of cooking equipment affects workflow, fire safety, ventilation effectiveness, and the separation of cooking zones from cold storage areas.
Common food truck cooking equipment includes flat-top griddles for versatile high-heat cooking, deep fryers for items requiring immersion cooking, convection ovens or combi-ovens for baking and roasting, steam tables for hot holding of prepared items, char-broilers for grilled items, and induction cooktops for precise temperature control with reduced heat output.
Select equipment rated for commercial food service use — NSF International listing or equivalent indicates that equipment meets construction and food safety standards. Residential-grade equipment is not acceptable in commercial food truck operations, even if physically identical to commercial counterparts, because it may not meet fire safety ratings, electrical load specifications, or material standards required by health codes.
Equipment placement follows a logical workflow from raw ingredient storage through preparation, cooking, holding, and service. Position cooking equipment near your service window to minimize the distance hot food travels. Place your fire suppression system directly above all cooking equipment. Ensure that hot equipment does not radiate heat toward your refrigeration units, which would force them to work harder and potentially fail to maintain safe temperatures.
Secure all equipment for mobile operation. Cooking equipment must be bolted or bracketed to the truck structure to prevent shifting during transit. Unsecured equipment creates physical safety hazards during driving and can damage gas and electrical connections, creating fire and food safety risks.
Gas connections must be inspected and approved by a licensed technician. Each gas appliance needs an individual shutoff valve accessible in an emergency. Gas supply lines must be flexible enough to accommodate vehicle movement without developing leaks. Install gas leak detectors and test them regularly.
Refrigeration is arguably the most critical food safety equipment on your food truck. Without reliable cold storage, you cannot safely store perishable ingredients, and your entire food safety plan collapses.
Assess your refrigeration needs by calculating the total volume of perishable ingredients you need for a full day of service, plus a buffer for slower-than-expected sales. Include space for work-in-progress items that move between cold storage and preparation stations throughout the day.
Commercial food truck refrigeration options include undercounter refrigerators that fit beneath prep tables, reach-in refrigerators for larger volume storage, sandwich prep tables with built-in refrigerated wells, and chest-style coolers for bulk ingredient storage. Choose units designed for mobile operation — standard restaurant refrigerators may not withstand the vibration and movement of vehicle transit.
Install thermometers in every refrigeration unit — preferably digital models with continuous logging capability and alarm functions that alert you to temperature excursions. Record temperatures at minimum at opening and midday. The FDA Food Code requires that cold holding temperatures not exceed 5°C (41°F) and frozen storage maintain -18°C (0°F) or below.
Power supply reliability directly affects refrigeration safety. If your truck uses a generator, ensure it has sufficient capacity to run all refrigeration units simultaneously along with other electrical loads. Consider battery backup systems that maintain refrigeration during generator shutdown periods. A power failure during transit or overnight can compromise your entire perishable inventory.
Organize refrigerated storage with raw ingredients on lower shelves and ready-to-eat items above. Use sealed containers to prevent cross-contamination from drips. Label everything with date received or prepared and implement strict FIFO rotation.
Your water system is a critical food safety infrastructure component that supports handwashing, food preparation, equipment cleaning, and sanitation. Health departments specify minimum water capacities based on your menu complexity and expected service volume.
Fresh water tanks must be constructed of food-grade materials approved for potable water contact. Common tank materials include food-grade polyethylene and stainless steel. Tank size requirements vary by jurisdiction — typical minimums range from 100 to 200 liters (25 to 50 gallons) for food trucks with full cooking operations.
Gray water tanks must be at least 15% larger than your fresh water tank to accommodate water expansion and prevent overflow. Gray water — used water from sinks and food preparation — must be disposed of at your commissary kitchen or an approved waste disposal point. Never dump gray water in parking lots, storm drains, or any unapproved location.
Hot water supply is essential for handwashing and warewashing. Your water heating system must produce water at temperatures sufficient for effective handwashing (at least 38°C/100°F) and warewashing (at least 49°C/120°F for manual washing). Tankless water heaters are popular in food trucks for their compact size and continuous hot water supply.
Water system maintenance includes regular tank cleaning and sanitization, water quality testing if using fill sources other than municipal water, inspection of hoses and connections for leaks and contamination, and verification that fill ports and tank vents are properly screened against pests and contamination.
Backflow prevention devices are required on water connections to prevent contamination of your fresh water supply by gray water or external sources. Have your backflow prevention system inspected as part of your regular equipment maintenance schedule.
No matter how popular your restaurant is or how talented your chef is,
one food safety incident can destroy years of reputation overnight.
Food trucks face unique safety challenges — limited space, variable water supply, outdoor temperature exposure, and mobile equipment that needs constant calibration. Health inspectors know this, and they check food trucks rigorously.
Most food businesses manage safety with paper checklists — or worse, memory.
The businesses that thrive are the ones that make safety visible to their customers.
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Exhaust hood and ventilation systems must be designed for your specific cooking equipment and rated for the volume of grease-laden vapor your kitchen produces. Grease filters must be cleaned daily — grease accumulation creates fire hazards and can drip onto food or food contact surfaces. The exhaust system should create negative pressure in the cooking area, drawing cooking vapors out rather than allowing them to spread through the truck.
Fire suppression systems are mandatory in food trucks with cooking equipment. Wet chemical suppression systems designed for commercial kitchens are the standard for food trucks. These systems must be inspected and approved by a licensed fire protection company, typically every six months. Keep your inspection certificate current and readily accessible for health and fire inspectors.
Fire extinguishers supplement your automatic suppression system. At minimum, carry a Class K fire extinguisher rated for cooking oil fires and a Class ABC extinguisher for general fires. Train all staff on fire extinguisher operation and emergency shutdown procedures.
Electrical systems for food trucks must be designed and installed by licensed electricians familiar with mobile food unit requirements. Common configurations include generator-powered systems, shore power connections for stationary operation, and battery-supplemented systems for transit refrigeration. All circuits should have ground-fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) protection, especially in wet areas near sinks.
Generator placement must ensure that exhaust fumes do not enter the food preparation area and that noise levels comply with local ordinances. Regular generator maintenance — oil changes, filter replacements, and load testing — prevents failures during service that could compromise both food safety and business operations.
Handwashing and warewashing facilities are among the most closely inspected aspects of any food truck. Deficiencies in these areas are among the most common causes of failed inspections.
Your handwashing station must be dedicated exclusively to handwashing — never used for food preparation, dishwashing, or waste disposal. It must provide hot and cold running water, liquid soap in a dispenser, single-use paper towels in a dispenser, and a waste receptacle. Position the station so that every worker can reach it without leaving their work area or crossing through food preparation zones.
Warewashing options include a three-compartment sink (wash, rinse, sanitize), a two-compartment sink with chemical sanitizing (where permitted by local code), or a commercial dishwasher (less common due to space and water constraints). Whichever system you use, maintain proper sanitizer concentrations and verify with test strips. Document your warewashing procedures and sanitizer concentration checks.
What size water tanks does a food truck need?
Tank size requirements vary by jurisdiction and menu complexity. Typical minimums range from 100 to 200 liters (25 to 50 gallons) for fresh water, with gray water tanks at least 15% larger. Check your local health code for specific requirements and consider your actual daily water usage when sizing tanks.
Do food trucks need a fire suppression system?
Yes — virtually all jurisdictions require commercial fire suppression systems in food trucks with cooking equipment. Wet chemical systems designed for commercial kitchens are standard. Systems must be professionally inspected and approved, typically every six months.
How do I power my food truck equipment?
Common options include commercial generators, propane for cooking equipment, shore power connections for stationary operation, and battery systems for transit. Your power system must reliably support all equipment simultaneously, with particular attention to maintaining refrigeration during all operating modes.
What refrigeration do I need for a food truck?
Your refrigeration capacity should exceed your daily perishable ingredient volume by at least 30%. Use commercial mobile refrigeration units designed to withstand vehicle vibration and movement. Install thermometers with logging and alarm capability in every unit.
Well-chosen, properly maintained equipment is the physical foundation of your food truck's safety system. Build a HACCP plan that leverages your equipment capabilities to their fullest.
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