Permit requirements for a ghost kitchen are usually narrower than for a dine-in restaurant because there is no customer seating, front-of-house service, or on-premise guest traffic. Both still need core food business approvals, but a dine-in operation often needs additional permits tied to occupancy, restrooms, signage, customer safety, and sometimes alcohol service.
A ghost kitchen generally needs the permits required to prepare and handle food legally from a commercial facility. A dine-in restaurant needs those same basics, plus approvals related to serving guests inside the premises.
In most markets, both concepts are treated as food businesses first. That means the main review focuses on food safety, storage, preparation areas, waste handling, refrigeration, ventilation, and staff hygiene procedures.
Once guests are entering and staying on site, the regulatory scope usually expands. Authorities may review seating capacity, emergency exits, toilets, accessibility, outdoor seating, and guest-facing signage.
Operators usually start with zoning and landlord approval before investing in build-out. After that, they move through kitchen design review, health and fire compliance, equipment installation, and final inspections before opening.
For example, a delivery-only burger brand working from a licensed shared kitchen may avoid most customer-area approvals. A neighborhood cafe with 40 seats, indoor service, and beer sales would usually face a broader permit package because the public is using the space directly.
A ghost kitchen inside a licensed commissary or shared commercial kitchen may inherit part of its compliance framework, but that does not automatically remove the need for its own registrations or operational approvals. Requirements vary by city, so the exact permit list should always be confirmed with the local health, zoning, and fire authorities before launch.
When a restaurant needs to present clear allergen information, dietary labels, menu availability, or different menus for delivery and in-house service, Menuviel's digital menu management, allergen badges, and fast availability tools help keep those guest-facing details structured and consistent across channels.