Use this page to onboard cooks consistently and safely. The sections below summarize the core compliance items to complete before a cook can serve clients.
legal Obligations for onboarding.
These are non‑negotiable requirements that must be completed before a cook is allowed to serve a client.
Food Handler’s Medical Screening and Certificate
- Screening includes tests for tuberculosis and typhoid.
- Medically fit individuals receive a certificate.
- Unfit individuals are barred until treated and cleared.
- Certificates must be renewed annually.
Medical fitness under municipal by‑laws
Municipal by‑laws typically require a medical certification confirming the cook is free of communicable diseases before operating.
Compliance with FDA licensing rules
The Food and Drugs Authority requires a Food Hygiene Permit and adherence to hygiene standards. Even though cooks work in clients’ homes, the company is considered a food service operator and must follow FDA licensing requirements.
What your company must have in place before approving cooks
These obligations apply to a managed‑service model and should be in place before any cook is approved.
- Business registration (Registrar General’s Department + tax)
- FDA Food Hygiene Permit (company must hold a valid permit)
- Insurance (public liability + worker protection)
- Record‑keeping
- Food Handler Certificates
- Medical screening results
- Training logs
- Incident reports
- Ingredient sourcing (especially if integrating Farmyard)
Approval checklist for each onboarder
A cook is approved only when all items below are completed.
- National ID verified
- Background check completed
- Medical screening completed (TB + typhoid)
- Food Handler’s Certificate issued and valid
- Food‑safety and hygiene training completed
- Trial cooking assessment passed
- Signed cook agreement (conduct, confidentiality, liability)
- Added to insurance roster
- SOP training completed
- Activated in scheduling system
