Yes, raw milk sales are legal in Louisiana but tightly controlled under state and local health codes. The Louisiana Department of Health (LDH) permits raw milk sales only through licensed cow-share or herd-share agreements, bypassing traditional retail channels. A 2023 LDH directive reinforced compliance with dairy sanitation standards, while a pending 2026 rule update may further restrict unregulated distribution.
Key Regulations for Raw Milk in Louisiana
- Licensed Cow/Herd-Shares Required: Sales must occur via legally structured agreements where consumers co-own dairy animals, exempting transactions from retail dairy licensing under LDH’s Sanitary Code, Part II, Chapter 11.
- Testing Mandates: Raw milk must undergo monthly bacterial and somatic cell count testing by LDH-certified labs, with violations triggering immediate suspension under LAC 51:II.1103.
- Labeling & Consumer Waivers: Containers require LDH-approved warnings (e.g., “Raw Milk – Not Pasteurized”) and signed acknowledgment of health risks, per LAC 51:II.1105.
Violations, such as unlicensed sales or failure to report test results, are enforced by LDH’s Bureau of Environmental Health, with penalties escalating to misdemeanor charges under RS 40:4.101. Local parishes may impose additional restrictions, such as Orleans Parish’s 2024 moratorium on new herd-share permits. Producers must maintain continuous compliance with evolving LDH guidelines to avoid operational shutdowns.