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AAA Food Handler

INDIANA
FOOD HANDLERS CARD

4.9
(26,836 reviews)

4.9
(26,836 reviews)

Our clients

BENEFITS OF TRAINING

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PREVENT

Education is the best tool to prevent, minimize, or eliminate foodborne illnesses and food hazards.

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AWARENESS

Improve critical thinking and decision making to prevent or avoid sticky situations.

ELIMINATE

Training helps reduce or eliminate food safety hazards before they become major issues.

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MINIMIZE

Be able to recognize, mitigate, reduce or eliminate the risk of improper food safety procedures.
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PRODUCTIVITY

Reducing food safety complaints will create a happier workplace and in turn increase productivity.

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WORKPLACE SATISFACTION

Serving safe food will increase productivity will in turn increase workplace satisfaction.

WHY CHOOSE US 

Food handler card

Getting Your Food Handler Card is Quick and Hassle-Free

Numerous professionals nationwide have already earned and renewed their card with AAA Food Handler — a trusted name in food safety training.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs)

The AAA Food Handler is an online course platform accredited by the  ANAB that teaches essential food safety practices, including hygiene, temperature control, proper cleaning, and contamination prevention. It’s entirely online, self-paced, takes about 1.5 hours, and is available in English and Spanish.

Anyone working with unpackaged food, food-contact surfaces, utensils, or equipment in Indiana should take the Food Handler Certificate Course. This includes cooks, dishwashers, servers, bartenders, deli clerks, grocery staff, and more.

Even though it’s not legally required, the Food Handler Certificate Course helps you learn how to prevent foodborne illness, follow proper food safety procedures, and reduce workplace risks. It also gives you a hiring advantage in Indiana’s growing food service industry.

You’ll learn about foodborne illness prevention, time and temperature controls, personal hygiene, handwashing, safe food storage, cleaning and sanitizing procedures, and avoiding cross-contamination and allergen risks.

To earn your Indiana Food Handlers Card, you must complete the online training and pass the 40-question final exam with a 70% or higher score. You have two attempts to pass, and upon passing, you can instantly download and print your certificate.

Typically valid for 5 years. Renewal is required before the expiration date. Always check with your local health department for updates.

Most Indiana food handler certificates are valid for 3 years. However, employers or local health departments may have renewal guidelines, so it’s best to check with them.

Indiana allows the sale of non-potentially hazardous foods that are shelf-stable and do not require refrigeration. Approved items include baked goods (without cream or custard), fruit jams and jellies, candies, dry spice mixes, granola, and similar products that can be safely stored at room temperature.

The course is 100% online and available 24/7. You can access it on any device with internet access, and it’s available in English and Spanish.

The Indiana Food Handler course costs only $6.95, making it one of the most affordable options available for food safety training.

With the Food Handler Certificate, you can apply for jobs like prep cook, line cook, server, bartender, dishwasher, busser, deli worker, grocery clerk, or food truck staff. It’s ideal for any role that involves handling food or food-contact surfaces.

Food safety training helps prevent foodborne illness outbreaks. Indiana has one of the lowest rates of foodborne illness in the U.S., and by following proper food handling procedures, you can help keep it that way.

Visit the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) website for statewide food safety regulations, the Indiana Food Code, and resources for food workers. The Indiana Department of Education also offers child care food safety resources.

In Indiana, ANAB recognition ensures Food Protection Manager Certification programs meet national food safety standards and state health regulations set by the Conference for Food Protection (CFP), making them valid for legal compliance.

Yes. Indiana requires a food handler certificate for home-based vendors. It helps ensure safe food preparation and compliance with House Bill 1149. Upon request, a copy must be provided to the local health department or customer.

Yes. Indiana accepts online food handler certificate courses if the provider meets state requirements and issues a valid food handler card upon completion.

For official food safety guidance in Indiana, contact the Indiana State Department of Health, 2 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204.

Food Handler Reviews

4.9

Food Protection Training
26,836 reviews
4.9
4.9 out of 5 stars (based on 26,836 reviews)
Excellent92%
Very good6%
Average2%
Poor0%
Terrible0%

Good

November 9, 2023

Perfect

Yishak G.

3

November 9, 2023

Decent

Pratham P.

good

November 9, 2023

Kassandra U.

Bueno

November 9, 2023

Ariana V.

Very informative, well explained, and easy to understand,

November 9, 2023

Veronica Q.

Very good, would recommend to others!

November 8, 2023

I love food

Ian M.

Good

November 8, 2023

Ying L.

Five stars

November 8, 2023

Easy

Karina A.

excellent training and exam questions

November 8, 2023

excellent

JohnLong L.

great training

November 8, 2023

Reben B.

Pretty good

November 8, 2023

Jackson W.

alot of good info!

November 8, 2023

David M.

i learned something new thank you

November 8, 2023

good

Jesus C.

pretty good and cheapest option I saw

November 8, 2023

bit of a hefty final exam, but if you paid attention you should do good.

Juan B.

Hmm

November 8, 2023

Suzanne S.

Thanks for the capacitación

November 8, 2023

Jesus D.

Course content seemed fine, but there are a few places (technical & content) which could be improved upon

November 8, 2023

Most of what follows is things I feel could be improved upon, but which largely don’t negatively impact the overall effectiveness of the course.

Technical issues:

– Variable audio between video segments, usually within a similar level, but occasionally drastically quieter

– Not all videos had closed captions, which is a vital tool for folks who may be hard of hearing, or who process information better when read over heard

– Volume and closed captions settings did not carry over between videos, this is minor, but it is frustrating to turn it up and enable CC on every single video segment

– I did also notice on a couple of the videos the controls for pausing/playing, volume, and closed captions moved to different places.

– The videos did a have a delay for me, but not too significant, however I feel this could be streamlined a bit better. I’m assuming the delay is due to a back end process first checking if you’ve completed the prior module and then initiating the process to load the video. Something which could be done to help improve the loading speed is having the video quality reduced to about 720p(assuming they’re not already), since most of the modules videos contained still images or infographics which wouldn’t be drastically negatively impacted by a lower resolution and they’re all pretty short and less than 5min which should mean the video files are small in size and they load swiftly.

Content:

– One of the first questions about High Risk Populations for foodborne illness was badly worded, the question “Which of the following groups are at a high risk of getting foodborne illness? click on each one to learn more” -> this implied that only the groups at higher risks should be selected, but the module actually wanted you to click on each group to learn more about them and their individual risks of foodborne illness.

– The Handwashing segment and steps I felt would have been better if it instead cut to segments of a video playing which demonstrate visually what was needed for each step rather than watching a video first then looking at simple infographic images. Or perhaps talked the steps in the handwashing process over the handwashing video shown initially.

– The segment on personal hygiene’s cartoon example, I felt dipped into over exaggeration and was poorly worded. The directions afterword’s felt ok, but during the video the comments “looks at your uncombed hair” and “she pinches her nose because you obviously didn’t shower” aren’t great. Instead if you have to keep the comments about hair and not showering, I’d recommend changing the wording to something closer to “concerningly unexpected and/or unpleasant odors” or “concerningly unkempt appearances”. Reasoning is, otherwise this really only applies to the beginning of a shift and to those not working in hot or fast paced areas of the food service/restaurant. Honestly though I’d just remove the cartoon animation from that segment, I can see the intent of a “this is why these things are needed” example, but if its removed it would reduce the overall time of the course and its removal doesn’t hamper the information which is needed to get across.

– Generally I felt things could have been a bit more succinct, there were a number of places where information was reiterated without significant changes or additional surrounding information. I realize some of that could have been for the sake of emphasizing, but if reduced, the modules time could probably be reduced by about 10-15minutes at a rough guesstimation.

– Something minor is the temperature ranges change a bit based on altitude(atmospheric pressure), temperature, and humidity making the boiling point of water vary depending on these factors and isn’t always exactly 212°F.

Sean M.

Comprehensive and thurough

November 8, 2023

John B.

Good course and really good explaining

November 8, 2023

This course gives good examples of situations on real life and helps comprehend

Carlos R.

Great course.

November 8, 2023

YASUTERU M.