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Training helps reduce or eliminate food safety hazards before they become major issues.
Reducing food safety complaints will create a happier workplace and in turn increase productivity.
Numerous professionals nationwide have already earned and renewed their card with AAA Food Handler — a trusted name in food safety training.
The Food Handler course includes essential topics related to food safety, hygiene practices, temperature control, cross-contamination prevention, and safe food preparation. After completing the course, you’ll receive a State-Approved Food Handler Certificate.
Enroll in an approved online course that meets Texas requirements. After completing the training and passing the required assessment (if applicable), you can download your Texas Food Handlers Card instantly.
Enrollment is available 24/7. You can begin learning at any time that fits your schedule.
The course takes approximately 1.5 hours and allows you to start, pause, and resume as needed.
Certificate types are offered at $6.95. Special bulk pricing is available for employers who need to train several staff members.
Employers can monitor, manage, and track employee progress while ensuring their team follows proper food safety procedures.
According to the Texas Administrative Code Rule §228.33, all food employees must complete an accredited food handler training course within 60 days of starting employment.
The Texas Department of State Health Services (TXDSHS) defines food employees as anyone who handles unpackaged food, food-contact surfaces, or food equipment. This includes workers in various establishments such as:
Restaurants (casual and fine-dining)
Fast food outlets
Coffee shops and bakeries
Food trucks and sandwich shops
Convenience stores
After successfully completing the course, you’ll receive a Texas food handlers card. This card demonstrates that you’ve received basic food safety education and must be kept on file by your employer. Texas law requires that your certificate be readily available on-site, either digitally or as a hard copy.
Yes, the food handler course is available in English and Spanish for broader accessibility.
The ANAB operates under the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) In Texas, this partnership ensures that food safety training programs—such as those offered by AAA Food Handler—meet public health requirements set by the Texas Department of State Health Services (Texas DSHS).
For official guidance on food safety rules and regulations in Texas, contact the Texas Department of State Health Services
Food Handler Program
The Exchange Building
8407 Wall Street
Austin, Texas 78754
In Texas, all food employees are required to complete an accredited food handler training course shortly after being hired. According to the Texas Food Establishment Rules and the Department of State Health Services (DSHS), this training must be completed within 30 to 60 days of starting work, depending on local enforcement.
Food employees include anyone who works with unpackaged food, food-contact surfaces, utensils, or food equipment. This applies to staff at fast food places, full-service restaurants, bakeries, coffee shops, food trucks, convenience stores, and sandwich shops.
Food Handler Reviews
4.9
the audio did not work for most pf the modules
The course was designed to be easily understood by a layman. Very informative and a great course!
Love how it is broken into sections and gives visuals!! Very easy to understand and retain!
Taught me everything I needed to know. However, it was somewhat clunky; I had to re-start the play button and closed captioning for every single module, as it didn’t continue with my previous settings. It was also not intuitive at times, expecting me to click on an object on the screen in order to continue but not prompting me to do so.
Excellent course.
Straightforward with easy to follow prompts
Fantastic learning materials. Very smooth and informative.
its okay
Hi
The corse was long but educational and I will be using these skills outside the workplace
The actual information is fine, but the voice over is hard to understand without closed captions (CC) due to it being AI. its robotic and doesn’t feel genuine.
I’ve taken a few food handlers courses similar to this one, and my experience is overall better when real people do the voice over.
Although I have been working in a kitchen for a about a year now, there was a few things on here that was very helpful. I was never able to remember the temperature for cooking chicken, but after this I got it down. Thank you
way too long, unnecessary filler and does not cover crucial topics. terrible.
Great training