VMScore aggregates inspection records for every DBPR-licensed mobile food vendor in Florida. Search by name, license number, or city. Open any result for the full DBPR inspection history and a $9.99 compliance report.
Every VMScore is sourced from official Florida DBPR public inspection records, synced weekly.
No vendor self-reports. No hidden methodology. The data is the public record.
VMScore tracks inspection records for every DBPR-licensed mobile food vendor (MFDV) and caterer (CATR) operating in the state of Florida. The database covers 16,394 active and recently active vendors across all 67 Florida counties.
Each search result links to a vendor compliance report containing the full inspection history, violation breakdown by severity, license status, and a composite VMScore calculated from official DBPR data. First report is free with code FIRSTFREE; $9.99 each after that.
For event coordinators, planners, and venues vetting Florida food vendors.
Type a vendor name, license number, or city. Open the result. The 0–100 score and A–F letter grade are at the top; the full DBPR inspection history is right below if you want to read every violation. Most users have what they need to make a booking call in under a minute. The first detailed compliance report is free with code FIRSTFREE.
In Florida, every licensed mobile food vendor is inspected by the Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). Their inspection records are public. The fastest way to read one is to search the vendor name on VMScore. Each compliance report shows the full DBPR inspection history, every violation broken out by severity (high-priority, intermediate, basic), license status, and a 0–100 score with an A–F letter grade.
Search by vendor name, license number, or city.
Used by Florida event planners, venue operators, and procurement teams to vet vendors before booking. First report free with code FIRSTFREE.
Yes. Florida DBPR publishes inspection records for every licensed mobile food vendor (license type 2014, MFDV) and caterer (license type 2013, CATR). VMScore aggregates the public records, scores each vendor, and packages the result into a single PDF compliance report. The data is the same data DBPR publishes; the report is the work of formatting and scoring it for you.
Three steps: confirm the vendor holds a current Florida DBPR license, pull their inspection record, and look at the high-priority violations specifically (those are the food-safety hazards, not paperwork issues). VMScore does all three in 30 seconds. Type the vendor name, open the report, and save the dated PDF in your event file.
DBPR's most severe category, drawn from the FDA Food Code. High-priority violations are direct food-safety hazards (improper food temperatures, raw meat contaminating ready-to-eat food, employees not washing hands, undercooked food, or toxic chemicals near food). These are the violations that actually correlate with foodborne illness risk. VMScore flags every high-priority violation on a vendor's record.
VMScore syncs weekly from Florida DBPR's official public database. When DBPR logs a new inspection, the vendor's record on VMScore updates on the next weekly cycle.
Yes. The PDF is dated, sourced (Florida DBPR), and stamped with the score and letter grade: the kind of third-party documentation an underwriter or counsel can cite directly. Some carriers specifically ask for it as part of a vendor file; most accept it on request. The report stays in your event records whether you share it or not.
First report free with code FIRSTFREE. $9.99 each after that. Dated PDF you keep on file.
Type a vendor name, license number, or city in the VMScore search above.