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Anderson's Outdoor AdventuresFlorida DBPR inspection record

Official Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation inspection history and the VMScore compliance analysis. License MFD1150459, Alachua County, FL. 1 inspections on file. Every record below is verifiable on the state's official site.

Source: Florida DBPR official records License MFD1150459 verified active16,404 FL vendors scoredSynced weekly, current through Jun 19, 2026

Inspection record

1
Inspections on file
1 day ago
Most recent
Alachua, FL
County
Active
License
Jun 18, 2026
Verify this record on Florida DBPR's official site

Cross-check every date above against the State of Florida's own portal. The records are public. The scored analysis is what VenuMark builds on top of them.

What is VenuMark? We are an independent Florida compliance-records service. We pull every public DBPR food-vendor inspection, score it 0 to 100 with the VMScore model, and format it into one report that venues, planners, and insurers can file. The records are the state's; we format, analyze, and score them. See our scoring methodology.

Common questions

About this report.

Where does this inspection data come from?

Florida DBPR — the state agency that licenses and inspects mobile food vendors and caterers. We pull every public inspection record and refresh weekly. We don't score vendors ourselves; we surface what DBPR already filed.

DBPR's portal is free. Why pay $4.99?

DBPR's portal is free, and worth using. $4.99 buys the part the portal doesn't: one PDF that scores the vendor, formats the full inspection history, flags every high-priority violation, and gives you a single document to email a client, drop in a vendor file, or hand to your insurer. You're paying for the report, not the data.

What counts as a "high-priority" violation?

DBPR's most severe category — direct food-safety hazards: improper food temperatures, raw meat contaminating ready-to-eat food, employees not washing hands, undercooked food, toxic chemicals stored near food. Intermediate violations are operational gaps (no soap at the handwash sink); basic violations are facility wear (cracked tile, dim lighting).

Is the data accurate?

Every figure in the report comes straight from Florida DBPR's official public records, with the inspection dates attached. If anything in your report doesn't match DBPR, we refund it.

Does a VMScore report satisfy our liability insurer?

Most commercial liability policies for event venues require documented vendor vetting before they'll cover food-borne illness claims. A VMScore PDF in the vendor file is the kind of dated, third-party-sourced documentation underwriters expect. Confirm the format with your carrier, but most accept it as proof of due diligence.

Is there a subscription, or auto-renew?

No. $4.99 per report, one-time. The first report is free with code FIRSTFREE. No account, no card on file, no upsells.

Independent analysis of Florida DBPR public records. Not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the State of Florida or DBPR.