Hammond is the largest city and commercial hub of Tangipahoa Parish, sitting on Louisiana's Northshore about 45 minutes from both New Orleans and Baton Rouge. As the parish center, it pulls together a college crowd, a working downtown, and steady traffic off the interstates, which gives food trucks a real mix of people to feed. Trucks fit right into that rhythm, serving locals, students, and travelers around downtown events, the Saturday farmers market, brewery and patio stops, and everyday lunch runs.
A big part of the energy comes from Southeastern Louisiana University, one of the largest universities in the state. SLU sits right at the edge of downtown, and the campus crowd keeps demand for quick, casual, affordable food high through the school year. That college-town pull, layered over a local population that already loves to eat, is exactly the kind of audience food trucks are built for, from late lunches and game days to events and pop-ups around the area.
Hammond grew up as a railroad town, and that history still shapes the walkable historic downtown around the old rail line and the 1912 depot, which remains the only Amtrak passenger stop in Louisiana outside New Orleans. Restored storefronts now hold shops, bars, chef-driven restaurants, and the historic Columbia Theatre. The city also sits at the crossroads of Interstate 12 and Interstate 55, in the heart of strawberry country near Ponchatoula, which keeps Hammond busy with both everyday locals and people passing through.
That mix gives Hammond trucks room to serve a wide range of cravings, with a clear Louisiana lean toward Cajun and Creole cooking, Gulf seafood, and po'boys alongside Southern comfort food, BBQ, tacos, burgers, sweets, and coffee. Some trucks are fixed or semi-fixed, some move through Northshore service areas, and some are best found through menus, profiles, and current updates. Use this page to browse Hammond food trucks by cuisine, menu, catering options, and nearby service areas.