Calculate your true cost per pound and suggested retail price for every jar size based on extraction costs, packaging, and labor.
Pricing honey correctly is one of the most important — and most commonly botched — parts of selling as a beekeeper. New beekeepers often underprice because they only think about the cost of the honey itself and forget to account for extraction equipment, jars, labels, their time, and the ongoing cost of maintaining their hives. When you factor in all those costs, a fair retail price for raw local honey at a farmers market typically falls between $12 and $20 per pound, depending on your region, the honey's floral source, and your brand.
Commercial grocery store honey sells for $3–$6 per pound because it's pasteurized, ultra-filtered, and often blended from multiple countries. Your honey is none of those things — it's raw, local, traceable, and far superior in flavor and nutrition. Price it accordingly. Underselling devalues not just your honey but the work of every beekeeper in your region who sells at a fair price.
A healthy established hive in a good nectar year produces 40–80 pounds of surplus honey. First-year hives often produce little or nothing — the bees need to build up reserves. In a poor nectar year or drought, even experienced beekeepers may see 10–20 pounds per hive. Budget conservatively when projecting your season's harvest. Extraction costs include renting or owning an extractor, uncapping equipment, filters, buckets, and the time to do the work. Packaging costs — jars, lids, and labels — typically run $1.50–$2.50 per unit for a 12 oz jar when purchased in bulk, or up to $3.50+ for small quantities.
An established hive in its second year or beyond typically produces 40–80 pounds of surplus honey in a good season, though averages vary widely by region. In the Southeast US with long nectar flows, 60–100+ pounds per hive is achievable. In the Pacific Northwest or northern states with shorter seasons, 20–40 pounds per hive is more typical. First-year hives rarely produce surplus — the colony needs that first season to build comb, expand the population, and store enough honey to survive winter. Plan on little to no harvest from new packages or nucs in year one, then expect real production starting in year two.
Start with your true cost per pound from this calculator — that includes extraction costs, jars, labels, and any labor you want to pay yourself. Then add your desired profit margin (40–60% is common for farmers market direct sales). As a real-world benchmark, raw local honey at US farmers markets in 2024 sold for $10–$22 per pound depending on region, with specialty varietals (buckwheat, tupelo, manuka-style local) reaching $25–$35 per pound. Check what other beekeepers in your area are charging so you're priced competitively without undercutting. Never match grocery store prices — your raw, unfiltered, local honey is a fundamentally different product.
Raw honey is minimally processed — it's warmed only enough to pour (below 110°F) and strained through a coarse filter to remove wax and bee parts, but not ultra-filtered. It retains pollen, propolis, natural enzymes, and tends to crystallize over time (which is normal and desirable). Filtered or pasteurized commercial honey is heated to 160°F+ and pushed through ultra-fine filters to remove all pollen, giving it a clear appearance and extending shelf life by preventing crystallization — but destroying many of the enzymes and eliminating the pollen that makes it traceable to a specific region. Consumers who understand the difference will pay significantly more for genuine raw honey, and many specifically seek it out for its flavor and perceived health benefits.
The startup cost to sell honey from your own hives depends on what equipment you already own. A basic extraction setup (hand-cranked 2-frame extractor, uncapping knife, filters, bucket) runs $200–$500 if purchased new. Jar and label costs for a 30-pound harvest — roughly 40 jars at 12 oz each — will run $60–$100 including labels. If you plan to sell at a farmers market, budget for a booth fee ($25–$100/week), a display setup ($50–$200 one-time), and possibly a cottage food registration fee ($10–$50 depending on your state). Total first-season selling costs beyond the hive itself often run $400–$800, making it important to harvest enough honey and price it fairly to recoup those costs.
In most US states, selling honey produced from your own hives directly to consumers is covered under cottage food or small farm exemptions, which typically require only basic labeling (your name, address, and "raw honey" disclosure) and no formal license below a certain revenue threshold. About half of US states require beekeepers to register their hives with the state department of agriculture — this is typically free or low cost and is separate from a sales license. If you want to sell through grocery stores, co-ops, or online with shipping, additional licensing, facility inspections, and labeling compliance (FDA regulations for food labels) typically apply. Check your specific state's department of agriculture and department of health websites, as rules vary significantly by state.
Creamed honey (also called whipped honey or spun honey) is liquid honey that has been deliberately seeded with finely crystallized honey and kept at cool temperatures until it forms a smooth, spreadable consistency. It has the same nutritional profile as liquid honey but a very different texture — like soft butter — that many customers prefer for spreading on toast or biscuits. Creamed honey commands a 15–30% price premium over liquid honey of the same variety, and it's extremely popular as a gift item. The process requires seed honey (about 10% of the batch), a large container for mixing, and controlled temperature storage around 57°F for 1–2 weeks. It's one of the highest-margin value-added products available to a small-scale beekeeper.