Melvea
Local honey · United States

Honey starts with a place.

The same bee makes a different honey on a sourwood ridge than it does in an orange grove. Find the farms near you — and taste where you live.

Local farms across every American honey region · directory refreshed daily
Browse farms

Find the farms where you live.

Explore the map or drop in your ZIP, open a region, then a state — and meet the beekeepers behind the jar, one human-sized list at a time.

Tap a pin to open a farm · tap a region to browse its states below
Southeast & AppalachiaSourwood, Tupelo, Gallberry
No farms listed yet.
Sourwood country
Southeast & Appalachia

Anise-leaning, glassy, light amber — the most coveted single-origin in the country.

·choose a state

Choose a state to meet its farms. Southeast & Appalachia has 433 listed across 12 states.

The short answer

What is honey terroir?

Terroir is the taste of a place. Bees forage within about two miles of the hive, so a jar of honey is a near-literal map of what was blooming nearby — the flowers, the soil they grew in, the season, the weather that year.

It is why sourwood from an Appalachian ridge tastes nothing like tupelo from a Gulf swamp, even though the same species of bee made both. Single-origin honey carries that fingerprint; blended supermarket honey averages it away.

The floral source

Which flowers were in bloom sets the dominant flavor — citrus, anise, malt, spice.

Soil & microclimate

The same flower yields differently on a coast, a ridge, or a river bottom.

The season

An early spring or a dry summer changes the harvest — vintage matters here, too.

Meet a beekeeper
B

A Charlotte beekeeping operation built on sixteen years of fieldwork, running a hive partnership program across backyards and corporate sites and bottling the honey those hives produce.

Bee & Comb
Charlotte, North Carolina
Raw HoneyWildflower
Visit the farm
Worth tasting

Honeys from these regions.

A cross-section of the Melvea catalog — single-origin varietals and small-batch jars from producers across the country. Buy direct from the farm or wherever you already shop.

On Amazon
MeadowfoamRaw Oregon Meadowfoam HoneyGloryBee · United States
8.4Melvea ScoreView
Direct
InfusedElderberry Infused Raw HoneyMitchem Bee Company · Florida
3.9Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
Greek PinePine Forest HoneyBalparmak · Turkey
6.6Melvea ScoreView
Direct
Orange BlossomFlorida Orange Blossom HoneyMitchem Bee Company · Florida
5.1Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
Blueberry100% Raw Maine Blueberry Honey 10.5ozBee Raw
6.5Melvea ScoreView
Direct
WildflowerWildflower HoneyMountain Sweet Honey Company · Georgia
3.4Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
AcaciaWelsh Mountain Apiaries Black Locust HoneyWelsh Mountain Apiaries
6.8Melvea ScoreView
Direct
Hot HoneyChili Crunch Hot HoneyMomofuku · United States
3.9Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
Saw PalmettoPalmetto Honey — Raw SouthernSavannah Bee Company · United States
7.8Melvea ScoreView
Direct
CreamedTurmeric & Cinnamon Whipped Raw HoneyMitchem Bee Company · Florida
3.9Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
Saw PalmettoPalmetto HoneyWeeks Honey Farm · Vidalia, Georgia
7.5Melvea ScoreView
Direct
Hot HoneyThai Chili Infused Raw HoneyMitchem Bee Company · Florida
0.9Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
WildflowerRoyal Jelly Enriched Raw Honey 40ozStakich · United States
6.5Melvea ScoreView
Direct
Ponderosa PineColorado Ponderosa Pine HoneyBjorn's Colorado Honey · Colorado
6.9Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
MeadowfoamOregon Meadowfoam Raw Honey 10.5ozBee Raw
6.8Melvea ScoreView
Direct
CreamedWickedly Whipped Summer Sweet HoneyKiller Bees Honey · Lake Toxaway, North Carolina
3.9Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
AcaciaLocust Blossom Raw HoneyBeekeeper's Daughter
6.8Melvea ScoreView
Direct
WildflowerRaw Wildflower HoneyKing Cobra Apiary · Piedmont, North Carolina (Orange & Alamance counties)
3.4Melvea ScoreView
On Amazon
ManukaManuka Honey UMF 10+ (MGO 263+)Comvita · New Zealand
5.3Melvea ScoreView
Direct
InfusedLavender Infused HoneyWehrloom Honey · Robbinsville, North Carolina (Graham County)
3.9Melvea ScoreView
Good to know

Questions about local honey.

How do I find local honey near me?

Start on the map above — pick your region, then your state, and you'll see the farms whose hives sit near you and the varieties they harvest. Or drop in your ZIP to jump straight to the closest producers. Every farm links to its profile, where you can see its honey and where to buy it.

What makes a honey "local"?

A local honey is one whose bees foraged near you — the hives sit in the region you're browsing, and the farm harvested it themselves. We group farms by region and state so "local" means a real place you could drive to, not a label on a blend bottled three states away.

Why does the same flower make different honey in different places?

Because nectar isn't fixed — it shifts with the soil the plant grows in, the climate it blooms under, and whatever else is flowering nearby. The same species can yield a brighter, thinner honey on a coastal plain and a darker, denser one on a mountain ridge. Clover honey from North Dakota doesn't taste like clover honey from Tennessee — and an orange-blossom honey from a Florida grove carries a different character than one from the citrus groves of southern Spain. Place is the ingredient.

Why does tupelo honey come from basically one place?

Because the tree behind it barely grows anywhere else. White tupelo (Nyssa ogeche) needs seasonally flooded river swamp, and the Apalachicola River basin in the Florida Panhandle holds the densest stand on Earth — a growing zone smaller than 200 square miles. The trees bloom two or three weeks a year, and the nectar peaks for barely a day or two; beekeepers float their hives into the swamp by boat and time it to the bloom. Move the bees a county over and you don't get tupelo.

Why does some honey crystallize while some never does?

It comes down to the sugar ratio the flowers handed the bees. Honey is mostly two sugars — glucose, which likes to crystallize, and fructose, which resists it. A honey high in glucose (like clover) firms up on your shelf; one high in fructose (like tupelo, with one of the highest fructose ratios of any honey) can stay liquid for years. Crystallized honey hasn't gone bad — it's just the glucose settling out, and gentle warmth brings it back.

How much honey does one bee actually make?

About a twelfth of a teaspoon — in her entire life. A single jar is the combined work of a whole colony visiting millions of flowers, which is why a hive near a sourwood ridge tastes like that ridge and nowhere else: the honey is an average of every bloom within flight range, gathered one tiny load at a time.

For beekeepers

Claim your hive on melvea.

Add your farm to the map, list the honey you actually make, and let people nearby find you. It is free, and you keep your own listing.

Ask Mel
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