Visitor in a sunny field on a Rhode Island honey farm route.

Local honey

Local Honey and Apiaries in Rhode Island

Local honey is one of the easiest farm products to bring home from Rhode Island. A jar fits in a tote bag, lasts for months, and carries the season with it. Clover, wildflower, apple blossom, goldenrod, basswood, and fall honey can all taste different because bees work what is blooming around them.

Honey shopping works well at farm stands, orchards, maple farms, farmers markets, and small stores that carry nearby products. These farm links Give you places to begin a local honey route while also finding produce, flowers, baked goods, eggs, maple, and seasonal farm items.

Worth knowingHoney and apiary retail hours follow bloom and bottling in Rhode Island. Farm listings note stand hours and product availability.

The season at a glance

Honey is available through much of the year, but the buying experience changes by season. Spring brings lighter floral notes when available. Summer honey often tastes brighter and more varied. Fall honey can be deeper, darker, and more herbal. Holiday farm stores often carry honey alongside maple, jam, candles, and gift baskets.

Farm market counter in Rhode Island for honey and local goods.

Farm market counter in Rhode Island for honey and local goods.

Farm picks

Farms to know

These farms anchor this route. Start here, then follow the town, season, and nearby farms that match the trip you want to take.

Farm photography at Salisbury Farm, Johnston, Rhode Island.

Johnston, RI

Salisbury Farm

Salisbury Farm is a Johnston farm with strawberries, raspberries, pumpkins, sunflowers, vegetables, a farm store, bakery, cider donuts, and prepared food.

RI
Farm photography at Phantom Farms, Cumberland, Rhode Island.

Cumberland, RI

Phantom Farms

Phantom Farms is a Cumberland orchard, bakery, cafe, and farm stand with year-round farm-store appeal.

RI
Farm photography at Sweet Berry Farm, Middletown, Rhode Island.

Middletown, RI

Sweet Berry Farm

Sweet Berry Farm is a Middletown farm with berries, farm-store shopping, produce, flowers, bakery treats, pumpkins, and coastal Rhode Island appeal.

RI
Farm photography at Seven Stump Flower Farm, Coventry, Rhode Island.

Coventry, RI

Seven Stump Flower Farm

Seven Stump Flower Farm is a Coventry flower farm with sunflowers, lavender, farm-store shopping, photo appeal, events, and CSA relevance.

RI
Farm photography at Richardson Farm RI, Foster, Rhode Island.

Foster, RI

Richardson Farm RI

Richardson Farm RI is a Foster farm with blueberries, apples, cut flowers, maple syrup, farm-stand shopping, a gift shop, sugarhouse, and CSA details.

RI

Mapped farms

Rhode Island honey & apiaries on the map

Apiaries and farm stands are often rural — group stops with a scenic backroad.

Map preview

The farm list is available now. Browse farms on this page or open the full map.

Regions

Best regions to plan around

Providence, Johnston, and the Blackstone Valley

This is the easiest farm region for quick Rhode Island trips. Johnston, Cumberland, North Scituate, Lincoln, and nearby towns bring together farm stands, pumpkins, bakeries, flowers, and local-food stops within a short drive of Providence.

South County

South County adds a coastal rhythm to farm shopping. Look for produce stands, flowers, pasture farms, and market stops that pair naturally with beach towns, ponds, and back-road drives.

Newport County and Aquidneck Island

Middletown and Little Compton give Rhode Island coastal runs a, coastal farm character. Berry farms, orchards, flower stops, and farm markets can sit close to beaches, stone walls, and harbor towns.

Scituate, Foster, Glocester, and western Rhode Island

The western part of the state feels more rural. It is the right place to look for orchards, maple, farm stands, pumpkins, local meat, and quieter weekend drives.

East Bay

The East Bay can work well for smaller food stops, flowers, markets, and a farm stop folded into a day near Bristol, Warren, or Tiverton.

What makes local honey interesting

Honey is shaped by place. Bees gather nectar from what is blooming nearby, so the flavor can shift from farm to farm and month to month.

Raw, creamed, comb, infused, and wildflower honey all behave differently in the kitchen. Creamed honey spreads beautifully on toast. Darker fall honey can stand up to tea, roasted squash, marinades, and cheese boards.

Farm stores often carry honey from their own hives or from neighboring beekeepers. Either way, buying it through a farm keeps the purchase close to the local food system.

How to use it at home

Use lighter honey with yogurt, berries, biscuits, tea, and vinaigrettes. Use deeper honey with roasted carrots, winter squash, sharp cheese, ham, pork, barbecue glaze, or cornbread.

A jar of honey also makes a useful farm gift. Pair it with apples, maple syrup, jam, cider donuts, or a small bunch of flowers and it feels thoughtful without being fussy.

What to look for at farm stores

Look for labels that list the beekeeper, town, floral source when known, and whether the honey is raw, creamed, comb, or filtered. Clear labeling makes the purchase feel more connected and helps you remember what you liked.

Candles, beeswax products, pollen, and honey sticks often appear near the honey shelf. They can be small but memorable add-ons for kids, teachers, hosts, and holiday baskets.

How to choose a jar

Buy two small jars instead of one large jar when the farm carries different types. A lighter summer honey and a darker fall honey can taste surprisingly different.

Keep honey at room temperature. If it crystallizes, set the jar in warm water and stir gently.

In Rhode Island, honey is often easiest to find at farm stands, orchards, maple farms, and markets that carry products from nearby beekeepers.

FAQ

Common questions

Where can I buy local honey in Rhode Island?

Farm stands, orchards, maple farms, apiaries, farmers markets, and farm stores are all good places to look.

Does local honey taste different from store honey?

It can. Local honey often reflects nearby blooms and seasonal nectar sources, which means color and flavor may change through the year.

What is creamed honey?

Creamed honey is honey with a smooth, spreadable texture. It is excellent on toast, biscuits, cornbread, muffins, and waffles.

Community

Share a field note

Add a jar of local honey to the next farm stop, then notice how the flavor changes by season, town, and floral source.