The Process.

Honey label with a bee illustration, text indicating Hive House honey from Farmington Utah, with space for batch number and season, and decorative wheat graphics.

local honey + local bees

Yep! You guessed it… we bottle our own honey. And it’s really good too! So, if you are lucky enough to purchase a property from Hive House SLC, you’ll get a bottle of Hive House Honey. And if you are not so lucky, fingers crossed maybe you’ll get some for Christmas.

Close-up view of water flowing from a faucet into an open container, with a person wearing gloves assisting, in black and white.

raw + unfiltered + awesome

Our honey goes straight from the hive, through a strainer, and right into bottles. No additives needed. Our honey is not cooked, filtered, pasteurized, or processed in any way. One, because we don’t know how; and two, because it seems like a lot of work. All kidding aside, the bees work hard to create such a perfect product and we want to keep it as they intended.

A jar of honey, a jar of honeycomb, and a honey dipper resting on a wooden surface with a white background.

honey + color

Honey will differentiate in color depending on the types of flowers the bees choose to visit. The bottle on the left was from our first batch of the 2020 season, Hive No. 1. The honey on the right was from our second batch from Hive No. 2. Hive No. 2 is located 2 feet from Hive No. 1… Crazy.

Hive House does not currently sell our honey, but stay tuned. That might be a good idea…


Beekeepers examining a honeycomb frame filled with worker bees at a beekeeping operation.
A bee on a wooden surface near a rock, captured in black and white.
Person wearing a wide-brimmed hat and protective suit, standing on a ladder in a garden, holding a sprayer, with two modern outdoor chairs and trees in the background.