How do you start a meadery business in 2027?
How do you start a meadery business in 2027?
Starting a meadery in 2027 means building a licensed production winery that ferments honey into mead — and treating it as a beverage-manufacturing business with a tasting room attached, not a hobby that sells the overflow. The work falls into six stages: validate a style and price point, secure federal (TTB) and state licensing, lock down a honey supply chain, build out a code-compliant production and tasting space, launch a tasting room as your highest-margin channel, and then scale through distribution only once the on-premise economics are proven.
Mead is legally classified and taxed as wine in the United States, which shapes every licensing and compliance decision below.
Why mead is a different business than a brewery
A meadery looks like a craft brewery from the customer's side — a taproom, flights, growlers, events — but the economics and regulation are closer to a winery. Three differences drive everything:
- Your main ingredient is volatile in price. Honey is an agricultural commodity, and a mead recipe can use 2.5–3.5 pounds of honey per gallon of finished product. Honey at $4–$7 per pound wholesale means $10–$24 of raw honey in every gallon before you add anything else. A brewery's grain bill is a fraction of that.
- Fermentation is slow. A clean traditional mead can take 2–9 months to ferment and age before it is sellable. Your cash is tied up in tanks far longer than a brewery's is, so working capital planning is the difference between surviving year one and not.
- You are federally a winery. The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) regulates mead under the wine rules. You apply for a winery basic permit and bond, file wine excise tax, and follow wine labeling law (COLA approval) — not the brewery framework.
Stage 1: Validate the product and the numbers
Before any license, settle three things in writing.
Pick a lane. Traditional mead, session mead (lower ABV, lighter, sells fast), melomel (fruit), metheglin (spiced), and hopped mead all behave differently in cost, aging time, and shelf appeal. Session and fruited meads turn cash faster and are easier to sell to a craft-beer-trained customer; barrel-aged traditional meads command higher prices but lock up capital for a year.
Most successful new meaderies launch with a small core range — one approachable session mead, one fruited mead, one premium bottle — rather than fifteen one-offs.
Build a unit-cost model. For one gallon of finished mead, add up honey (pounds × price), yeast and nutrients, fruit or adjuncts, packaging (a 750ml bottle, cork or crown, label, and box can run $1.50–$3.00), and your allocated overhead. Then set price against the channel: a glass poured in your own tasting room might gross $8–$12 against well under $2 of liquid cost, while the same volume sold to a distributor nets you a fraction of that after their margin and the retailer's.
The model has to show you can survive on tasting-room and direct sales alone.
Confirm demand locally. Talk to bottle shops, run mead at farmers' markets if your state allows sampling permits, and gauge whether your area has the craft-curious customer base that pays $14–$28 a bottle. A meadery is a destination business; if there is no foot traffic and no tourism, the tasting room math gets hard.
Stage 2: Licensing — federal first, then state, then local
This is the longest pole in the tent. Start it early because TTB processing can take several months.
- Form the legal entity. An LLC is standard. Do this first because the TTB application is tied to the entity and the premises.
- Secure the premises. TTB will not issue a permit for a location you do not control, and the premises must be zoned and built for alcohol production. You generally need a signed lease or deed before applying.
- File the TTB Winery Basic Permit and bond. Mead is wine, so you apply as a bonded winery through TTB's Permits Online system. You will post a wine excise tax bond. Expect this step to take a few months and to involve back-and-forth.
- Get your state alcohol license. Every state has its own winery/farm-winery license, and some farm-winery tiers offer lower fees and on-site sales privileges if you use in-state honey or fruit — worth checking, the savings can be significant.
- Label approval (COLA). Each product label needs a Certificate of Label Approval from TTB before it ships across state lines. Build label lead time into your launch calendar.
- Local permits. Zoning/conditional-use permit, building and occupancy permits, health department sign-off if you serve food, and a sales tax permit.
Do not produce or sell a single drop before federal and state permits are in hand. Producing alcohol without a permit is a federal offense, not a paperwork slip.
Stage 3: Honey supply chain
Your honey sourcing decision is a core strategic choice, not a purchasing afterthought.
- Local vs. bulk. Local apiary honey supports a "made here" story and may qualify you for a farm-winery license tier, but it is pricier and supply can be seasonal. Bulk wholesale honey (often from a national supplier or co-op) is cheaper and more consistent but generic.
- Lock contracts. Honey prices swing with crop years and pollinator health. Negotiate a forward contract or at least a price agreement with one or two suppliers so a bad season does not blow up your unit cost.
- Storage. Honey stores well but needs a cool, dry space and warming capacity (honey crystallizes and must be gently liquefied before use). Budget for drums, a warming setup, and the floor space.
Stage 4: Production buildout and equipment
A starter meadery production room typically includes: stainless fermentation tanks (variable-capacity is forgiving for a startup), a must-mixing setup to dissolve honey, temperature control, a basic lab kit (hydrometer or refractometer, pH meter), filtration, a bottling or canning line (manual or semi-auto to start), a glycol or cooling system, cleaning/sanitation gear, and adequate floor drains.
Many new meaderies start with a few hundred to a couple thousand gallons of annual capacity and grow into it.
Plan the space for the slow fermentation reality: you need enough tank capacity that batches in their multi-month aging window do not block you from starting new ones. A single under-sized tank farm is the most common throughput bottleneck.
Stage 5: Open the tasting room — your highest-margin channel
The tasting room is where a meadery makes money. Selling a glass or bottle direct to the customer keeps the full retail margin instead of splitting it with a distributor and retailer.
- Design for dwell time. Flights, comfortable seating, a small food offering or food-truck partnership, and events (mead-pairing nights, music, release parties) turn visitors into regulars and grow average spend.
- Build direct revenue streams. A wine/mead club with monthly bottle allocations, growler and bottle sales to-go (where state law permits), branded merchandise, and private event bookings all carry strong margins and smooth out seasonality.
- Capture the customer. Email and SMS sign-ups at the bar, a simple loyalty program, and an events calendar convert one-time tourists into a repeat local base — which is what carries you through slow months.
Stage 6: Scale through wholesale only after on-premise is proven
Distribution feels like growth, but it is the lowest-margin channel and, in most states, irreversible — once you sign with a distributor, franchise laws make it very hard to leave. Expand outward only after the tasting room consistently covers fixed costs:
- Self-distribution to local bottle shops and restaurants where your state allows it — you keep more margin and control the accounts.
- A distributor once volume outgrows what you can deliver yourself. Vet them hard; you are effectively married to them.
- Farmers' markets, festivals, and mead competitions for brand awareness and direct sales without giving up margin.
Realistic timeline and capital
From entity formation to first pour, plan on roughly 9–18 months: licensing alone runs several months, buildout adds more, and then your first batches need 2–9 months to ferment and age before they can be sold. Startup capital for a modest meadery with a tasting room commonly lands in the low-to-mid six figures, depending heavily on whether you lease a build-ready space or renovate, and on local construction costs.
The most underestimated number is working capital — you must fund honey, labor, rent, and licensing for the many months between spending money and having sellable product on the shelf.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a winery license or a brewery license for mead? A winery license. Federally, mead is classified and taxed as wine, so you apply for a TTB winery basic permit and your state's winery or farm-winery license — not a brewer's permit.
How long before I can sell my first mead? Budget 2–9 months of fermentation and aging per batch on top of your licensing and buildout time. Session and fruited meads are ready faster; barrel-aged traditional meads take the longest.
What is the single biggest cost risk? Honey price volatility. Honey is an agricultural commodity, it is the largest ingredient cost in mead, and a bad crop year can swing your unit cost sharply — which is why forward contracts with suppliers matter.
Is wholesale distribution worth it? Eventually, for volume — but it is your lowest-margin channel and often legally hard to exit once you sign a distributor. Prove the tasting room economics first; on-premise and direct sales are where a meadery actually earns its margin.
Can I start as a farm winery to save money? In many states, yes — farm-winery license tiers offer lower fees and on-site sales privileges if you use in-state honey or fruit. Check your state's specific rules, because the savings and the sales privileges can be substantial.