Contract Honey Packing in Australia: Facility Guide
Buyer Guides
Honey X
Honey X
Apr 4, 2026
6 min read
Contract Honey Packing in Australia: Facility Guide
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What Is Contract Packing and Who Needs It

Contract packing is a manufacturing service where a business supplies its own honey and engages a licensed facility to pack it into finished commercial or consumer units. The facility provides the production lines, quality control, storage, and logistics. The client retains ownership of the product throughout.

It is a distinct service to private label. In private label, the buyer creates a brand and the supplier provides the honey, packing, testing, and compliance from a single source. In contract packing, the buyer already owns the honey and the brand. The facility provides the labour, the lines, and the compliance framework to complete production.

For a full comparison of both service types, see the private label service page or read the private label honey checklist.

Businesses that typically use contract packing services include established honey brands that have outgrown their current production capacity, importers and distributors sourcing honey in bulk and needing it packed under their own label in Australia, and export-focused buyers who require packing completed under a licensed, accredited facility that meets offshore regulatory standards.

The Certifications That Matter Before You Sign a Contract

When evaluating any Australian honey packing facility, certification is the baseline test. Without documented certification, nothing else a facility tells you about its capability carries weight.

At minimum, a compliant Australian honey packing operation should hold:

  • HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points): the foundational food safety management standard required for commercial food production in Australia and accepted in most export markets
  • BQUAL: the Australian honey industry's specific quality assurance programme, covering production practices, traceability, and residue monitoring
  • Export accreditation aligned to destination markets, which varies by country and product category
  • Documented standard operating procedures for line changeover, contamination prevention, and allergen management
  • Calibrated fill and weight verification systems, with records available for inspection

HACCP and BQUAL are the non-negotiable starting point. For any facility handling honey destined for markets in China, the UK, the USA, or the Middle East, additional offshore accreditations apply and should be confirmed before any agreement is signed.

Honey X operates under HACCP and BQUAL certification at its Bentley, Western Australia facility, alongside additional offshore accreditations maintained for specific export markets. Honey X holds 12 or more certifications in total. For a full list of current certifications, see the contract packing service page.

Production Line Capacity: Reading the Numbers Correctly

The Honey X facility at Bentley, WA operates three dedicated production lines. Daily capacity reaches up to 3,000 jars and 8,000 sachets. This positions the facility to serve specialty brands requiring smaller production runs through to consistent mid-volume output for export.

Three dedicated lines provides a practical operational advantage. Different SKUs or formats can run concurrently without cross-contamination risk, provided that proper line changeover protocols are in place. It also provides redundancy: if one line requires maintenance, production is not halted entirely.

When assessing any contract packing facility, the figures worth interrogating are:

  • Units per line per shift, not simply total daily output across all lines
  • Minimum run size per SKU, which directly affects per-unit cost for smaller orders
  • Maximum batch size relative to your volume requirements
  • Lead time from raw product intake to finished goods available for despatch

Stated capacity means little without context. A facility quoting a daily throughput figure without specifying line speed, hours operated, or SKU complexity is not giving you the information you need. Ask for typical throughput for comparable SKUs.

Sachet and Jar Formats: Confirming Capability Before Anything Else

Sachet and jar packing are mechanically distinct processes requiring different equipment, fill systems, sealing mechanisms, and quality verification checkpoints. Not all honey packing facilities run both. Confirming capability for your specific format is the right first step, before any other conversation.

The Honey X facility handles the following formats:

  • Sachets: 10g and 13g fill weights, heat-sealed, suitable for hospitality, food service, airline, and retail strip-pack applications
  • Jars: PET and glass formats, with fill, seal, label, and tamper-evident closure capability

Sachet packing is particularly relevant for export clients targeting hospitality and food service channels, where portion control and consistent fill weight are operationally critical. Glass jar packing is the standard format for retail and pharmacy channels in most premium active honey markets.

For buyers launching export SKUs, confirm that the facility can apply market-specific labelling, including foreign language compliance labelling where required by the destination market. This is separate to the packing operation itself but is often managed by the same facility.

Quality Control and Third-Party Testing: What to Ask For

Quality control at a honey packing facility operates at two levels. The first is in-process control: fill weight verification, seal integrity, label accuracy, and date coding. The second is product-level verification: confirming that the honey being packed meets the grade and specification stated on the finished product.

For active honey products, product-level verification requires independent laboratory testing specific to the batch being packed. A historical test result from a previous production run does not serve as verification for a new batch.

Honey X conducts third-party testing at Analytica (ALS) in New Zealand, ChemCentre in Western Australia, and the University of Sydney. All testing is independent and batch-specific. Test certificates are available to registered wholesale buyers via the customer portal.

When assessing a facility's quality systems, ask specifically:

  • Is testing conducted per batch or per variety?
  • Which laboratory issues the certificate and is that laboratory accredited for the test method used?
  • How is traceability maintained from raw honey intake to finished goods?
  • What happens when a batch fails to meet specification?

A facility that cannot answer these questions clearly is not a suitable partner for active honey destined for regulated markets.

Evaluating a Packing Facility: A Structured Checklist

Before entering a contract packing agreement, a structured evaluation reduces risk on both sides. The following checklist covers the key verification points for any serious buyer:

  1. Request and review current certification documents. HACCP, BQUAL, and any relevant export accreditations should be current, not expired.
  2. Confirm that the facility has direct experience with your specific honey type. Active honey, infused honey, and standard table honey have different handling requirements.
  3. Ask for a site visit or a virtual facility walkthrough. Line layout, hygiene standards, and storage conditions are visible on inspection.
  4. Review the facility's allergen management procedures. Honey packed alongside other food products carries cross-contamination risk if allergen protocols are not documented and enforced.
  5. Confirm minimum order quantities, turnaround times, and storage terms in writing before any production begins.
  6. Request a sample production run for new SKUs before committing to full production volume. This allows format, fill weight, and label accuracy to be confirmed at low cost.

Honey X accepts enquiries from buyers with established honey supply who need a licensed, export-compliant Australian packing facility. Submit your requirements via the contract packing service page.

Tamper-Evident Packaging and Shelf Stability

Tamper-evident closures are a regulatory and commercial requirement for honey destined for retail, pharmacy, and export markets. Most major markets, including China, the UK, and the USA, require evidence of tamper-evident packaging as part of import compliance. For buyers exporting under their own brand, this is not optional.

Honey has a naturally stable shelf life under correct storage conditions, driven by high sugar concentration and low water activity. However, fill temperature, moisture content at packing, and container seal integrity all affect product stability in transit and on shelf.

For Jarrah honey specifically, the natural fructose-to-glucose ratio means the product does not crystallise under standard storage conditions. The Crystallisation-Free Guarantee™ is Australia's first such guarantee for Jarrah honey, backed by this natural chemistry rather than any processing intervention. This has direct commercial significance for buyers in export markets where crystallised honey creates product return costs or retail presentation issues. The Honey X export service covers logistics and packaging requirements for specific destination markets.

Timeline: What to Expect from First Order to Repeat Supply

Understanding lead times before you commit to a contract packing arrangement allows you to plan supply chain sequencing accurately. For first orders, where new SKU formats, labels, and specifications are being set up, lead times are typically longer than for repeat production runs.

At Honey X, the typical lead time for a first order is 12 to 14 weeks. Repeat orders run at 4 to 6 weeks. These figures account for product intake, quality verification, production scheduling, packing, and despatch preparation. Export orders requiring freight and documentation may have additional lead time depending on destination market requirements.

Confirming lead times in writing before production begins is standard practice. Any facility that cannot provide written confirmation of expected turnaround is introducing supply risk into your planning. For export-facing brands, the export service page covers freight terms and registered market logistics in detail.

Register for Wholesale Access

Honey X operates a contract packing service from its Bentley, WA facility: three dedicated production lines, HACCP and BQUAL certified, with daily capacity for up to 3,000 jars and 8,000 sachets. Independent third-party testing is conducted at Analytica (ALS), ChemCentre, and the University of Sydney.

Enquire about contract packing for your honey products via the contract packing service page. For buyers also exploring supply, see the private label service or the export logistics service. Register for wholesale access and our team will review your requirements.

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