Lesson 5 of 105 / 10

Labelling Under the Honey Ordinance: What Goes on the Label

20 min12 min reading time

All mandatory information for honey labels under HonigV and LMIV: trade description, best-before date, origin, nutrition. Plus DIB rules, organic labelling and QR code integration.

Labelling Under the Honey Ordinance: What Goes on the Label

Honey jar with a professionally designed label
The label is your honey's business card: legally correct AND visually appealing.
Note on Regulations

The specific laws and labelling requirements described in this lesson primarily apply to Germany (HonigV, LMIV, FPackV) and the EU. If you are based in another country, check your local food labelling regulations. The principles of transparent, accurate labelling are universal, but exact requirements may differ.

Labelling is one of the most legally sensitive steps. An incorrect label can lead to fines, product recalls and loss of customer trust. At the same time, the label is your most important marketing space.

In this lesson you will learn about all mandatory information under HonigV, LMIV and FPackV, the DIB specifics, voluntary enhancements and QR code integration.

6-7 mandatory items
must appear on every honey label -- the nutrition declaration may be exempt for small-scale local direct sales

The Legal Framework

Inspections can come at any time

Food inspectors can check at farmers' markets, farm shops or online sales. Fines for incorrect labelling: several hundred euros. False origin claims can even have criminal consequences.

The 7 Mandatory Items

Mandatory information on the honey label

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1. Trade Description

The Honey Ordinance strictly defines permitted descriptions:

Prohibited descriptions
  • "Natural honey" / "Pure natural" -- misleading, as all honey must be a natural product
  • "Cold-extracted" -- implies there is "hot extraction" (there is not)
  • Health claims without authorisation ("helps with colds")
  • Fantasy names without a correct trade description

2. Net Fill Quantity

Stated in grams or kilograms. Minimum digit height under FPackV:

Common sizes: 250 g (sample size), 500 g (standard), 1,000 g (regular customers). DIB jar: Only 250 g and 500 g.

Pre-packaging Regulation

The declared fill quantity must be met on average. For 500g: max. -15g tolerance per jar. Use a calibrated scale and fill slightly generously.

3. Best-Before Date (BBD)

The BBD is not an expiry date -- honey stored correctly is practically indefinitely shelf-stable. You set the BBD yourself and are liable for it.

2 years
from bottling is the usual BBD period -- also recommended by the DIB

Format: "Best before: 06/2028" or "Best before end: June 2028" (for shelf life over 3 months, month/year is sufficient).

4. Country of Origin

Mandatory for honey:

  • German honey: "Country of origin: Germany" or "German honey" in the trade description
  • EU blend: "Blend of honeys from EU countries"
  • Non-EU blend: "Blend of honeys from EU and non-EU countries"
Regional advantage

"German honey" or regional statements ("Honey from the Taunus") are strong selling points. Consumers pay more for regional honey -- but the claim must be truthful.

New from 14 June 2026: EU Directive 2024/1438

The new EU Honey Directive 2024/1438 tightens origin labelling: for honey blends, from 14 June 2026 the individual countries of origin with percentage shares must be listed in descending order on the label. The previous collective description "Blend of honeys from EU and non-EU countries" will no longer suffice.

5. Lot Number

Serves traceability. Format freely chosen, e.g.: "L 2026-S2" (Lot 2026, extraction 2). Tip: If the BBD includes day and month, it can simultaneously serve as the lot number.

6. Name and Address

Complete: First/last name, street, house number, postcode, city. Yes, you must provide your home address if you do not have a business address. A PO box is not sufficient.

7. Nutrition Declaration

Mandatory since 2016 for pre-packaged foods. Important exception: Under Annex V No. 19 LMIV, foods supplied in small quantities directly from the producer to consumers or local retail shops are exempt from the nutrition declaration (radius approx. 50 km). This exemption applies to many hobby beekeepers selling directly. For online sales, however, the exemption does not apply.

The "Big 7" per 100 g:

Recommendation: Even if you are exempt, include the nutrition table anyway -- the values are similar for all honeys and can be taken from standard food composition databases. It looks professional and builds trust.

Font Size

LMIV: All mandatory information at least 1.2 mm x-height (approx. 6-7 pt). For packaging under 80 cm2 surface area: 0.9 mm. Make a test print and check legibility!

The DIB Honey Jar

A vendor wearing a cap stands smiling behind a sun-lit market stall full of honey jars in various sizes and varieties, with honeycomb pieces and a bouquet of wildflowers.
The DIB jar is the best-known honey trademark in Germany.
  1. Use only original jars

    Exclusively DIB jars with the guarantee seal (green-gold banderole). Only 250 g and 500 g. Obtained from the regional association.

  2. Apply the guarantee seal intact

    The banderole must be stuck intact around the lid rim -- it guarantees DIB quality.

  3. Back label with mandatory information

    Your own label on the back with: name, address, BBD, lot number, nutrition table, variety if applicable.

  4. Meet DIB quality standards

    Max. 18 % moisture content, max. 15 mg/kg HMF, min. 64 Units/kg invertase, 100 % German honey.

DIB jar vs. own jar

DIB: High recognition value, trust signal, but limited design freedom (0.80-1.20 EUR/jar). Own jar: Maximum brand freedom, cheaper (0.30-0.60 EUR), but no quality seal. Many beekeepers use both: DIB for the classic range, own jars for premium lines.

Voluntary Information

Allergen Labelling

Honey itself is not an allergen (not on the LMIV list). Only relevant for mixed products:

  • Honey with nuts: "Contains: tree nuts"
  • Honey with milk: "Contains: milk"
  • Pure honey: No ingredient list required (single-ingredient product)

Organic Labelling

  1. Register with an organic control body

    Choose an approved control body (e.g. DE-OKO-006). Costs: approx. 200-500 EUR/year.

  2. Implement organic requirements

    EU Organic Regulation 2018/848: Within the 3 km foraging radius, predominantly organic land or wild flora, approved hive materials, approved Varroa treatments (organic acids), organic feed.

  3. Use the EU organic logo

    Green leaf with stars. Mandatory alongside the logo: control body code number + origin statement.

Organic without certification = illegal

Terms like "organic", "eco" or the EU organic logo without certification are illegal. Even "biologically valuable" or "natural like organic" are problematic.

Packaging Act (VerpackG) and LUCID

Germany-specific regulation

The following applies specifically to Germany. Other countries have their own packaging waste regulations -- check with your national authority.

Since 1 July 2022, everyone who first places filled packaging on the market -- including beekeepers who fill honey into jars -- must be registered in the LUCID Packaging Register and participate in a dual system.

LUCID registration is mandatory!

Selling packaged food without LUCID registration risks fines up to 200,000 EUR and a sales ban. Registration at lucid.verpackungsregister.org is free; participation in a dual system (e.g. Der Gruene Punkt, Interseroh+) costs approximately 15-50 EUR/year for small quantities.

QR Code Integration

Honey jar with label and smartphone for QR code transparency
QR codes connect artisan tradition with digital transparency.

What to Link?

Hivekraft QR codes

With Hivekraft you generate QR codes directly from the app -- linked to a public page with batch info, apiary photos and beekeeper portrait. No coding required.

Technical details: Print QR code at least 15 x 15 mm. Use a permanent URL (not a free dynamic provider). Short accompanying text: "Learn more" or "Meet our bees."

Label Design

Design Checklist

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Common Mistakes

Sample Label

The label is the legal business card of your honey. A professional, complete label signals: this person knows their craft.


Knowledge Check


With this you have laid the foundation for a successful honey business: quality control, harvest workflow, variety knowledge, processing and labelling. In the remaining lessons we delve deeper into pricing, marketing and brand building.

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