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Microgreens and business: how to choose a selling strategy from the appropiate sales channel to setting prices (avoiding losing money along the way)

The first thing I learned while researching microgreens and business models is that they are not sold like lettuce. In reality, they compete in a completely different league, much closer to the premium segment (flavor, aesthetics, freshness, exclusivity) than to basic produce.

And this affects everything: who you sell to, how much you charge, how you deliver, and how you package your product.

In recent years, the microgreens market has experienced strong commercial growth, closely linked to fine dining and premium or organic grocery stores. In these markets, consumer perception and symbolic value (health, novelty, experience) play a major role.

So the key question is: which business model is right for you?
Let’s look at the main options.

The three main sales channels

Restaurants

In practice, microgreens fit perfectly into professional kitchens because they add flavor and visual appeal. Chefs often use them as flavor enhancers, and demand tends to be high.

The advantages

  • Higher average price.
  • Consistent, recurring orders.
  • Less price competition if you deliver quality (which is exactly what chefs look for).

The challenges

  • If you miss a delivery, you risk losing the client (mistakes are not tolerated at this level).
  • They require consistency: the same quality week after week.

Gourmet shops, organic and specialty supermarkets

In these stores, customers are buying quality, exclusivity, flavor, and a healthy experience.

The advantages

  • Larger order volumes.
  • Increased visibility and brand positioning.

The challenges

  • Shelf life and potential returns.
  • Impeccable labeling and presentation.

What works

  • Harvesting to order.
  • Fast delivery to preserve freshness.

Direct to consumer sales (social media, local markets, online)

This channel often offers the highest margins, but also the biggest hidden cost: your time (messages, orders, packaging, delivery routes).

The advantages

  • Full control over pricing.
  • Strong personal brand.

The challenges

  • Logistics.
  • Higher time investment.

What works

  • A fixed pickup point (reduces delivery time).
  • Predefined packs (instead of fully customized orders).

Pricing

This is where many microbusinesses fail: prices are set “by intuition,” and as the business grows, an unpleasant surprise appears, you work more and earn less.

To set realistic prices, you must account for:

  • Variable costs: seeds, substrate, trays, labels, packaging…
  • Labor costs: your time and/or your team’s time (seeding, watering, harvesting, packaging).
  • Fixed costs: electricity, rent, shelving/LEDs, refrigeration…

Six key metrics for your microgreens business

  1. Total cost per unit (tray).
  2. Margin per unit (what remains after direct costs).
  3. Time per unit (minutes spent seeding + harvesting + packaging).
  4. Loss rate (% discarded or discounted due to quality or shelf life issues).
  5. Repeat purchases (customers who return week after week).
  6. Delivery cost per order (fuel / time / route).

Scaling the business

Remember: scaling is not about adding more trays, it’s about selling better or producing more efficiently.

There are usually two ways to scale:

Price based scaling

  • Differentiate yourself through the service you offer (fixed delivery days, custom mixes, consistency).
  • Above all, quality.

Cost based scaling

  • Offer more varieties and formats.
  • Reduce harvesting and packaging time.
  • Produce and sell larger volumes.

Conclusion

Growing and selling microgreens means competing in markets where customers buy value, premium products, and organic produce.

It may seem simple, but there are many factors to consider: packaging, labor, logistics… It’s a whole world that can be summed up in two words: strategy and organization.

What do you think?

That’s it for today’s article, we hope you enjoyed it. You can also take a look at our previous article: “Microgreens as a business: set up your first micro farm.”

See you next time!

Carlota

Sources

Amici, A. S., Appicciutoli, D., Bentivoglio, D., Staffolani, G., Chiaraluce, G., Mogetta, M., & Finco, A. (2025). From seed to profit: A comparative economic study of two Italian vertical farms. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 9. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sustainable-food-systems/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2025.1584778/full

Lone, J. K., Pandey, R., & Gayacharan, C. (2024). Microgreens on the rise: Expanding our horizons from farm to fork. Heliyon, 10(4), e25870. https://www.cell.com/heliyon/fulltext/S2405-8440(24)01901-7?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS2405844024019017%3Fshowall%3Dtrue

Wiafe, D., & Talley, J. (2021). Microgreen supply chain analysis for the pre-harvest stage. In Proceedings of the 10th Annual World Conference of the Society for Industrial and Systems Engineering (SISE 2021 Virtual Conference). https://ieworldconference.org/content/SISE2021/Papers/Wiafe.pdf

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