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We teach how to grow microgreens in the city, harvest them at home and turn them into healthy, delicious meals.
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Up to now, we’ve been talking about how to grow microgreens at home: for organizations, NGOs, offices as a leisure activity to help employees disconnect, social and urban groups, residential communities, schools or universities for educational purposes, and even nursing homes or rehabilitation centers.
In short, how to grow microgreens in a non profit context.
In this next series of articles, we’ll focus on microgreens as a business. At first glance, it may seem simple: trays, light, water… and start selling. And yes, compared to other crops, microgreens are relatively easy to start as a business.
However, the reality is that it’s not that simple. You need to turn fast-growing crops into a repeatable, safe, and profitable operation, while complying with the regulations in each country. You can have a beautiful harvest and still lose money if you don’t control key factors such as packaging or the actual time each tray takes.
Ready? Let’s take a look!
Before buying LEDs or shelving, there’s one question you should answer as soon as possible:
Who is going to pay for this, every single week, consistently?
In the microgreens world, there are usually three main routes:
It’s highly recommended to start with a business plan, even if it’s just you and one shelf. Define your sales method, volume, calendar, and pricing from day one.
The goal is for your production to respond to real demand, avoiding waste and financial losses.
Microgreens as a business can be profitable as long you don’t get lost. Many people want to offer 15 varieties, mixes, multiple sizes, and different packaging from day one. That dramatically increases complexity, and with it, costs and time.
A solid way to start could look like this:
This is the key: first, you build a simple business model, analyze it, measure it, and once it works, you’re ready to scale.
Microgreens work well in small spaces, but not in chaos. The key is environmental control: temperature, humidity, light, water, and cleanliness.
Think of your space as a small production line with three areas:
You don’t need a laboratory. But separating “before” and “after” harvest reduces hygiene issues and helps you avoid problems (and returns).
Quick setup checklist:
When people talk about vertical farms, the discussion often focuses on energy consumption. And yes, energy matters. But labor and packaging are just as important, along with consumables and logistics.
Producing is not enough, you must produce efficiently. Time per tray, harvest rhythm, packaging, and waste can impact profitability as much as the growing process itself.
If it takes you twice as long to harvest and pack because you don’t have a system, your “premium product” quickly turns into underpaid work.
Survival tip: time your tasks from the beginning.
This isn’t obsession, it’s understanding whether your business is profitable in terms of your time as well.
Fixed costs:
Variable costs (per tray):
Your price shouldn’t be based on “what others charge,” but on:
Microgreens are mostly eaten raw, so your reputation depends on small details: cleanliness, cold chain, and proper handling.
Separating areas, cleaning correctly, using appropriate water, and avoiding post-harvest contamination make a huge difference.
A reasonable mini protocol for a micro business:
This also helps you sell better, it’s not the same to say “they’re fresh” as it is to explain and prove your process.
A restaurant doesn’t want to be impressed one week and abandoned the next. They want a reliable supplier.
A trick that works: offer a tasting pack with four varieties, a simple usage guide, and a clear price, followed by a weekly order proposal.
Scaling in microgreens isn’t about impulsively buying more lights. It should happen only when:
Scaling a disorganized system only leads to stress and failure.
Microgreens are attractive because they allow you to start small, learn fast, and adjust quickly. But that’s exactly why they must be taken seriously as a business from day one.
If there’s one key takeaway, it’s this: to sell microgreens, you need organization. A clean, measurable, and consistent process built on routine, planning, recording, optimizing, and delivering the same way every time.
Everything else, the perfect substrate, beautiful packaging, comes later.
See you next time!
Carlota
Links of Interest
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, Article 1584778. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sustainable-food-systems/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2025.1584778/full
Martinez, J. (2024, April 10). Controlled environment agriculture: A systematic review. Food Safety Magazine. Retrieved from https://www.food-safety.com/articles/9386-controlled-environment-agriculture-a-systematic-review
Pennsylvania State University Extension. (2025, September 27). Business planning for your microgreens operation. Pennsylvania State University Extension. Retrieved from https://extension.psu.edu/business-planning-for-your-microgreens-operation
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