Private Label Honey Sachets: Specs, MOQs, and How to Launch
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Honey X
Honey X
Apr 4, 2026
6 min read
Private Label Honey Sachets: Specs, MOQs, and How to Launch
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Private Label Honey Sachets: Specs, MOQs, and How to Launch

Single-serve honey sachets are one of the most commercially versatile formats in the honey category. They suit a wide range of distribution channels and deliver a consistent, measured serve without refrigeration, breakage risk, or portion ambiguity.

This post covers everything a buyer needs to know to scope and launch a private label sachet programme: physical specifications, fill size options, minimum order quantities, film and packaging requirements, label compliance, honey variety selection, and the production timeline from brief to despatch.

Why the Sachet Format Works for Private Label

Portion control is a primary commercial driver. A sachet delivers a fixed, consistent serve with no measurement required and no variable dosing. For buyers making any nutritional or compositional claim on their product, this consistency matters.

Shelf stability is the second advantage. Properly sealed sachets in PET/ALU/PET/PE/ALU film maintain honey integrity for the full shelf life without refrigeration, humidity control, or special handling. This is relevant for export and for buyers supplying accounts where cold chain access is limited.

The format is also practical for logistics. Sachets fit a wide range of secondary packaging formats, travel without leaking, and require no utensils. For buyers entering markets where on-the-go consumption drives format decisions, the sachet removes friction at the consumer level.

Fill Size Options

Private label sachets are available across six fill weights: 8g, 10g, 13g, 20g, 25g, and 30g. The right fill size depends on your target channel, your intended retail or foodservice context, and your label design.

The 8g and 10g fills are the standard for hospitality, foodservice, and single-serve accompaniment formats. The 13g fill is the most common single-serve format for retail positioning. The 20g, 25g, and 30g formats suit brands requiring a more substantial serve per unit.

Sachet production is also available through the private label programme in glass jars and PET containers for brands where sachet format is not the primary requirement. Jar capacity runs to 3,000 units per day on a dedicated line.

Sachet Film Specifications

All sachets are produced on a PET/ALU/PET/PE/ALU laminated film, printed using gravure printing. The aluminium layers provide the moisture and oxygen barrier required for shelf stability. The outer PET layer accepts high-resolution, colour-accurate print.

The physical sachet dimensions are 120mm x 70mm with a 5mm bleed on all sides. Artwork files must be supplied to these specifications. All design elements and mandatory label text must sit inside the safe zone, clear of the bleed area.

Gravure printing produces consistent, high-fidelity results across long print runs. Colour matching, fine detail, and premium finishes are achievable within this process. Your design team will need to supply print-ready files in the correct format. Technical specification sheets are available on request.

Minimum Order Quantities

There are two separate MOQs to understand: the film order MOQ and the filling MOQ. They operate independently and have different cost structures.

Film Order MOQ

A single film order covers approximately 300kg of film, which yields roughly 225,000 sachets. Up to 5 unique designs can be printed across a single film order. This means multiple SKUs, variety lines, or market variants can share the same film production run.

For brands launching a range from day one, this structure makes multi-SKU entry more economical than if each design required a separate film commitment. A premium variety, a standard variety, and a third variant can all enter production on a single film order.

Filling MOQ

The filling MOQ is 20,000 units per SKU. This is the minimum quantity that can be run through the filling line for any single design or product variant. Film and filling MOQs are scoped together during the brief stage so your total production commitment is clear before any manufacturing begins.

Production Capacity

The high-speed line runs at 25,000 units per day. The low-MOQ line runs at 7,000 units per day, suited to smaller initial runs or SKUs that do not yet warrant full high-speed production. Jar filling capacity is 3,000 jars per day on a dedicated line.

A 100,000-unit order across the high-speed line takes approximately four production days. A 20,000-unit run on the low-MOQ line takes approximately three days. These figures sit within the filling window of the overall production timeline, which is covered below.

For buyers requiring contract packing rather than private label supply, see contract packing options. The production infrastructure is the same. The distinction is whether the buyer or Honey X owns the honey going into the line.

Secondary Packaging: Doy Packs

The standard doy pack format holds 10 sachets per unit and measures 130mm x 50mm x 180mm. The MOQ for doy packs is 5,000 units.

Doy packs carry their own branding and label requirements and are produced separately from the sachet film. If your range includes both sachets and doy packs, artwork for both formats needs to be scoped and supplied during the artwork phase.

For buyers requiring bulk foodservice packs rather than retail-ready doy packs, alternative secondary packaging formats are available. Discuss your distribution channel requirements during the brief stage so the right format is scoped from the start.

Honey Variety Selection

The honey variety you fill your sachets with is a product decision. Your variety selection affects your label positioning, your price point, your target market, and the documentation available to your brand.

Jarrah for Premium Positioning

Jarrah honey (Eucalyptus marginata) is produced from the old-growth forests of Western Australia. It is characterised by high Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA), a low GI profile validated through independent testing, and the Crystallisation-Free Guarantee™, which provides commercial reliability in export markets where crystallised honey creates returns and complaints.

The Crystallisation-Free Guarantee applies at TA35+ and above and is backed by the natural chemistry of Jarrah: its characteristically low glucose to fructose ratio means the honey remains liquid over time without processing intervention. For buyers building a premium brand story backed by verifiable data, Jarrah is the foundation variety.

The Jarrah Factor™ is Honey X's composite quality score for Jarrah honey, combining antimicrobial strength, antioxidant levels, and sugar composition into a single grade designation. TA grades run from TA15 through TA55+, the highest grade verified in supply. Learn more about active Western Australian honey.

Forest Blend for Value and Volume

Forest Blend is Honey X's multi-floral Western Australian blend. It is the appropriate selection for value-tier positioning, high-volume foodservice accounts, and hospitality programmes where cost per unit is the primary driver.

Forest Blend does not carry the same TA grade as single-variety active honeys, but it is produced under the same quality controls, tested for purity and composition, and is available across all sachet fill weights.

Marri for Ultra-Premium

Marri honey (Corymbia calophylla, commonly called Red Gum) is graded at TA30+ and above. It carries strong peroxide-based bioactivity and commands a price point that suits gift retail, travel retail, and specialty health channels where active honey credentials are a key purchase driver.

Marri's bioactivity is primarily peroxide-based (PA), which activates in moisture-rich environments. Batch-specific test certificates are available to registered buyers for all active grades. The export services team can advise on variety selection for specific destination markets.

Label Compliance: The 10 Mandatory Inclusions

Australian food labelling law requires specific information on every packaged food product. For honey sachets, 10 elements are mandatory and must appear on the finished sachet label or secondary packaging as required under the Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) Food Standards Code.

  1. Product name
  2. Net weight: The fill weight of the sachet in grams
  3. Country of origin
  4. Business name and address
  5. Ingredient list
  6. Nutrition Information Panel (NIP): Per-serve and per-100g data
  7. Best before date
  8. Batch identification
  9. Allergen declarations
  10. Barcode

Minimum Font Sizes

The Food Standards Code specifies minimum font sizes for label text. Legal text requires a minimum type size of 2.5mm. Marketing text requires a minimum of 4mm.

On a 120mm x 70mm sachet, meeting these requirements while maintaining a clean layout is achievable but requires careful design. All artwork is reviewed for label compliance during the artwork approval stage, before it proceeds to film production.

Production Timeline: First Order

A first-order private label sachet programme runs across 12 to 14 weeks from brief to despatch. Repeat orders run at 4 to 6 weeks once film and honey supply are established.

Weeks 1 to 2: Brief and Scope

The team works through your product brief: variety selection, fill weight, volume, secondary packaging requirements, target market, and timeline. Testing of your selected honey variety runs in parallel from this point, so documentation is ready when you need it.

Weeks 2 to 5: Artwork Development

Artwork is developed, reviewed, and approved across this window. Label compliance review occurs during this stage. All 10 mandatory inclusions are checked against the artwork before it proceeds to film production. This is the stage where design errors are least costly to resolve.

Weeks 5 to 9: Film Production

Approved artwork goes to the film supplier. Gravure printing and lamination of the film roll takes approximately four weeks. Honey testing for your selected batch continues in parallel during this window.

Weeks 9 to 11: Filling

Film is received, loaded, and filling commences. Your fill volume determines how many production days are required within this window. Quality control checks occur at the start of each run and at regular intervals throughout.

Weeks 11 to 13: Pack Assembly and Despatch

Filled sachets are assembled into secondary packaging, labelled, palletised, and prepared for despatch or collection. Final batch documentation and test certificates are issued at this stage.

The timeline above assumes prompt artwork supply and a single revision cycle. Planning your first order with a 14-week window is the conservative and recommended approach.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum order for private label honey sachets?

The filling MOQ is 20,000 units per SKU. Film orders cover approximately 225,000 sachets and can include up to 5 unique designs. Film and filling are scoped together during the brief stage so your total commitment is clear before production begins.

What fill size options are available?

Sachets are available in six fill weights: 8g, 10g, 13g, 20g, 25g, and 30g. Sachets can be supplied as individual units or packed into doy packs of 10. The right fill size depends on your distribution channel, price point, and target market.

What must be included on a honey sachet label?

Australian food labelling law requires 10 mandatory inclusions: product name, net weight, country of origin, business name and address, ingredient list, Nutrition Information Panel, best before date, batch identification, allergen declarations, and a barcode. Legal text must be a minimum of 2.5mm and marketing text a minimum of 4mm.

How long does a first order take?

A first-order programme runs 12 to 14 weeks from brief to despatch. Repeat orders run at 4 to 6 weeks once film and honey supply are established.

Next Steps

Private label sachet production is a structured process with clear specifications and predictable timelines. The variables are your variety selection, fill weight, volume, and artwork. Everything else is a known quantity.

Enquire about private label sachet production, review contract packing options, or explore export logistics for your target market. For the full range of active Western Australian honey available for private label production, see the active Western Australian honey product category.

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