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Medical Grade Honey for Wound Care Buyers
Register for wholesale access at honey-x.au to view batch certificates and pricing. Independently tested WA active honey for wholesale and export buyers. Register at honey-x.au for batch certificates and pricing.
Honey X
Apr 4, 2026
April 4, 2026 16:58
1 min read

Supplying Honey to Clinical Buyers: What the Grade Actually Means

When clinical supply chain buyers source honey, they are not making a purchasing decision based on general quality claims or country of origin. They are sourcing a specific material to a specific grade, verified by a specific method, with batch-level documentation that supports their own compliance obligations downstream.

This post is written for buyers in clinical and wound care supply channels who need to understand how WA honey is graded, tested, and documented for supply at that level. It covers the grading framework, the verification method, the distinction between food grade and clinical grade supply, and the formats Honey X makes available to this buyer segment.

What "Medical Grade" Means in the Context of Honey Supply

The term "medical grade" in honey supply refers to a defined set of supply chain requirements, not a single property of the honey itself. It is the combination of independently verified antimicrobial activity at high Total Activity grades, batch-specific testing documentation, full traceability back to origin, and production under accredited quality systems.

Each of those requirements must be met simultaneously. A honey with high TA grading that lacks batch-specific documentation is not clinical-grade supply. A well-documented product from an accredited facility that has not been independently tested at the required TA threshold is equally unsuitable. Clinical supply buyers require all four elements to be present and verifiable.

Honey X supplies honey that meets all of these requirements. The supply is independently tested and third-party verified at Analytica (ALS) in New Zealand and ChemCentre in Western Australia, the laboratories most directly relevant to this verification standard.

The TA Grading Scale and What Clinical Buyers Look For

Total Activity (TA) is the primary metric for grading active WA honey. TA combines two distinct independently verified antimicrobial mechanisms: Peroxide Activity (PA), which is hydrogen peroxide-driven, and Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA), which is stable and not hydrogen-peroxide dependent.

The scale runs from TA10+ at moderate activity through TA20+, TA30+, TA40+, and TA50+ at elite grade. Honey X has achieved TA55+ as the highest grade verified in its supply.

Clinical supply chain buyers typically work with honey at TA30+ and above. At TA30+, the independently verified antimicrobial activity reaches the threshold considered meaningful for clinical supply purposes. Higher grades, TA40+ and TA50+, carry correspondingly higher documented activity levels. The buyer's own clinical protocols will determine the minimum TA threshold required for their specific application.

WDPE Testing: The Verification Method

The test method used to verify TA is the Well-Diffusion Phenol Equivalent (WDPE) assay. This is the accepted gold standard for measuring antimicrobial activity in honey, and it is the method used by Analytica (ALS) and ChemCentre, the labs Honey X uses for independent verification.

The WDPE method works as follows. Diluted honey is placed into a well in a petri dish with agar infused with Staphylococcus aureus bacteria. Over 24 hours, the antimicrobial compounds in the honey diffuse outward, inhibiting bacterial growth. The diameter of the bacteria-free zone is measured and compared against a phenol standard. The result is expressed as a TA grade: a TA30 result means the honey demonstrated the same antimicrobial activity as a 30% phenol solution under test conditions.

This is a quantified, reproducible, comparable result. It is not a subjective grading. All TA grades assigned to Honey X products are based on WDPE results from third-party independent testing. Honey X has conducted 153+ third-party tests across five laboratories, including Analytica (ALS), ChemCentre, and the University of Sydney. Batch-specific test certificates are available to approved buyers. Read more about how active WA honey is tested in the bioactivity testing overview.

Food Grade Versus Clinical Grade: The Supply Chain Distinction

Food grade honey meets food safety standards: HACCP compliance, absence of contaminants, correct moisture content, and standard traceability. That is the baseline for any reputable honey supply.

Clinical grade supply begins where food grade supply ends. The distinctions are in testing rigour, documentation depth, and batch traceability:

  • Testing rigour: Clinical supply requires batch-specific WDPE results at defined TA thresholds. Food grade supply does not require antimicrobial activity testing.
  • Documentation: Clinical supply buyers require certificates of analysis at the batch level, not the variety level. Each unit supplied must carry its own verified test result.
  • Traceability: Clinical supply requires full traceability from hive location and harvest date through to the specific batch shipped. General food grade supply does not carry this level of traceability as a standard requirement.
  • Production accreditation: Clinical supply is sourced from facilities operating under HACCP and BQUAL certification at minimum, with relevant offshore accreditations applicable to the destination market.

Honey X operates across all of these requirements for the buyer segments that need them. The documentation infrastructure exists. The accreditations are current. The testing is conducted per batch.

WA Jarrah Honey and Non-Peroxide Activity

WA Jarrah honey (Eucalyptus marginata) is particularly relevant to clinical supply because of its Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA) profile.

NPA is the stable component of honey's independently verified antimicrobial activity. Unlike Peroxide Activity, NPA is not dependent on hydrogen peroxide. The stability profile of NPA means it is maintained across storage conditions that would diminish peroxide-based activity over time.

This long-term stability is the reason NPA is the component of most direct relevance to clinical applications where shelf life and product integrity across the supply chain are procurement requirements. Manuka honey is well known for its NPA, linked to Methylglyoxal (MGO). WA Jarrah honey also carries meaningful NPA alongside PA, verified through the same WDPE methodology. For buyers already sourcing Manuka, WA Jarrah honey offers a complementary supply option with a distinct but equally rigorous bioactivity profile, as verified at Analytica (ALS).

Jarrah is available in grades from TA15 through TA55+. View the full active WA honey product range.

Supply Formats for Clinical Buyers

Honey X makes bulk honey supply available to clinical buyers in formats suited to clinical procurement volumes and downstream packaging requirements.

Bulk formats include 300kg drums and 1,400kg IBCs for high-volume clinical procurement, as well as 28kg pails and 14kg cubes for mid-volume or trial orders. Each format is available with batch-specific documentation and can be supplied under the certification basis required by the buyer's destination market.

For buyers who require honey in smaller or consumer-accessible formats, Honey X produces sachets across a full size range: 8g, 10g, 13g, 20g, 25g, and 30g. Jar and PET formats are also available. All formats are produced under HACCP-accredited production lines with full traceability back to batch.

Certification Basis

Honey X holds HACCP and BQUAL certification as the foundation of its quality system. BQUAL is the Australian honey industry's benchmark quality assurance programme and is the standard most relevant to clinical supply buyers in international markets who require an audited quality framework specific to honey production and handling.

Beyond these core certifications, Honey X holds 12+ certifications in total, including offshore accreditations for specific destination markets. Honey X is a registered importer for China, the UK, the USA, and Saudi Arabia, and the export documentation framework is designed to meet the requirements of clinical and regulatory buyers in each of these jurisdictions.

Certification documentation is available to approved buyers. View the Honey X contact page to enquire about certification specifics relevant to your market.

Heritage and Scientific Oversight

The Fewster family has been beekeeping in Western Australia since 1916, now in its fifth generation. The scientific oversight at Honey X is led by Mike Fewster, Chief Scientific Officer, who holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Applied Science and whose work underpins the Jarrah Factor™ grading system and all in-house screening protocols.

The combination of generational supply continuity and in-house scientific rigour is a meaningful distinction for clinical supply buyers who require confidence in both the consistency of supply and the accuracy of the documentation that accompanies it.

Over 200 tonnes of active WA honey have been tested across five independent laboratories. In-house screening is validated by those same independent laboratories. Every batch independently tested for activity, composition, and compliance before release.

Enquire About Clinical Supply Grading and Batch Documentation

If you are sourcing honey for a clinical supply chain and need to understand the TA grading available, the documentation standard, or the certification basis applicable to your market, the starting point is a direct conversation.

Honey X supplies buyers in 17+ markets from bulk drums and IBCs through to smaller packed formats. The testing, documentation, and traceability infrastructure is in place. The question is whether the specific grade, format, and certification basis you require is available for your destination market and volume.

View the active WA honey range, or enquire directly about clinical supply grading and batch documentation via the Honey X contact page.

Honey Science
The Science Behind Jarrah Honey's Unique Properties
A science-led guide to Jarrah honey's three defining properties: dual-mechanism antimicrobial activity, low glycemic index, and natural resistance to crystallisation. All properties independently verified by third-party laboratories.
Honey X
Apr 4, 2026
April 4, 2026 16:57
1 min read

Why Jarrah Honey Is Scientifically Distinct

Jarrah honey is produced from the nectar of Eucalyptus marginata, a tree native to Western Australia's South West forests. Its chemical profile is shaped by both the nectar source and the environment in which the bees forage. The result is a honey with three independently documented properties that set it apart from every other commercially available active honey: verified dual-mechanism antimicrobial activity, a low glycemic index, and a natural resistance to crystallisation.

Each of these properties is measurable. Each is backed by independent laboratory testing. And each one is directly relevant to buyers in health food, food manufacturing, and specialty retail markets who need substantiated product claims rather than marketing language.

This guide covers the science behind all three, how they are tested, what the grades mean, and why the chemistry of Eucalyptus marginata makes Jarrah honey a commercially distinct ingredient.

The Environment That Shapes the Chemistry

Over 80% of WA's honey-producing forests remain untouched by human development. Beekeeping in Western Australia is conducted without antibiotics, chemical treatments, or artificial feeding. This is not a position adopted for marketing purposes. It reflects the regulatory and environmental conditions under which WA apiculture operates.

The Jarrah forests themselves are ancient. Trees over 1,000 years old provide the floral source, and those trees flower only once every two to four years. The rarity of the harvest cycle is a natural production ceiling. There is no mechanism to artificially increase Jarrah honey supply, because there is no mechanism to make the trees flower more frequently.

The isolation of WA's south-west forests, combined with strict state-level biosecurity controls, has maintained the region free of several honey bee diseases and pests that affect production in other parts of the world. For buyers sourcing honey destined for markets with strict import residue requirements, WA's antibiotic-free production framework represents a material compliance advantage. This is the foundation on which Jarrah honey's chemistry sits.

Dual-Mechanism Antimicrobial Activity: PA and NPA

Most active honeys achieve antimicrobial strength primarily through Peroxide Activity (PA): hydrogen peroxide released when honey comes into contact with moisture. PA is effective but has a recognised limitation. In the presence of the enzyme catalase, which occurs naturally in body tissue and in some application environments, hydrogen peroxide is neutralised. This reduces the practical antimicrobial effect in those settings.

Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA) is not hydrogen-peroxide dependent. It arises from stable chemical compounds in the honey that retain their antimicrobial function even in the presence of catalase. NPA is therefore more stable in storage and more consistent across a wider range of applied conditions.

WA Jarrah honey achieves both PA and meaningful NPA simultaneously. This dual mechanism is captured in the Total Activity (TA) score. The NPA component in Jarrah honey is not driven by methylglyoxal (MGO), which is the source of NPA in Manuka honey. It arises instead from a distinct combination of antimicrobial phytochemicals native to Eucalyptus marginata. The underlying chemistry is different. The result, stable long-term antimicrobial activity, is comparable.

For buyers, the practical significance of high NPA in Jarrah honey is that antimicrobial activity remains stable through formulation, through storage, and through product shelf life in a way that purely peroxide-based activity does not.

The WDPE Test: How Antimicrobial Strength Is Measured

The Well-Diffusion Phenol Equivalent (WDPE) test is the gold standard method for measuring honey antimicrobial activity. It is also the methodology used to verify Manuka honey grades in New Zealand. The test process works as follows:

  1. Diluted honey is placed into a well in a petri dish with agar infused with Staphylococcus aureus bacteria
  2. Over 24 hours, the antimicrobial compounds in the honey diffuse outward through the agar, inhibiting bacterial growth
  3. The diameter of the bacteria-free zone is measured
  4. The result is compared to a phenol standard and expressed as a Total Activity (TA) score

The TA score represents the equivalent phenol concentration needed to achieve the same zone of inhibition as the honey sample. A honey graded TA30+ performs at the antimicrobial equivalent of a 30% or greater phenol solution under these standardised test conditions.

Honey X tests at three independent laboratories: Analytica (ALS) in New Zealand, ChemCentre in Western Australia, and the University of Sydney. Analytica (ALS) is also the laboratory that underpins the Manuka honey testing methodology, which makes it a credible third-party reference point for buyers familiar with that framework. All results are third-party, independent, and batch-specific. No grade is claimed without a current laboratory certificate to support it.

Buyers who want a detailed walkthrough of the test process and how grades are assigned can read the guide to how active honey is tested.

The TA Scale: What Each Grade Means for Buyers

Jarrah honey from Honey X is available in grades from TA15 through to TA55+. The scale works as follows:

  • TA15: Entry-level active grade
  • TA20+: Strong antimicrobial activity
  • TA30+: Highly active
  • TA40+: Exceptional activity
  • TA50+ and above: Elite grade
  • TA55+: Highest grade verified in supply

Higher TA grades carry a higher NPA component, which is the more commercially stable form of antimicrobial activity. For buyers in markets where product stability across varied storage conditions and extended shelf life is a requirement, the NPA content at TA30+ and above is particularly relevant.

Batch-specific test certificates are available to registered wholesale buyers via the active Western Australian honey product category.

The Jarrah Factor™: A Composite Quality Score

The Jarrah Factor™ is a proprietary grading system developed by Honey X Chief Scientific Officer Mike Fewster. It goes beyond a single TA number to combine antimicrobial strength, antioxidant levels, and sugar composition into a composite quality score specific to WA Jarrah honey.

Mike Fewster holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Applied Science. His background spans decades in chemistry, analytical methods, and numerical modelling, with a career that moved from geoscience into international honey sales and then into the CSO role at Honey X. His work underpins both the Jarrah Factor framework and all in-house screening protocols used before independent laboratory testing.

The Jarrah Factor matters for buyers because a single TA number, while useful, does not capture the full quality picture of a batch. Two honeys can have the same TA score while differing significantly in antioxidant capacity and sugar composition. The Jarrah Factor provides a more complete data set for buyers who need to make sourcing decisions based on the total quality profile of a product, not a single metric.

More information about the science team is available on the About page.

Low Glycemic Index: The Glycemic Factor™ Explained

Jarrah honey has a low glycemic index (GI). Independent testing of Jarrah Platinum TA50+ has recorded a GI of 46, well within the low-GI classification range (GI 55 or below). The low GI arises directly from the sugar composition of Jarrah honey: it is high in fructose and low in glucose relative to most other honeys.

Honey is approximately 80% carbohydrates, composed of roughly 35 to 40% fructose and 30 to 35% glucose. Jarrah honey's fructose-to-glucose ratio sits at the higher end of this range, which is what drives the lower GI score. Fructose is metabolised differently to glucose, producing a slower and lower rise in blood glucose levels following consumption.

The Glycemic Factor™ is Honey X's proprietary validation system for this low-GI positioning. It is backed by independent testing data and provides buyers with a commercially usable, substantiated claim for health food and low-GI product categories. It is a verified data point tied to actual batch composition, not a general wellness statement.

For buyers sourcing honey for health food retail, the Glycemic Factor provides a credible, testable point of difference. The Honey X Research and Development team can support buyers in developing product claims frameworks that incorporate this data appropriately for their target markets.

Why Jarrah Honey Does Not Crystallise: The Chemistry

Crystallisation in honey is driven by glucose. When the glucose concentration in honey is high relative to fructose, glucose molecules precipitate out of solution and form crystals around particles such as pollen or wax. Honeys with a high glucose content, including many standard floral and clover varieties, can crystallise within weeks of packing.

Jarrah honey has a naturally high fructose-to-glucose ratio. Because glucose is the molecule that crystallises, and because Jarrah honey has a low glucose concentration, crystallisation does not occur under normal storage conditions. This is not a processing intervention or a preservative effect. It is a natural consequence of the nectar chemistry of Eucalyptus marginata.

The high fructose-to-glucose ratio contributes directly to the low GI score discussed in the previous section. These two properties, low GI and non-crystallising behaviour, share the same chemical foundation.

What the Crystallisation-Free Guarantee™ Means for Buyers

The Crystallisation-Free Guarantee™ is Australia's first guarantee of non-crystallising Jarrah honey. It applies to TA35+ and above grades, which are guaranteed crystallisation-free until the best before date. It is a commercially meaningful commitment in export markets where crystallised honey creates logistical challenges, product return costs, or retail presentation issues.

In practice, the Crystallisation-Free Guarantee means buyers can ship Jarrah honey to distant markets, store it under standard warehouse conditions, and place it on retail shelves without the risk of the product setting solid, separating, or requiring reprocessing before use.

For buyers sourcing honey for food manufacturing, a non-crystallising honey ingredient does not require heating before use. This matters because heat can degrade some of the bioactive compounds that give Jarrah honey its measured activity. A product that arrives in a consistent, pourable state is easier to work with and retains more of its natural chemistry through the production process.

Honey X currently serves 17 or more international markets. The non-crystallising property of Jarrah honey is a consistently cited commercial advantage across varied climates, storage environments, and distribution channels.

Jarrah Honey in Formulation and Ingredient Supply

Jarrah honey's combination of verified dual-mechanism antimicrobial activity, low GI, and natural resistance to crystallisation makes it a distinctive active ingredient for food manufacturers and product developers. Each property is independently testable, commercially communicable, and backed by batch-specific data.

For buyers sourcing at TA30+ and above, the high NPA content means antimicrobial activity remains stable through formulation processes that would neutralise purely peroxide-based activity. This stability is relevant for any application where the honey is combined with other ingredients or processed before final packaging.

The Honey X Research and Development team includes three in-house specialists with experience in honey-based product development, custom blends, and infused honey formulations. The team can support buyers from initial concept through to a production-ready SKU. The existing Honey X infused range, which includes Black Winter Truffle, Ginger and Lemon, Organic Cacao, Red Korean Ginseng, Turmeric Ginger Pepper, Cacao Chilli, and Cacao Kakadu Plum, is the direct output of this in-house capability.

All Honey X products, including custom formulations, are independently tested before despatch. Test certificates from Analytica (ALS), ChemCentre, and the University of Sydney are provided as standard documentation for each batch. Buyers receive verifiable data, not summaries. The Research and Development service page outlines what the team can support.

Bulk Supply and Export Terms

Jarrah honey is available through the bulk honey supply service in formats from 14kg cubes through to 300kg drums, 1400kg IBCs, full pallets, and full container loads (FCL). Export terms available include Ex-Factory, FOB, DDU, and CIF.

Honey X is a registered importer for China, the UK, the USA, and Saudi Arabia under Forest Fresh Australia Pty Ltd, and serves 17 or more markets globally. The About page covers the heritage and team behind the business in detail.

Register for Wholesale Access

Jarrah honey is available in grades from TA15 to TA55+. Register for wholesale access to view batch specifications and test certificates from Analytica (ALS), ChemCentre, and the University of Sydney, and to request samples for your application.

Pricing is available to approved wholesale buyers only. Enquire about bulk supply or export options through the customer portal. Explore the full range via the active WA honey product category.

Honey Science
Honey as an Active Ingredient: What Buyers Need to Know
Active WA honey is a measurable, batch-tested ingredient with documented bioactive properties. This guide covers Total Activity grading, NPA stability, low GI, polyphenols, and what product developers need to know before specifying WA honey in formulation.
Honey X
Apr 4, 2026
April 4, 2026 16:56
1 min read

Why Product Developers Are Looking at Honey Differently

For most of its commercial history, honey has been positioned as a food ingredient: a sweetener, a flavour base, a natural alternative to refined sugars. That positioning underserves what WA active honey actually is.

Product developers and brand builders working in health food, beauty, sports nutrition, and wellness categories are increasingly treating active honey as what the science shows it to be: an ingredient with measurable bioactive properties that can be specified, tested, and documented to a level that most natural ingredients cannot match.

This guide covers what those properties are, how they are measured, and what the practical implications are for buyers building products around active WA honey as a key ingredient. For the underlying science of WA Jarrah honey's antimicrobial activity, see our Jarrah honey science guide.

The Bioactive Properties of WA Active Honey: What Buyers Need to Know

WA active honeys are characterised by a set of measurable properties that distinguish them from commodity honey. Understanding each of these at an ingredient level is the starting point for any serious product development conversation.

Total Activity and Antimicrobial Strength

Total Activity (TA) is the primary grading metric for WA active honeys. It combines two distinct antimicrobial mechanisms: Peroxide Activity (PA) and Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA). TA is expressed as a number derived from the Well-Diffusion Phenol Equivalent (WDPE) method, the gold standard test for measuring honey antimicrobial strength.

The TA scale runs as follows:

  • TA10+: Moderate activity. Relevant for products where honey is a primary ingredient with incidental bioactive contribution.
  • TA20+: Strong activity. Appropriate for health-positioned products where antimicrobial and antioxidant properties are a defined attribute.
  • TA30+: Highly active. The entry point for products where bioactivity is a primary value claim for the finished product.
  • TA40+: Exceptional activity. Relevant for premium product formats where grade and provenance are central to the brand proposition.
  • TA50+ and above: Elite grade. The highest-verified activity in Honey X's supply, reaching TA55+. Reserved for buyers who require best-in-class ingredient specification.

Jarrah honey is available in verified grades from TA15 through TA55+. Marri and Yarri are available at TA30+. All grades are independently tested by batch. Grade specifications and batch certificates are available through the active Western Australian honey product category.

Non-Peroxide Activity: Stability That Matters in Product Development

For product developers, the distinction between PA and NPA is not academic. It determines how a honey ingredient behaves under processing and across shelf life.

Peroxide Activity (PA) is driven by hydrogen peroxide, which activates when honey comes into contact with moisture. PA is effective in direct-contact applications but is sensitive to heat, light, and extended storage. Products involving heat processing, blending, or long shelf-life requirements need to account for PA degradation over time.

Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA) is stable long-term. It is not hydrogen-peroxide dependent and does not require dilution to activate. NPA is significantly more heat-resistant and storage-stable than PA. This makes NPA the component of primary interest for product developers working with honey as a processed or shelf-stable ingredient.

Jarrah honey is characterised by meaningful NPA alongside its PA component. This dual-mechanism profile is a key technical advantage for developers specifying honey at TA30+ and above. The NPA component retains its activity even after standard processing conditions where PA would diminish.

Marri and Yarri honeys tend to be more PA-dominant. This does not reduce their value as active ingredients, but it does affect the applications they are best suited to: shorter-cycle formats, direct-consumption products, and applications where moisture-contact is part of the use case.

Low Glycaemic Index and Sugar Composition

Jarrah honey has a lower glycaemic index than most commercial honey varieties. This is a direct function of its sugar composition: Jarrah has a high fructose to glucose ratio, which slows glucose release and results in a lower GI response.

Jarrah Platinum at TA50+ has been independently tested and recorded a GI of 46. For context, honey is approximately 80% carbohydrates, comprising roughly 35 to 40% fructose and 30 to 35% glucose. Jarrah's elevated fructose proportion shifts this balance toward the lower end of the GI scale.

The Glycemic Factor™ is Honey X's low-GI validation system for Jarrah honey, backed by independent testing data. This is relevant for product developers positioning products in categories where glycaemic response is a consumer consideration.

The high fructose to glucose ratio also means Jarrah honey does not crystallise under normal storage conditions. The Crystallisation-Free Guarantee™ is Australia's first guarantee of non-crystallising Jarrah honey, and is commercially meaningful for buyers managing export supply chains where crystallised product creates handling and presentation issues.

Polyphenols, Antioxidant Capacity, and Prebiotic Properties

Jarrah honey contains high levels of polyphenols and flavonoids, contributing to its antioxidant capacity. Antioxidant capacity is a measurable property that can be referenced in product positioning within applicable regulatory frameworks.

WA honeys are also a good source of prebiotics, including oligosaccharides and complex carbohydrates. Jarrah honey in particular promotes higher concentrations of butyric acid (BTA) in the gut, a saturated short-chain fatty acid. This prebiotic profile is a relevant attribute for product developers working in digestive wellness and gut-health adjacent categories.

The Goodness Factor™ is Honey X's overall quality metric, combining antimicrobial activity, antioxidant capacity, and quality indicators into a single auditable reference point for buyers specifying active WA honey as an ingredient.

How Bioactivity Translates to Product Development Opportunity

The properties above are not theoretical. They are measurable, batch-specific, and documentable. For product developers, that is the distinction that separates active WA honey from commodity alternatives.

The global natural health product market was valued at USD 23.5 billion in 2023 and is projected to reach USD 38.5 billion by 2033, growing at a 5.3% CAGR. Bioactive honey occupies a growing segment within this market. Buyers who can specify a graded, tested, and documented active ingredient are better positioned to build credible product propositions in this environment than those relying on generic honey supply.

The Jarrah Factor™, developed by Chief Scientific Officer Mike Fewster, combines antimicrobial strength, antioxidant levels, and sugar composition into a composite quality score. It goes beyond a single TA number to give product developers a complete picture of ingredient quality when specifying WA Jarrah honey at scale. This is the grading framework that underpins all Honey X active honey supply.

Available Grades and Supply Formats for Product Developers

Active WA honey is available for ingredient use in bulk formats suited to product development at every scale, from R&D trial through to full production runs.

  • 14kg cubes: Suited to small-batch formulation and trial work.
  • 28kg pails: Standard format for mid-volume production. Practical for semi-automated dosing.
  • 300kg drums: For continuous production lines where honey is a significant volume ingredient.
  • 1400kg IBCs: Full industrial-scale supply for large-volume production requirements.

Each format ships with batch-specific documentation. All product dispatched in these formats has been independently tested prior to release. Freight options include Ex-Factory, FOB, CIF, and DDU terms across 17+ markets. Full logistics detail is available through the bulk honey supply enquiry process.

R&D Support: From Ingredient Brief to Production-Ready SKU

Honey X operates an in-house formulation and development function with three in-house specialists. This team works across both the scientific and technical side of honey formulation, and the market-fit and trend positioning side that matters for brand builders entering new categories or markets.

For buyers who need more than commodity ingredient supply, the research and development service offers an end-to-end path from ingredient brief to production-ready SKU. The process covers grade selection, trial batches, documentation packages, and the transition to production-scale supply with batch certificates matched to each lot.

This consolidates ingredient sourcing, testing, and documentation into a single supplier relationship. Buyers do not need to manage multiple vendors across the formulation and supply process. Lead times are 12 to 14 weeks for a first order, reducing to 4 to 6 weeks for repeat supply once the specification is confirmed.

What Documentation Looks Like for an Active Ingredient Specification

Product developers specifying honey as an active ingredient need documentation beyond a standard food safety certificate. The documentation Honey X provides for active honey ingredient supply includes:

  • Batch-specific TA test certificate from Analytica (ALS) in New Zealand or ChemCentre in Western Australia, confirming the WDPE-method Total Activity score
  • PA and NPA breakdown, confirming the contribution of each activity component to the overall TA grade
  • Sugar composition analysis, confirming fructose, glucose, and sucrose levels consistent with the declared variety and grade
  • Moisture content result, confirming honey is within the accepted range for shelf stability
  • Residue panel results, confirming absence of antibiotic residues and contaminants
  • Country of origin declaration and production traceability records

For buyers in markets with specific documentation requirements, Honey X can support with source attestations and production declarations relevant to your target regulatory context. All documentation is batch-specific, traceable to a specific harvest lot.

Honey X's supply is backed by 153+ third-party tests across five independent laboratories, with over 200 tonnes of active WA honey tested across those labs. In-house screening is validated by independent accredited labs as standard practice.

Enquire About Active Ingredient Supply

Register for wholesale access to view grade specifications, batch certificates, and supply options for active WA honey. Enquire about ingredient supply, custom formulation, and R&D support via the Honey X development team through the wholesale portal. View the full active Western Australian honey range and bulk supply options after registration.

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