Best Honey Refractometer
The honey refractometer tells you in seconds whether your honey is ready to harvest. Put a drop on the prism, hold it to the light, and read the moisture percentage off the scale โ no guessing and no waiting on a lab.
Features
- Reads the moisture (water) content of honey
- Steel body โ durable and built to last seasons
- Lightweight and pocketable for the extracting room or the bee yard
- Includes step-by-step instructions for calibration and use
Why moisture matters
Moisture content is how you judge whether honey is ready to pull. Honey capped and harvested at the right moisture stores well; honey taken too early holds too much water and can ferment in the jar โ which means unhappy customers and wasted crop. A quick reading before you extract takes the guesswork out of the call.
How to use it
Place a few drops of honey on the prism, close the cover plate, and let it sit a moment so the sample spreads and settles to room temperature. Hold the eyepiece up to a light source and read where the boundary line crosses the moisture scale. Calibrate first using the included instructions so your readings are accurate, and wipe the prism clean between samples.
Before you order
- Whatโs included: one honey refractometer and instructions.
- Best for: checking honey moisture at harvest and before bottling.
- Tip: calibrate before first use, and let cold honey come to room temperature for the most reliable reading.
Pairs Well With
Specifications
- Measures: honey moisture / water content
- Body: steel
- Length: approx. 8 in
- Includes: instructions
FAQ
What moisture level should harvested honey be?
Beekeepers generally aim to harvest honey below about 18.5% moisture, since higher levels risk fermentation in the jar. Check your local guidance and the reading on your refractometer before pulling supers.
Do I need to calibrate it?
Yes. Calibrate it before first use following the included instructions, and check it periodically โ calibration is what keeps your readings trustworthy.
How do I read the moisture scale?
Put a drop of honey on the prism, close the plate, hold the eyepiece to a light, and read where the light/dark boundary line crosses the scale. Let cold honey warm to room temperature first for an accurate reading.