NYC raw milk guide

Where to buy raw milk in NYC.

You cannot buy raw milk in a New York grocery store; state law allows licensed dairies to sell it direct to consumers only. Here is every option NYC buyers actually use in 2026, with the tradeoffs of each.

Get Saturday delivery NY raw milk law

Why it is not at Whole Foods

New York is a direct-sale state: licensed raw-milk dairies can sell to consumers under Department of Agriculture and Markets rules, but retail stores cannot stock it. So no NYC grocery store, co-op, or farmers market stall legally sells raw milk. Every real option below is some form of buying direct from a licensed dairy. Full New York raw milk rules here.

Option 1: Saturday delivery from a licensed NY dairy

farm-to-door runs a Saturday raw-dairy route across Manhattan with a licensed upstate dairy partner. A2/A2 grass-fed milk in glass, bottled the morning of delivery, $7 flat delivery, order by Thursday 8pm. This is the lowest-effort option if you live in Manhattan.

Order Saturday delivery

Manhattan only for now. Raw whole milk, raw kefir, raw colostrum.

Open the shop

Option 2: drive to the farm

Licensed New York dairies sell raw milk at the farm, and several sit within a 90-minute drive of the city in the Hudson Valley and western Connecticut border country. You get the lowest price per gallon and you meet the herd. The tradeoff is the drive, every week, with a cooler. The New York raw milk farm directory lists licensed dairies with on-farm sales; Connecticut (retail legal) and Pennsylvania (retail legal) pages cover the neighboring states.

Option 3: buying clubs and herd shares

Long-running NYC buying clubs pool weekly orders from member households and coordinate pickup points; herd shares sell you an ownership interest in a specific herd. Both models exist quietly across the five boroughs, usually by referral. They work well once you are in, but most have waitlists, fixed pickup windows, and little flexibility week to week. Local Weston A. Price Foundation chapters and RealMilk.com are the established referral paths.

Option 4: buying across state lines

Pennsylvania and Connecticut both allow retail raw milk, and some New Yorkers stock up on trips. Know the rule: federal law prohibits selling raw milk across state lines for human consumption, but it does not prohibit you from transporting milk you bought legally for your own use. Buy it there, drink it yourself, do not resell it.

What to avoid

The honest comparison

OptionEffortPriceBest for
Saturday delivery (farm-to-door)None; order by Thursday$20/gal + $7 deliveryManhattan households
Drive to the farmWeekly round tripLowest per gallonCars, big families, freezer stock
Buying club / herd shareWaitlist, fixed pickupMid; share feesOuter boroughs, committed regulars
Out-of-state retailOccasional tripsStore retail priceAnyone already traveling

Whichever path you pick, ask the same questions: which dairy produced it, when was it bottled, what does the herd eat, and what testing does the dairy run. A licensed dairy answers all four without blinking.

Frequently asked questions

Can you buy raw milk in stores in NYC?

No. New York allows licensed dairies to sell raw milk direct to consumers, but retail stores cannot stock it. Every legal path is some form of buying direct: delivery from a licensed dairy, on-farm purchase, or a herd-share arrangement.

What is the easiest way to get raw milk in Manhattan?

Saturday home delivery from farm-to-door, run with a licensed New York dairy. Order by Thursday 8pm and a cooler lands on your stoop Saturday afternoon. $7 flat delivery.

Is it legal to bring raw milk into NYC from Pennsylvania or Connecticut?

For personal use, yes. Federal law prohibits selling raw milk across state lines for human consumption, but transporting legally purchased milk for your own consumption is permitted. Reselling it is not.

How do NYC raw milk buying clubs work?

Member households pool weekly orders from a licensed dairy and share a pickup point, or buy an ownership share in a herd. Most run on referrals and waitlists. Weston A. Price Foundation chapters and RealMilk.com are the established ways to find one.

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