MICROGREEN BUSINESS GUIDE · BAYVILLE, NY
Start a microgreen business in Bayville, NY.
Most Bayville residents do not realize how few of the microgreens served along the waterfront strip and across the bridge in Oyster Bay were grown nearby. Kitchens are mostly buying greens trucked in by distributors, cut days before they reach the line. The Bayville grower who fixes that is in prize position with every account from the beach to the harbor.
Quick Answer
You can start a microgreen business in Bayville with under $400 in initial equipment and grow it into a $3,000 to $8,000 per month side income within 90 days. Here is the local demand picture, the unit economics at North Shore wholesale prices, and the operating system used by the working microgreen farms.
Walk into the waterfront restaurants along Bayville Avenue on a Tuesday and ask where the microgreens come from. How often is the answer a Nassau grower instead of a distributor truck?
What Bayville buys today
Bayville is a thin barrier strip between Mill Neck Bay and Long Island Sound with a waterfront restaurant culture that punches above the village's small population. Seafood-driven concepts along Bayville Avenue plus summer beach traffic create a meaningful wholesale window, and a short drive over the bridge connects to the broader Oyster Bay and Locust Valley restaurant base.
The community is geographically tight, which actually works in a grower's favor. A single afternoon delivery loop covers Bayville plus Oyster Bay and Locust Valley, putting a dozen serious wholesale accounts in a 20 minute drive. Beach season layers in catering and private event demand from the harbor venues.
For indoor growing, Bayville faces humid Sound-side summers and cold winters tempered by water on both sides. A basement, garage, or spare bedroom with a small dehumidifier and window AC holds the 65 to 75 degree microgreen window year round, and once dialed in the climate is no longer a constraint.
Every week you wait, another waterfront kitchen signs a long-term deal with an out-of-state distributor. What does it cost you when the summer season opens and the accounts you wanted are already booked through Labor Day?
The math, in Bayville prices
North Shore wholesale microgreen prices sit at the upper-mid to premium tier, with waterfront seafood and chef-driven Bayville accounts paying top dollar for cut-to-order local product. Here is what the unit economics look like at conservative Bayville numbers.
Startup cost
$400
Trays, soil, seed, lights. Used gear cuts this in half.
Per-tray net
$20-$30
After seed, soil, packaging, delivery.
Trays per week
100
Target for $3K-$5K/mo at Bayville pricing.
Break-even week
Week 4
First positive cash week. Most growers hit it.
What that looks like in Bayville square footage
A 10 by 10 foot room with two vertical shelving units holds 60 to 80 active trays. That is enough to produce $3,000 to $5,000 per month in Bayville at standard wholesale prices. A two-car garage doubles it. A basement triples it.
Picture the week where Sunday is planting, Tuesday is delivery on Bayville Avenue and across the bridge to Oyster Bay, Saturday is the market, and the app tells you exactly which trays to cut. What changes about how you spend your other four days when the business runs on a system?
Three things every working microgreen farm in Bayville runs on
- A seed density and watering plan you trust. The number one cause of failed trays for new growers is over- or under-seeding. The cheat sheet inside Grown Like A Pro gives you grams per 10x20, soak hours, blackout days, harvest day, and watering for sixty-one varieties.
- A rotation tracker. Once you are running thirty-plus trays per week, you cannot remember what is in blackout, what is in light growth, what harvests Tuesday. A spreadsheet works for the first month. After that you need a system that pings you the day before each harvest and reorders seed before you run out.
- A customer + invoice layer. Restaurants in Bayville want predictable weekly invoices and net-15 terms. Farmers market customers want clamshell tracking. Both want consistency. The app handles both.
The IKEA test
If you can follow an IKEA instruction sheet without screaming at the family, you can grow microgreens at a commercial level in Bayville. The steps are about that difficulty: open the box, lay out the parts, follow the picture, repeat. Trays are the bookcase. Seed is the dowels.
If you ever did struggle with the IKEA bookshelf, that is exactly why Glappy lives inside the app. Glappy is the in-app coach that breaks every step down barney style, in your own language, from "how do I plant my first tray" to "why is this tray going leggy at day five and what do I do about it tonight." Type the question, get a step-by-step answer. There is no question too basic. The whole point is that a Bayville grower starting today is not on their own.
What you are not buying
You are not buying a course. You are not buying a hype product. You are not buying seed from us, and you are not buying trays from us. We do not sell either. Grown Like A Pro is the operating system you run your Bayville farm on. The growing happens in your basement.
Try Grown Like A Pro free for 30 days →Bayville microgreen FAQ
How much can I make growing microgreens in Bayville?
Is it legal to sell microgreens in NY?
What microgreens sell best in Bayville?
How much space do I need to grow microgreens in Bayville?
What is the best app for tracking microgreen production in Bayville?
How long does it take to learn to grow microgreens commercially?
Do I need a license to sell microgreens in Bayville?
How do I price microgreens to restaurants in Bayville?
Related guides
Once you have the Bayville math in your head, the next read is the density chart that drives every tray you plant.
- The Free Microgreen Seed Density Guide (the one piece of paper every Bayville grower needs)
- All free grow guides