MICROGREEN BUSINESS GUIDE · WHEATON, IL
Start a microgreen business in Wheaton, IL.
Most Wheaton residents do not realize how short the local microgreen supply actually is. The downtown restaurant cluster around the Metra station has built a real chef-driven identity, and almost all of it leans on distributor product trucked in from elsewhere. The Wheaton grower who closes that gap pays themselves first.
Quick Answer
You can start a microgreen business in Wheaton with under $400 in initial equipment and grow it into a $2,500 to $6,500 per month side income within 90 days. Here is the local demand picture, the unit economics at western suburban wholesale prices, and the operating system used by working microgreen farms.
Walk into five chef-owned restaurants in downtown Wheaton on a Tuesday and ask where they source their microgreens. How often do you hear a local grower instead of a distributor truck?
What Wheaton buys today
Wheaton has built a tight, walkable downtown food scene around the Metra station and along Hale and Main, with chef-driven independents, modern American, and steakhouse concepts setting the tone. The community skews higher-income, college-educated, family-oriented, and food-aware, the textbook demographic for premium local produce.
The restaurant mix runs modern American, Italian, brunch and breakfast, Asian, and a strong steakhouse and farm-to-table presence, all categories that build plate work around microgreens. The French Market on Saturdays is one of the better-known western suburban markets and pulls steady, willing-to-pay traffic from across DuPage County.
For indoor growing, western suburban winters and humid summers are the climate constraints, and both solve cheaply. A basement, spare bedroom, or insulated garage with a small heater in winter and a dehumidifier in summer holds the 65 to 75 degree window microgreens prefer, and once climate is set the rest is just process and consistency.
Every week you wait, another downtown kitchen signs a year long supply agreement with a distributor truck rolling in from outside the village. What does it cost you when the chefs you wanted to sell to are already on someone else's invoice?
The math, in Wheaton prices
Wheaton restaurant wholesale prices for microgreens run at the higher end of the western suburban range, with chef-driven and steakhouse accounts paying premium for genuinely local cut-to-order product. Here is what the unit economics look like at conservative Wheaton 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 Wheaton pricing.
Break-even week
Week 4
First positive cash week. Most growers hit it.
What that looks like in Wheaton 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 Wheaton at standard wholesale prices. A two-car garage doubles it. A basement triples it.
Picture the version of your week where Sunday is planting day, Tuesday is restaurant delivery downtown and along Roosevelt, Saturday is the French Market, and the app tells you exactly which trays to cut. What changes about how you spend the rest of your week when the business runs on a system?
Three things every working microgreen farm in Wheaton 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 Wheaton 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 Wheaton. 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 Wheaton 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 Wheaton farm on. The growing happens in your basement.
Try Grown Like A Pro free for 30 days →Wheaton microgreen FAQ
How much can I make growing microgreens in Wheaton?
Is it legal to sell microgreens in IL?
What microgreens sell best in Wheaton?
How much space do I need to grow microgreens in Wheaton?
What is the best app for tracking microgreen production in Wheaton?
How long does it take to learn to grow microgreens commercially?
Do I need a license to sell microgreens in Wheaton?
How do I price microgreens to restaurants in Wheaton?
Related guides
Once you have the Wheaton 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 Wheaton grower needs)
- All free grow guides