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expired Posted by busybugsy • Aug 16, 2022
expired Posted by busybugsy • Aug 16, 2022

32-Oz Happy Belly Raw Wildflower Honey

w/ Subscribe & Save

$7.05

$11

35% off
Amazon
78 Comments 23,901 Views
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Deal Details
Amazon has 32-Oz Happy Belly Raw Wildflower Honey on sale for $7.05 when you checkout via Subscribe & Save. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders of $25 or more.

Thanks to Community Member busybugsy for finding this deal.

Instructions:
  1. Click here and select the "Subscribe & Save" option, if it isn't already selected
  2. Select any frequency, then click 'Set Up Now'
  3. Proceed to checkout
  4. The price should be $7.42 - 5% Subscribe & Save = $7.05
  5. Complete your order, shipping is free w/ Prime
    • Note: You may cancel Subscribe & Save any time after your order ships

Editor's Notes

Written by BostonGirl
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $3.97 lower (36% savings) than the list price of $11.02
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.7 from over 14,000 Amazon customer reviews.
  • About this store:
  • Please read the Forum Thread for more deal discussion.

Original Post

Written by busybugsy
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 32-Oz Happy Belly Raw Wildflower Honey on sale for $7.05 when you checkout via Subscribe & Save. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders of $25 or more.

Thanks to Community Member busybugsy for finding this deal.

Instructions:
  1. Click here and select the "Subscribe & Save" option, if it isn't already selected
  2. Select any frequency, then click 'Set Up Now'
  3. Proceed to checkout
  4. The price should be $7.42 - 5% Subscribe & Save = $7.05
  5. Complete your order, shipping is free w/ Prime
    • Note: You may cancel Subscribe & Save any time after your order ships

Editor's Notes

Written by BostonGirl
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $3.97 lower (36% savings) than the list price of $11.02
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.7 from over 14,000 Amazon customer reviews.
  • About this store:
  • Please read the Forum Thread for more deal discussion.

Original Post

Written by busybugsy

Community Voting

Deal Score
+32
Good Deal
Visit Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: Amazon Brand - Happy Belly Raw Wildflower Honey

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
12/28/22Amazon$6.90
4
07/12/22Amazon$7.05
14
11/15/21Amazon$5.31
1
11/11/21Amazon$5 frontpage
116
07/07/21Amazon$6.84 popular
12
06/10/21Amazon$5.40 frontpage
68
04/13/21Amazon$6.60 frontpage
86
Show More

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 7/12/2025, 11:16 PM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$11.41

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Top Comments

BF_
947 Posts
2942 Reputation
OP has posted lowest price ever in all recent posts. even after I posted that it's been lower recently. nobody seems to care and deal goes FP at 15 TU.

Seems people just don't care if it's normal price, poor reviews or FP anymore. probably there is more shilling going on to generate revenue for SD. OP is labeled an "Expert" on groceries. More like an expert in marketing normal or overpriced Happy Belly items as "lowest price ever"
PetSpy
6632 Posts
2521 Reputation
check history...

$7 is same price it was a year ago,
lowest was $5.31 in November'21
and that's before any s&s discounts.

SD'ers need to stop calling it a deal
every time some demand destruction
by "recession" retail price gouging
triggers an overstock sale.
cannono
1191 Posts
382 Reputation
Organic does not at all promise the honey's natural characteristics are more intact after processing. Organic is a very misunderstood label used in the fear-mongering way like you just posted to imply it is delivering better food to consumers when that is not the case.

77 Comments

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Pro
Expert
This user is an Expert in Grocery
Aug 17, 2022
2,262 Posts
Joined May 2012
Aug 17, 2022
cinnamonlovely
Aug 17, 2022
Pro
Expert
This user is an Expert in Grocery
2,262 Posts
Honey + saltines or honey + vegetable oil? Wow. What's with the odd combinations?
Pro
Expert
This user is an Expert in Grocery
Aug 17, 2022
2,262 Posts
Joined May 2012
Aug 17, 2022
cinnamonlovely
Aug 17, 2022
Pro
Expert
This user is an Expert in Grocery
2,262 Posts
Quote from KMAC7204 :
I love to see all the down votes when someone calls out the OP or the product! Just take it, it's prob true! Sorry OP, it is what it is when posting. I support your post, just not the product.

It's funny that we as consumers can't have an option or push back on a product on here.

SD has become a spot for people to bitc* as to why they don't get FP and to make sure everyone's feeling are met.

If people like me do not agree with the product or how it was sourced or over taste/feel/outcome of it, why can't we voice that opinion? SD then punishes us for voicing our option and marks our comment or sends us a note "don't be mean" hahah . And again it's on the product and not political crap either like other threads.

Too many people are sensitive to the down votes and want to be the almighty "SDer".

All BS to me. Lets bring back the old SD before all fake marketing products and SD workers pushing their commission checks.

SMH, it sucks and is a shame!
Oh honey …
Aug 17, 2022
1,944 Posts
Joined Oct 2010
Aug 17, 2022
bens_brother
Aug 17, 2022
1,944 Posts
Review seems to be pretty good. Why some of guys here claim it is fake honey??
Aug 17, 2022
373 Posts
Joined Jun 2005
Aug 17, 2022
Saledoc
Aug 17, 2022
373 Posts
The cap is very cheaply made and broke right away
1
Pro
Aug 17, 2022
1,561 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
Aug 17, 2022
swgfanforlife
Pro
Aug 17, 2022
1,561 Posts
Quote from bens_brother :
Review seems to be pretty good. Why some of guys here claim it is fake honey??
This is 100% real honey and the Happy Belly company is a private label owned by Amazon. The same brand sells Milk that is RBST free. That's a growth hormone put into a lot of milk you buy at the grocery store. So Happy Belly tries to sell a more healthy brand of foods, hence why you see it at Whole Foods.

Now as far as honey goes, if you are eating it for the health benefits, you need to source it locally. Bees near your home will have antibiotic and anti-inflammatory properties from your local pollen and flora. The honey from your area will also have allergens native to you. So if you suffer from allergies in the summer, eating local honey can help you out.

Most cities have farmers markets, so look for one near you. It's where I used to get my local honey, but I found a farmer just over the river from me and he sells me the big jars with the honeycomb, which I prefer. I grew up chewing on the honeycomb, but a lot of honey sold now doesn't include it.
1
Aug 17, 2022
805 Posts
Joined Nov 2015
Aug 17, 2022
Sonnysunshine17
Aug 17, 2022
805 Posts
I wonder if honey is actually good for human consumption since it never expires..
1
2
Aug 17, 2022
614 Posts
Joined Jun 2015
Aug 17, 2022
Iceream
Aug 17, 2022
614 Posts
Quote from dbrez8 :
Lots. But no more then most of the generic stuff at the grocery store. It's all co-packed and blended from untraceable sources that originate overseas where they cut real honey with sugar syrup or HFC. The only way to make sure you get the real stuff is buying local from farmstands/beekeepers.
You know your honey. You are absolutely right.
1

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Aug 17, 2022
152 Posts
Joined Jun 2010
Aug 17, 2022
virgo888
Aug 17, 2022
152 Posts
Costco honey bottle went up from 9.99 pre-pandemic to 15.99 now.
1
Aug 17, 2022
452 Posts
Joined Jul 2020
Aug 17, 2022
visaman777
Aug 17, 2022
452 Posts
Quote from MagentaMoon3841 :
Cyanide occurs organically in the nature. If I add organic Cyanide to my organic food, is it organic and would anyone want to try it???
I'll try it
1
Aug 17, 2022
1,191 Posts
Joined Oct 2014
Aug 17, 2022
cannono
Aug 17, 2022
1,191 Posts
Quote from swgfanforlife :
This is 100% real honey and the Happy Belly company is a private label owned by Amazon. The same brand sells Milk that is RBST free. That's a growth hormone put into a lot of milk you buy at the grocery store. So Happy Belly tries to sell a more healthy brand of foods, hence why you see it at Whole Foods.

Now as far as honey goes, if you are eating it for the health benefits, you need to source it locally. Bees near your home will have antibiotic and anti-inflammatory properties from your local pollen and flora. The honey from your area will also have allergens native to you. So if you suffer from allergies in the summer, eating local honey can help you out.

Most cities have farmers markets, so look for one near you. It's where I used to get my local honey, but I found a farmer just over the river from me and he sells me the big jars with the honeycomb, which I prefer. I grew up chewing on the honeycomb, but a lot of honey sold now doesn't include it.
You lost credibility when you said rBST is "put into a lot of milk you buy at the grocery store." This is false and proves the marketing works on fear - a brand says they don't use rBST, so you assume that makes it better and that other brands normally use it.

First, you'll notice milk labeled as not using rBST on their cows also have to have a disclaimer pointing out that rBST has never been shown to make a difference in the chemical makeup or nutrition of milk. There is no reason to fear rBST cows and brands legally can't get away with suggesting it unless they print the scientific fact somewhere on the label too. But the psychological suggestion works anyway on uninformed consumers.

Second, rBST has been de facto banned for decades in the USA because all the major dairy co-ops agreed to stop using it. It stopped being efficient to produce or buy, and has since been eliminated from virtually all dairy milk processes as a result. So it isn't special to not use rBST on cows anymore. You can spend all day searching your town for a milk brand that still uses rBST and you won't find one.
1
Aug 17, 2022
1,220 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
Aug 17, 2022
nashi
Aug 17, 2022
1,220 Posts
"Product of Argentina, Canada and USA" alone is a red flag..... I once tried similar labelled Costco honey, never again. I had been regular user of nature nate, even they got sued and owners changed. Quality has gone down significantly, imho. Now I buy 100% us honey (local) or few reputable brands, if something does not tastes right, it goes back to store.
Last edited by nashi August 16, 2022 at 10:36 PM.
Aug 17, 2022
545 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
Aug 17, 2022
catbert
Aug 17, 2022
545 Posts
Quote from Pickle :
Them BEES are BUSY!

Argentina sadly is a pass through for China fake honey Frown (More honey was consumed in the USA, then the entire planets honey production level)
Thanks. Mixing 3 countries in the product origin is a Red flag to me (pun intended). Red China products managed to sneak in through different means. I am very conscious in avoiding them but they managed to cheat me a couple of times with packages written entirely in Traditional Chinese (Taiwan) or Japanese. Really have to read the fine print. Those people are sneaky.
Aug 17, 2022
545 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
Aug 17, 2022
catbert
Aug 17, 2022
545 Posts
Quote from cannono :
Mass market honey is often made from blends or filler currently. It's common to blend various regions of honey for a better price and more consistent flavor or texture at low prices.
Thanks for the info! That's what I suspected. How can we tell if they didn't muddy the waters by homeopathically adding US or Canadian honey (like 2 drops in a bathtub of Argentinian honey)?
Aug 17, 2022
615 Posts
Joined Jun 2022
Aug 17, 2022
KorgGamer69
Aug 17, 2022
615 Posts
Quote from BUYMECAR :
Honey doesn't ever need to be treated with chemicals lol
Grocery store fruit doesn't need to be either, yet they still do it.

I am not fearmongering, btw. This is an industry known fact. Granted, the chemical they do spray on fruit is not in any way remotely harmful, it is only to artificially ripen fruit to make it look better on store shelves.

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Aug 17, 2022
2,262 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
Aug 17, 2022
BUYMECAR
Aug 17, 2022
2,262 Posts
Quote from KorgGamer69 :
Grocery store fruit doesn't need to be either, yet they still do it.

I am not fearmongering, btw. This is an industry known fact. Granted, the chemical they do spray on fruit is not in any way remotely harmful, it is only to artificially ripen fruit to make it look better on store shelves.
No, honey has an infinite shelf life. Adding anything to it is just wasting money. Honey distributors heat up honey to prevent crystallization which often kills the non-nutritious benefits found in what's traditionally considered organic honey. But apart from diluting honey with sugar blends and adding flavors, there's no economic benefit to doing any chemical modifications to honey.

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