HomeFarmingGrowing Herbs in Ireland

Growing Herbs in Ireland

Growing herbs in Ireland can be very rewarding enterprise. It can be a successful business with a surprisingly small amount of land. The relatively constant temperatures and our moist climate suits many herbs, though Mediterranean herbs need extra care with drainage and sun best grown in Polly tunnels.

Herbs growing in Ireland is surprisingly easy because our fairly constant temperature agrees with most herbs. The key is providing sunshine and good drainage, especially for Mediterranean herbs.

Commercial Herb Growing Business Model for Ireland

A Financially Viable Income Generator

Based on successful Irish examples like O’Hanlon Herbs (2-acre farm in Wicklow, producing 4.5 million potted herbs + 5 million cut herb packets/year to Tesco, Aldi, Lidl and Dunnes), here’s a realistic business model for starting a financially viable herb farm in Ireland.

  1. BUSINESS STRUCTURE

Phase 1: Startup (Years 1–2)

  • Scale: 0.5–1 acre protected growing (glasshouses/tunnels)
  • Employees: 1–2 (you + 1 part-time)
  • Focus: Direct-to-consumer (farmers’ markets, local restaurants, online)
  • Goal: €30,000–€50,000 annual revenue

Phase 2: Growth (Years 3–5)

  • Scale: 1–2 acres protected + 1–2 acres’ open field
  • Employees: 4–6 full-time
  • Focus: Wholesale to regional supermarkets + food service
  • Goal: €100,000–€250,000 annual revenue

Phase 3: Commercial (Years 6+)

  • Scale: 2–5 acres (like O’Hanlon Herbs)
  • Employees: 10–20 full-time
  • Focus: National retail chains (Tesco, Aldi, Lidl, Dunnes)
  • Goal: €500,000–€1.5M+ annual revenue
  1. TOP 10 HERBS TO GROW FOR PROFIT IN IRELAND

High-Value Culinary Herbs (Fresh Retail)

Herb Why It’s Profitable Growing Notes for Ireland
Basil Most popular culinary herb; sells itself; high demand  Grow in glasshouse/sunny window (above 5°C); doesn’t thrive outdoors in Irish climate 
Parsley Steady seller; biennial (multiple cuttings)  Cool soil, moderate moisture; sow March/April; several cuttings before seed May/June 
Chives Steady seller; can do in cooler weather  Moist, well-drained soil; sun or light shade; cut back after flowering for second flush 
Thyme Popular, perennial; trim after flowering  Well-drained soil, full sun; very hardy; lasts several years 
Rosemary High value; perennial; Mediterranean  Very well-drained soil, sheltered sunny spot; mulch in autumn; raise pots on pot feet over winter 
Sage Evergreen perennial; high demand  Well-drained soil, sunny spot; prune back in spring for fresh growth 
Mint Steady seller; spreads rapidly (keep in pot)  Cool, rich soil; keep in pot or bottomless container; divide every 2 years 
Coriander Popular; good for digestion/medicinal  Sun, well-watered; sow March–July for May–Oct harvest; prone to bolting, keep well watered 
Oregano Popular Italian cooking herb  Well-drained soil, full sun; perennial; easy to grow outdoors 
Lavender Called “Swiss army knife” of herbs (so many uses)  Well-drained soil, full sun; prune in spring just before growth; not winter 

Medicinal Herbs (Growing Market)

Herb Why It’s Profitable Growing Notes
Calendula Growing popularity; medicinal values  Easy to grow; medicinal teas, tinctures 
St John’s

Wort

Mood-boosting substance  Perennial; medicinal use 
Chamomile Medicinal, calming  Easy annual; medicinal teas 
Catnip Sedative for humans; cat product  Hard to grow; medicinal use 
  1. REVENUE STREAMS (Multiple Income Sources)

Stream 1: Fresh Potted Herbs (Primary)

  • Production: 10–15 varieties (rosemary, thyme, parsley, basil, mint, chives, sage, oregano, lavender, coriander, etc.)
  • Output: 65,000 pots/week (like O’Hanlon Herbs mature production)
  • Price: €3–€5 per pot (retail)
  • Annual Revenue: €800,000–€1.5M (at commercial scale)

Stream 2: Cut Fresh Herbs (Packets)

  • Production: 15 varieties (sliced/packed)
  • Output: 80,000 packets/week (like O’Hanlon Herbs)
  • Price: €2–€4 per packet (retail)
  • Annual Revenue: €600,000–€1.2M (at commercial scale)

Stream 3: Dried Herbs (Packaged)

  • Production: Packaging dried versions of top herbs
  • Price: €5–€10 per packet
  • Annual Revenue: €50,000–€150,000 (adds 10–20% to revenue)
  • Revenue Multiplier2x–5x revenue per pound compared to fresh

Stream 4: Essential Oils & Extracts (High Value)

  • Production: Distillation of lavender, sage, oregano, etc.
  • Price: €50–€200 per bottle (small)
  • Annual Revenue: €20,000–€80,000 (premium product)

Stream 5: Herbal Teas & Tinctures (Wellness)

  • Production: Blending chamomile, calendula, St John’s wort, etc.
  • Price: €8–€25 per tea/tincture
  • Annual Revenue: €30,000–€100,000

Stream 6: Agri-Tourism (Diversification)

  • Activities: Herb-picking tours, wellness workshops, farm stays
  • Price: €15–€50 per person
  • Annual Revenue: €10,000–€50,000

Stream 7: Contract Growing for Pharmaceutical Companies

  • Production: Specific medicinal herbs for pharmaceutical contracts
  • Price: Contract-based (steady income)
  • Revenue Potential: €50,000–€200,000/year (long-term partnerships)
  1. STARTUP COSTS (Phase 1: 0.5–1 Acre)

Fixed Capital Costs – can be built up in phases – can be self financing

Item Cost (€) Where to Buy
Glasshouse (1,000m²) €40,000–€80,000 Local horticultural suppliers
Tunnels (2 units, 500m²) €10,000–€20,000 Irish suppliers
Irrigation System €3,000–€6,000 Bord Bia approved suppliers
Drying Racks & Equipment €2,000–€5,000 Local metalwork
Packaging Machine €5,000–€15,000 Food processing suppliers
Cold Storage (10m³) €8,000–€15,000 Refrigeration suppliers
Tractor (small, 20hp) €15,000–€25,000 Agricultural dealers
Packaging & Branding €2,000–€5,000 Print shops
Soil & Compost €1,500–€3,000 Local suppliers
Fencing & Infrastructure €3,000–€6,000 Agricultural suppliers
Total Fixed Costs €90,000–€180,000  

Variable Startup Costs

Item Cost (€)
Seeds/Starter Plants €1,500–€3,000
Organic Compost & Soil €2,000–€5,000
Raised Beds/Containers €3,000–€10,000
Labor (Year 1) €15,000–€25,000
Marketing & Branding €2,000–€5,000
Insurance €1,500–€3,000
Utilities €3,000–€6,000
Total Variable Costs €28,000–€52,000

TOTAL STARTUP (Phase 1)

€118,000–€232,000

  1. EXPECTED RETURNS (Phase 1)

Annual Revenue (0.5–1 Acre)

Revenue Stream Volume Price Annual Revenue
Potted Herbs 13,000 pots/week €3.50 €182,000
Cut Herbs (Packets) 16,000 packets/week €2.50 €130,000
Dried Herbs 500 packets/week €7.50 €19,500
Essential Oils 50 bottles/month €100 €6,000
Herbal Teas 200 packets/month €15 €3,600
Agri-Tourism 50 visitors/month €30 €18,000
Total Annual Revenue     €359,100

Annual Expenses (Year 1–2)

Expense Annual Cost (€)
Labor (2 people) €35,000
Utilities (heating, water, electricity) €10,000
Organic compost & soil €5,000
Packaging materials €4,000
Marketing & advertising €4,000
Insurance €3,000
Maintenance & repairs €5,000
Loan repayments €15,000
Total Annual Expenses €86,000

Net Profit (Phase 1)

€359,100 – €86,000 = €273,100/year

Profit Margin~76%

  1. GOVERNMENT SUPPORT & GRANTS (Ireland)

Available Grants

  • Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine (DAFM) grants for horticulture
  • Bord Bia Quality Assurance Scheme (food safety certification)
  • TÉAGASC horticulture advice and business planning support
  • Regional Enterprise Development grants for small businesses

Key Requirements

  • Bord Bia Irish certification (provenance is key differentiator)
  • Food safety audit to BRC standard
  • Organic certification for premium pricing (30–100% price premium)
  1. MARKETING STRATEGY

Target Markets

  1. Primary: Irish consumers (local, Irish-grown provenance)
  2. Secondary: Chefs, restaurants, food service
  3. Tertiary: Health/wellness brands, spas, pharmacies

Key Selling Points

  • “Irish Provenance”: Key differentiator vs. imported herbs
  • Freshness: Grown + packed daily to order (unlike imported)
  • Local: Irish retailers see benefit in domestic supplier
  • Quality: Bord Bia certified, BRC audited

Channels

  • Farmers’ Markets (local)
  • Online Store (e-commerce, nationwide delivery)
  • Direct to Restaurants (food service)
  • Wholesale to Supermarkets (regional/national)
  • Social Media (Instagram, Facebook for brand building)
  1. OPERATIONAL MODEL

Production Cycle

  • Potted Herbs: Year-round production in glasshouses
  • Cut Herbs: Seasonal (June–September peak) + protected growing (spring/autumn)
  • Hardy Cut Herbs: Winter availability (thyme, rosemary, sage)

Automation

  • Seed sowing: Automated (reduces labor, ensures uniformity)
  • Packing: Bespoke herb packaging for optimal freshness
  • Irrigation: Automated watering systems

Quality Control

  • Daily to order: Packaged fresh daily to customer orders
  • Food safety: BRC audited
  • Agronomic checks: Rigorous quality control
  1. SCALING PATHWAY (O’Hanlon Herbs Model)

Phase 1: Back Garden (1988)

  • Started in back garden in Co. Dublin
  • Door-to-door sales of potted herbs
  • Part-time work elsewhere for support

Phase 2: Commercial Site (1992)

  • Moved to Glenealy, Co. Wicklow (suitable site)
  • Quinnsworth trial (10 stores) → full listing

Phase 3: Growth (2000–2008)

  • 2000: 20,000 packet herbs/week
  • 2008: 1,000 potted pots/week
  • Herb sales took off in Ireland around 2000 (more adventurous cooking)

Phase 4: Sophisticated Unit (2008)

  • Leap from basic seasonal growing to year-round production in glasshouses
  • Automation of seed sowing for uniformity

Phase 5: Commercial Scale (Current)

  • 1 hectare under glass
  • 4.5 million potted herbs/year
  • 5 million cut herb packets/year
  • Staff: 55 employees
  • Customers: Tesco, Dunnes, Aldi, Lidl
  1. KEY SUCCESS FACTORS

What Makes It Work

  1. Protected Growing: Year-round production via glasshouses (critical for Ireland’s climate)
  2. Irish Provenance: Key differentiator vs. imported herbs
  3. Daily to Order: Packaged fresh daily (superior to imported)
  4. Multiple Revenue Streams: Fresh + dried + essential oils + teas + agri-tourism
  5. Automation: Reduces labor, increases uniformity
  6. Quality Certification: Bord Bia + BRC for retailer trust
  7. Local Retailer Support: Irish retailers value domestic supplier

Risks to Manage

  1. Herbs are fragile and perishable→ need local growing + daily packing
  2. Climate: Mediterranean herbs need protection (glasshouses)
  3. Competition: Imported herbs (cheaper but inferior quality)
  4. Labor: High labor costs in Ireland
  5. Seasonality: Protected growing essential for year-round supply
  6. FINANCIAL SUMMARY
Metric Phase 1 (0.5–1 Acre) Phase 2 (1–2 Acres) Phase 3 (Commercial)
Startup Cost €118,000–€232,000 €250,000–€500,000 €1M–€3M
Employees 1–2 4–6 10–20
Annual Revenue €300,000–€500,000 €500,000–€1M €1M–€3M+
Net Profit €150,000–€250,000 €250,000–€500,000 €500,000–€1.5M+
Profit Margin ~70% ~70% ~70%
ROI (Year 3) ~150% ~200% ~250%

Estimate: A well-maintained 1/10-acre herb garden can generate $20,000+ annually (≈€18,000) if you grow high-demand herbs and market efficiently.

  1. ACTION PLAN (First 12 Months)

Months 1–3: Planning

  • Complete business plan (use Teagasc templates)
  • Secure land (0.5–1 acre minimum)
  • Obtain business registration + insurance
  • Order glasshouse/tunnel equipment

Months 4–6: Infrastructure

  • Build glasshouse/tunnels
  • Install irrigation & cold storage
  • Register with Bord Bia Quality Assurance
  • Purchase starter plants/seeds

Months 7–9: Production

  • Start first crop (potted herbs in glasshouse)
  • Begin marketing (farmers’ markets, online)
  • Establish relationships with local restaurants

Months 10–12: Sales & Scaling

  • Launch e-commerce store
  • Apply for wholesale contracts (regional supermarkets)
  • Expand production (add 2nd crop)
  • Begin drying/essential oil production
  1. FINAL THOUGHTS

Herb farming is financially viable in Ireland because:

  • High value per pound vs. vegetables/grains
  • Low startup costs (€1,000–€3,000 for small operation)
  • Multiple revenue streams (fresh, dried, oils, teas, etc.)
  • Year-round demand from chefs, wellness brands, consumers
  • Ireland’s climate suits many herbs (constant temperature agrees with plants)
  • Protected growing enables year-round production

Key takeaway: Start small (0.5–1 acre), focus on Irish provenance, grow under glass or polly tunnelsfor year-round supply, and diversify revenue streams (fresh + dried + oils + teas + agri-tourism). O’Hanlon Herbs proves the model works at scale in Ireland.

Contact Resources:

  • TÉAGASC Horticulture: www.teagasc.ie
  • Bord Bia: www.bordbia.ie
  • O’Hanlon Herbs: www.ohanlonherbs.ie
  • Fernhill Garden Centre: www.fernhill.ie (herb starting advice)

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