How the raw milk near me directory works
- Click Open the directory. The Raw milk filter pre-applies.
- Allow your browser to share location, or type your ZIP or city in the search box. The map centers on you.
- Working farms that list raw milk appear as pins on the map and as cards in the list, sorted by distance.
- Open a farm card to see its practices, fulfillment options, delivery zones, and direct contact path.
The directory does not warehouse food, take a cut of farmer revenue, or stand between you and the farmer. Once you find a farm you like, you contact the farmer directly and pick up or arrange delivery.
Coverage
farm-to-door covers the United States. Coverage is densest in the Northeast (New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Pennsylvania) and is expanding nationwide. State-by-state legal context is available on the raw milk laws by state page.
What "near me" actually means
For most raw milk buyers, "near me" is the maximum distance they will drive once a week or once a month for a pickup. Many farms offer local delivery to a defined zone, often within a 25 to 60 mile radius. A smaller number ship raw milk in coolers, but federal law restricts interstate raw milk sales for human consumption.
Open the live directory
Map and list pre-filtered to raw milk. Allow location for nearest farms.
Is raw milk legal in my state
The directory shows you farms that legally sell raw milk. The legal model varies: retail in stores, on-farm only, herd share only, pet food only, or fully banned. See the raw milk laws by state page for your state. If your state allows only herd shares, the directory still surfaces dairies that operate herd shares.
Filters that matter for raw milk shoppers
- Raw milk. Pre-applied on this page.
- A2/A2 dairy. Cows whose milk lacks the A1 beta-casein variant, often easier to digest. More on A2/A2.
- Raw kefir. Raw milk fermented into a yogurt-like drink.
- Pickup only or Local delivery. Driven by your access and time.
- Organic and Regenerative. Production practice. Most raw milk farms are not certified organic but operate to similar standards.