Free Shipping For orders over $35
This is the setup most beekeepers start with — and stick with. Two 10-frame deep boxes form the brood chamber: the queen lays here, the bees raise their young here, and the colony stores the food it needs to get through winter here. When the colony is ready to produce surplus honey, you stack medium supers on top (sold separately). That's the system. It works.
We build these from solid cypress — not pine, not poplar. Cypress is naturally rot-resistant without chemical treatment, dimensionally stable, and handles wet springs and hot summers without warping. The 7/8-inch boards are thick, smooth, and precision-cut so every box stacks flush. We've used pine. We went back to cypress.
This kit covers the brood chamber — everything a new colony needs to get established. It does not include honey supers. Once your bees fill both deep boxes (usually by the end of the first or second season), you add medium boxes above for surplus honey storage. A queen excluder goes between the brood boxes and the super if you're using one. Hive stand, bees, and protective gear are all separate.
All three options are the same kit. The difference is how much work you do when it arrives.
Unassembled saves a few dollars. Assembled saves an afternoon. Neither is wrong — just depends on your situation.
| Wood | Solid cypress |
| Board thickness | 7/8 inch |
| Frame size | Deep (9 1/8 inch) |
| Foundation type | Double-waxed black plastic |
| Frame count | 20 (10 per box) |
| Bottom board | Screened |
| Hive format | Langstroth 10-frame |
| Assembly options | Unassembled / Assembled / Assembled + Painted |
| Paint finish (painted variant) | White primer + UV-resistant topcoat |
Watch: 8 or 10 Frame? Deep or Medium Boxes? A Guide to Choosing Your First Hive Setup