PRODUCT

How can I afford a CSA share?

CSAs (Community Supported Agriculture subscriptions) can seem expensive at first glance because the entire season is paid upfront. But with a little planning, they’re surprisingly affordable. And they often provide more value over the season than the purchase cost. Think of it like buying your produce in bulk: you invest once and enjoy the benefits for months.

Let’s take a look at how easily a CSA can fit into a household budget.

A small CSA share (5–6 items each week for the 20-week 2026 season: June through mid-October) is $500.

If you start saving now, setting aside $17 a week will allow you to put down the $100 deposit by the end of the year. That deposit locks in your spot for the season.

From January through March, you can save $33 a week to cover the remaining balance by April 1. And that’s it—you’re fully paid!

Then comes the fun part. From the first strawberries in June through the last sweet potatoes in October, you’ll receive a box of the freshest, most seasonal produce every single week, with no additional grocery spending for these items all summer and fall. In a good growing year, you may even receive more than you paid for. (This past season, our CSA members received 9% more value in produce than the cost of their shares!)

A little saving at the start can lead to a whole lot of saving (and delicious eating) throughout the season.

Want to learn more or reserve your share? Find all the CSA details here.


This post was originally published in November 2021, and has been updated.

CSA members are farm VIPs

Our CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) members are the heroes of our farm, and we’re so thankful for them! Their support is what allows us to keep growing healthy food for our community.

CSA members are the VIP customers at West End Farm. We appreciate their investment in the farm (and the farm products, and the farmer), and we show that by giving them the first, best, biggest, and freshest produce.

Harvest happens on CSA pick up days (Mondays and Thursdays), so CSA customers get veggies that are only hours out of the field! When the first strawberries are ripe, they go in the CSA boxes before any extras go to the farmers market. When the broccoli is harvested, the CSA boxes get the nicest, biggest heads, and what’s left is posted for sale on the farm website. When people call the farm wanting to buy tomatoes, we tell them we’ll let them know what’s available after we pack the CSA boxes.

Every week during the CSA season, members get the exclusive weekly CSA email (see the photo for an example) with all kinds of tips and tricks for using their produce. At the top is an update on what’s happening at the farm: what’s being planted, which highly-anticipated crop will be ripe in the next week or two, and any important announcements about their CSA box. Next in the email is a section that lists every item in the CSA box that week, along with suggestions for how to store it and ideas for how to use it in recipes. The “Featured Item” section of the email goes in-depth on one of the veggies in the box, with nutritional information, fun facts, and additional tips on how to prepare it. A recipe is included every week that uses at least one (and sometimes all) of the items in the box. And at the end of the email is a section listing additional items for sale.

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CSA members get first chance to buy any additional products from the farm, before we take them to the farmers market or advertise them elsewhere. That means when we’re about to harvest honey from the honeybees, the announcement goes out first in the CSA weekly email so CSA members can reserve their honey orders. When we make a fresh batch of jam from our berries, the CSA members are the first to know. And when we offer up canning tomatoes or other items for sale, the CSA members have the first chance at them.

CSA members have a standing invitation to come visit the farm for box pickup every week. When they come out to pick up their box of freshly-harvested veggies, they get a chance to chat with Farmer Katie, see the produce growing, and watch the chickens run around. Kids can pet the baby kittens, pick a flower for their mom, or see if there are any ripe blackberries.

Does this sound like a community you’d like to be part of? We’d love to have you! You can join the CSA here.