Reports › Company profiles › Apis India
Apis India
Sector: Consumer Goods, Honey and Natural Sweeteners | HQ: New Delhi, India | Founded: 1983 | Employees: 800+
Listed as: Privately held |
Apis India is not separately listed on Indian stock exchanges. Refer to the parent entity or cooperative federation noted under "Listed as" above.
Company overview
Apis India Limited is one of India's largest honey and natural food product companies, founded in 1983 in New Delhi. Operating under the Apis Himalaya, Apis Original, and Apis Naturoz brands, the company has built a multi-decade presence in branded packaged honey, fruit juices, jams, sauces, ketchup, and select breakfast and snacking products. Apis India is among the top three Indian organised honey brands alongside Dabur Honey (the largest) and Patanjali Honey, with significant pan-India distribution. The company operates manufacturing facilities at Roorkee (Uttarakhand) with additional contract manufacturing partners, processing honey sourced from beekeeper cooperatives across Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, and the Himalayan region. The Apis Himalaya brand specifically positions the high-altitude Himalayan-origin honey. The product portfolio extends beyond honey into the Naturoz line of natural fruit juices, jam and conserves, ketchup, sauces, and select health and wellness adjacencies. The company has remained closely held with periodic IPO consideration discussions but no completed listing as of FY25.
Financial performance and recent trajectory
Disclosed revenue (FY25): ₹400 crore (FY 2024-25 estimate).
Competitive position
Apis India operates in the Indian organised honey market estimated at over ₹2,500 crore by FY25. Principal organised competitors are Dabur Honey (the dominant brand with over 35 percent market share of organised honey), Patanjali Honey, Saffola Honey (Marico), Hi-Tech Foods, Beez Honey, Zandu Pure Honey, and a long tail of regional and unbranded honey suppliers. Apis is consistently among the top three organised brands by revenue. The structural challenge for organised honey has been the 2020 Centre for Science and Environment adulteration controversy that affected category consumer trust. Apis's competitive moats are multi-decade brand recall, the Himalaya origin positioning supporting premium pricing, the diversified product portfolio extending into juices and condiments, and the established distribution network.
Key risks
Periodic adulteration controversy affecting category consumer trust Competitive intensity from Dabur Honey and Patanjali Honey Beekeeping seasonal yield volatility tied to climate and flower bloom cycles
Outlook
Apis India Limited was founded in 1983 in New Delhi as a packaged honey company sourcing from beekeeper cooperatives across north India. The brand name Apis derives from the genus name of honeybees. Over the following four decades, the company expanded into adjacent natural food categories including fruit juices, jams, sauces, and select wellness products under the Naturoz sub-brand. The company has remained closely held. The business is organised around four product pillars. The Honey segment, the largest contributor, includes Apis Himalaya honey (high-altitude Himalayan origin), Apis Original (mainstream honey), Apis Litchi Honey, Apis Acacia Honey, Apis Wild Berry Honey, and various specialty single-flora honey variants. The Fruit Juices segment under the Apis Naturoz brand includes 100 percent fruit juices and nectars across orange, mango, mixed fruit, apple, and select premium variants. The Jams and Conserves segment includes mixed fruit jam, mango jam, pineapple jam, strawberry jam. The Sauces and Condiments segment includes tomato ketchup, chilli sauce, soy sauce, vinegar. The Health and Wellness segment includes flavoured honey blends and honey-based wellness preparations. Manufacturing is anchored at Roorkee, Uttarakhand with supplemental contract manufacturing partners. The Roorkee facility includes honey processing, fruit juice processing, jam and sauce manufacturing, and packaging operations. Honey sourcing combines direct procurement from beekeeper cooperatives in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, and the Himalayan region (Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh), with quality and origin documentation through chain-of-custody protocols. Distribution covers approximately 2,50,000 retail outlets across India through a multi-tier distributor network. Modern trade coverage is strong with the major chains. E-commerce and quick commerce are growing with presence on Amazon, Flipkart, BigBasket, JioMart, Blinkit, Zepto, and Instamart. Exports to the Middle East, Europe, and select diaspora markets contribute approximately 15 to 20 percent of revenue. Financial trajectory has been moderate. Revenue is estimated at approximately ₹300 crore in FY22 growing to ₹400 crore in FY25 at high single-digit CAGR. EBITDA margin is estimated in the 10 to 14 percent range typical of branded honey and natural foods. The 2020 CSE adulteration controversy affected the broader category through CY21 and CY22. Recent strategic priorities include certification and quality testing expansion, premium honey variants at higher price points, and digital and quick commerce channel deepening. Strategy through 2025 to 2030 is anchored on four themes. First, premium honey segment expansion (Himalayan, single-flora, manuka-style variants). Second, exports growth in the Middle East and Europe. Third, natural and ayurvedic adjacent products under the Naturoz umbrella. Fourth, the structural recovery of honey category trust as testing and certification become standard. The regulatory environment is the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 administered by FSSAI for honey specifications (the Food Safety and Standards (Honey) Regulations specify nuclear magnetic resonance and other quality parameters), the Bureau of Indian Standards specifications (IS 4941 for honey), and the Legal Metrology Act 2009 for packaging declarations. International import regulators apply for export markets. The Goods and Services Tax framework treats packaged honey at 5 percent. The Companies Act 2013 governs corporate disclosure. Risks include the periodic adulteration controversy and consumer trust dynamics, beekeeping seasonal yield volatility, competitive intensity from Dabur and Patanjali, currency exposure on export contracts, structural shift of premium consumers toward artisanal apiarist brands, and food safety regulatory tightening. Management quality is anchored by the founder family with a professional management team. Statutory audit is conducted under the Companies Act 2013 framework. ESG positioning is moderate to strong. Honey production supports beekeeping livelihoods particularly in tier-2 and rural areas. Beekeeping itself supports pollination services for adjacent agriculture. Sustainable sourcing protocols and beekeeping cooperative engagement are the positive ESG dimensions.
KAMRIT point of view
Building or competing with Apis?
KAMRIT advises promoters, family offices, and global enterprises evaluating greenfield entry into the consumer goods sector. Our Bankable DPR with Cost Model and ROI benchmarks your project economics against the listed-company cost structure of Apis and peers. The Execution Partnership tier covers everything from incorporation through commissioning. A 20-minute scoping call with our partners is free.
Related KAMRIT project reports
These reports use Apis India in benchmarking and competitive analysis sections.
Disclaimer: This profile is compiled by KAMRIT Financial Services LLP for educational and benchmarking purposes only. It is not investment advice, a recommendation to buy or sell securities, or a solicitation. Stock data is provided by Yahoo Finance and may be delayed by up to 20 minutes. Company financial commentary draws on publicly available filings, exchange disclosures, and KAMRIT industry research. Readers should consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser before making investment decisions. KAMRIT is a financial services and compliance firm, not a SEBI-registered investment adviser.