Be the first to check in today.
Photo courtesy of www.communityfoodbank.orgFarmers Market
Tucson, Arizona
Community Food Bank Farm Stand is tied to the work of the Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) that relies on 160 employees and hundreds of community volunteers to help people across the region access food and related programs. That nonprofit frame shapes this Tucson stand into more than a routine produce stop: it sits inside a larger network serving five counties of Southern Arizona, with programs and services varying by location. For shoppers, that means the farm stand is part of an organization built around food access in Pima, Cochise, Graham, Greenlee, and Santa Cruz counties.
Southern Arizona is the scale here. The Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona is based in Pima County and serves five counties across the region, including Cochise, Graham, Greenlee, and Santa Cruz, so the Tucson farm stand sits inside a much broader food-access system than a single neighborhood storefront. The organization’s locations page directs residents to resource centers, emergency grocery assistance, prepared meals, and partner organizations, with programs varying by site.
The local context is also named directly in the organization’s land acknowledgement, which references the ancestral and occupied lands of the Tohono O’odham, Pascua Yaqui, Ak-Chin, Hohokam, Akimel O'odham, and Hia-Ced O'odham. That grounding, along with the food bank’s volunteer base and regional scope, makes this stand part of Tucson’s civic food infrastructure rather than a stand-alone retail stop.
The strongest throughline here is food access programming tied to the Community Food Bank’s wider resource network, not a roster of named farm vendors. Expect this stand to be understood alongside nearby services, partner sites, and recurring distribution efforts across the Tucson area and western Pima County.
Monthly mobile distributions extend that same service model to Avra Valley Fire District Station 191 and Picture Rocks Park on regular monthly schedules.
No dogs is the clearest visit rule to plan around. Restrooms are not available, so this is a stop to approach with errands and timing in mind rather than as a long linger. The stand is at 3003 S. Country Club Rd. in Tucson, which puts it on a straightforward city address rather than a park or plaza setup.
The broader organization notes that programs and hours vary by location, an important detail for anyone familiar with other Community Food Bank sites around Southern Arizona. If you use the food bank’s wider network, Tucson is one node among resource centers, partner organizations, emergency grocery assistance, and prepared meals listed through the same system. The organization also operates monthly mobile distributions at Avra Valley Fire District Station 191 and Picture Rocks Park, which can matter if you are comparing fixed-site and mobile options.
SNAP EBT is accepted at the Community Food Bank Farm Stand. The food bank also mentions SNAP enrollment assistance as part of its services, so this location sits within an organization that handles both food access and benefits navigation. Payment methods are identified clearly on-site, which helps if you are planning a quick stop around other errands.
Reviews coming soon. Be the first to share your experience.
Notice outdated info, missing products, or changed hours? Let us know and we'll update it.