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Photo courtesy of Photo by a Google Maps contributorFarmers Market
Belchertown, Massachusetts
Belchertown Farmers Market runs from June through October on the Common in Belchertown, with a vendor mix that reaches well past standard produce stands into flowers, mushrooms, maple, baked goods, prepared foods, and handmade household items. The range is broad enough that one stop can cover vegetables, fruit, meat, eggs, bouquets, and dessert, while still leaving room for soapmakers, potters, and candle vendors. For shoppers who like markets with both farm staples and ready-to-eat options, this one brings together grills, waffles, pierogi, cold drinks, ice cream, and ice pops alongside the farm tables.
The strongest pattern here is overlap with variation: multiple farms bring vegetables, herbs, berries, eggs, and melons, but each one adds its own side categories, from cheese and maple to bread, body care, and bouquets. That makes the market useful for a full grocery pass and for picking up a few extras that are clearly tied to specific vendors.
No dogs are allowed, which is the clearest policy detail to factor into a visit. The market is set on the Common in Belchertown, so the location is straightforward if you're heading into town specifically for market shopping. Restrooms are not available on site, another practical point to plan around before arrival.
The vendor list also suggests a market where weekly selection can shift within a broad overall range: several farms bring overlapping staples like vegetables, berries, herbs, eggs, and melons, while some food vendors appear on a reduced schedule, including Batch Ice Cream once per month and Crooked Stick Pops every other week. If you're visiting with a specific treat in mind, timing matters more here than it does for the core farm stands.
SNAP/EBT is accepted at the Belchertown Farmers Market. Payment methods are presented clearly for shoppers, which helps if you're planning a mixed purchase across produce, meat, baked goods, and crafts rather than carrying cash for every stand. That SNAP option is especially useful given the number of vendors selling staples like vegetables, fruit, eggs, and other farm goods.
The market accepts HIP benefits and will supplement SNAP (stated on the vendor list).
June – October
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