Where to Buy Clean, Organic Groceries in Miami: A Neighborhood Guide
The cart in front of you at a Miami checkout line has been changing. Two years ago you’d see a scattered handful of organic labels in an otherwise conventional haul. Now, at the right stores, you’re seeing glass bottles, regeneratively farmed products named by county, and a studied absence of seed oils. The demand was always here. The infrastructure took a long time to catch up.
Nude Miami’s opening at the base of Panorama Tower this spring made the shift concrete. Miami’s first boutique organic grocer drew the obvious Erewhon comparison — intentionally — and made clear that enough appetite existed for a store where every product on the shelf had been individually vetted against a strict ingredient standard. No GMOs. No artificial additives. No seed oils. Not as marketing language. As the actual operating policy.
But Nude is one address in Brickell. The question worth answering is where someone in Coconut Grove, on the beach, in Midtown, or off Bird Road actually shops. Here, ranked by the rigor of what earns shelf space, are seven stores worth building your week around.
1. Nude Miami — Brickell
Miami’s first grocer built around an ingredient blacklist: no seed oils, no GMOs, no artificial anything — and a hot bar that holds to the same standard.
The 4,720-square-foot space at the ground floor of Panorama Tower is part grocer, part café, part proof of concept. Founders Charles Amine, Harry Miller, and Sebastian Lezcano stocked the shelves the way they shop themselves: if a product doesn’t clear the vetting process, it doesn’t make the floor. The result is a grocery store with no ambiguity — no exceptions made for category leaders or familiar brands that happen to use canola oil. Every item cleared the same standard.
The centerpiece is an organic, seed-oil-free hot bar — grass-fed meats, wild-caught fish, and rotating seasonal sides cooked exclusively in olive oil, avocado oil, grass-fed butter, or tallow. The café side runs made-to-order smoothies, functional coffee and matcha, cold-pressed juices in glass bottles, and pastries sourced from local Miami bakeries. It is, as the Erewhon comparison suggests, a particular point of view about how food should be sold. Miami took long enough to get here.
Neighborhood: Brickell · Address: 1100 Brickell Bay Dr, Miami, FL (ground floor, Panorama Tower) · Price band: Premium ($$$) · Hours: Confirm directly — not published at time of writing (as of June 2026) · Link: nudemiami.com
2. Whole Foods Market Midtown — Edgewater
The most locally stocked Whole Foods in Miami, with over 500 items from 130-plus Florida suppliers — the strongest case the chain makes for itself in this market.
This 53,400-square-foot store on Biscayne Boulevard opened June 26, 2025, and is distinguished from Miami’s other Whole Foods outposts by its depth of Florida sourcing. When the signage here says “local,” it means Florida fishermen, Florida farms, Florida producers — not a produce section with one regional honey tucked in the back. If you want to build a cart made almost entirely of Florida-grown or Florida-made products, this is the location where that is most practical.
The late hours make it a genuine option for weeknight shopping, which — given Biscayne’s traffic patterns at rush hour — is a detail that matters. The prepared foods section rotates well; the meat counter stocks grass-fed options. As a Whole Foods, it carries all the caveats that come with the chain: products from both rigorous and merely “natural” suppliers share the same shelves. But the local sourcing initiative here goes deeper than at any other Miami location.
Neighborhood: Edgewater / Midtown · Address: 2910 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33137 · Price band: Mid-to-premium ($$–$$$) · Hours: Daily 7:30 am – 11:00 pm (as of June 2026) · Link: wholefoodsmarket.com/stores/midtownmiami
3. Sprouts Farmers Market — Coconut Grove
The most affordable dedicated organic option in Miami’s inner neighborhoods, opened January 2026, with a bulk program that rewards intentional shoppers.
Sprouts opened its Coconut Grove location on January 19, 2026, and immediately gave the neighborhood an organic-first option that does not price itself out of a regular weekly shop. The produce section is the reason to go: extensive, clearly certified-organic labeling, and priced considerably below what comparable items run at Whole Foods. The bulk bins — grains, nuts, seeds, dried fruit — reward shoppers who plan ahead and want to reduce packaging.
The prepared foods section is competent rather than exciting. The supplement aisle is narrower and less curated than you’d find at a dedicated health food store. But for a full weekly organic shop where produce is the priority and the budget is real, this location earns its position on this list.
Neighborhood: Coconut Grove · Address: 2750 SW 27th Terrace, Miami, FL 33133 · Price band: Mid ($–$$) · Hours: Daily 7:00 am – 10:00 pm (as of June 2026) · Link: sprouts.com
4. Milam’s Market — Coconut Grove
Miami’s most trusted local independent grocer — six Miami-Dade locations — with a produce section that sources carefully and turns over fast.
Milam’s isn’t exclusively organic, and it’s worth saying that plainly. What sets it apart is something harder to quantify: it buys like a neighborhood market, not like a national chain managing category planograms from a central office. The Coconut Grove location on McDonald Street has the feel of the flagship — tight, well-run, busy enough that the produce moves before it ages. Organic lines are clearly marked, local fruit shows up first, and the butcher section carries grass-fed options alongside conventional cuts.
For shoppers who want range — not exclusively organic, but organic where it counts, alongside a full-service deli and a wine section with a real point of view — Milam’s is the practical anchor for the Grove. It also keeps the longest hours of anything on this list, which matters in a city that runs late.
Neighborhood: Coconut Grove · Address: 2969 McDonald St, Miami, FL 33133 · Price band: Mid ($$) · Hours: Daily 7:00 am – 11:00 pm (as of June 2026) · Link: milamsmarkets.com
5. Whole Foods Market — Miami Beach
The reliable full-service anchor for South Beach and Mid-Beach residents — consistently stocked, late hours, produce that holds its standard week to week.
The Alton Road location has been the default clean-grocery option for Miami Beach long enough that recommending it feels obvious. It earns the obvious recommendation. The produce is consistently fresh, the prepared foods section — salad bar, hot bar, sushi, custom pizza — is stocked well into the evening, and the hours accommodate the kind of schedule this neighborhood runs on. At 11 p.m. on a Thursday, this is the store that’s still fully operational.
It is not the most interesting store on this list. It doesn’t carry the vetting rigor of Nude or the Florida-sourcing depth of the Midtown location. But for beach residents who want a full-service, reliably organic grocery experience without driving to the mainland, it holds the position.
Neighborhood: Miami Beach · Address: 1020 Alton Rd, Miami Beach, FL 33139 · Price band: Mid-to-premium ($$–$$$) · Hours: Daily 8:00 am – 11:00 pm (as of June 2026) · Link: wholefoodsmarket.com
6. Beehive Natural Foods — Miami
Miami’s most established independent health food store — 34 years, still independently owned — with supplement expertise that no chain can staff.
Beehive opened on Bird Road when Miami’s health food market was still fringe territory, and it has been there long enough to earn the loyalty that outlasts trends. The store is small: a walk-in space stocked with organic groceries, cold-pressed juices, herbs, vitamins, supplements, and homeopathic remedies. The layout is not optimized for a first-time visitor. The knowledge is.
The staff field questions about adaptogens, magnesium forms, and digestive enzymes without reaching for a pamphlet. For routine weekly shopping, the selection doesn’t compete with a full-service grocer. For targeted buying — a specific probiotic strain, a quality collagen supplement, a locally sourced tincture — there is nowhere in South Miami that matches it. Closed Sundays.
Neighborhood: Westchester / South Miami · Address: 6490 Bird Rd, Miami, FL 33155 · Price band: Mid-to-premium ($$–$$$) · Hours: Monday – Saturday, 9:00 am – 7:00 pm (as of June 2026) · Link: beehivehealthfoods.com
7. Trader Joe’s — South Beach, Miami Midtown
The best value entry point for organic pantry staples, with a private-label organic line priced well below anything else on this list.
Trader Joe’s is not an ingredient-vetted boutique and makes no claim to be. What it is: the most affordable way to stock an organic pantry in Miami. The private-label Trader Joe’s Organic line covers olive oil, nut butters, canned goods, frozen vegetables, and legumes — at prices that make the case for clean eating as a workable daily habit rather than a premium event. The 9205 S Dixie Hwy store runs a fast inventory, which means product turnover is reliable.
The practical move for cost-conscious clean shoppers is a split strategy: Nude, Sprouts, or Whole Foods for fresh produce, meat, and specialty items; Trader Joe’s for the pantry. The organic private label holds up. The value is real.
Neighborhood: South Miami · Address: 9205 S Dixie Hwy, Miami, FL 33156 · Price band: Value ($) · Hours: Daily 8:00 am – 9:00 pm (as of June 2026) · Link: traderjoes.com


