I still can't believe how much we undervalue our product. The packaging and distribution alone for one jar (jar, lid, label and time, fuel) probably has a c.a. £1 cost which needs to be factored in - even before the value of what is in the jar (both intrinsically, and in relation to the attendant costs of labour, capital and consumables) .
Forget most UK supermarket honey as a point of comparison - although it must be said that much of the better 'volume' stuff you see here (normally in 12oz jars) is usually well over £5 per lb equivalent.
On the continent, where supermarkets stock decent honey of domestic provenance, 'volume' honey fetches in excess of £6 per jar.
As for Notts, any small-scale (artisan) beekeeper selling at even £6 per lb needs shooting.
I am local to that area, if I sold in 1lb jars (I don't), I'd be asking £8, and I'd get it easily.
The attached picture is of 8oz jars for sale in Nottingham. The cheaper one is mine.
I would never sell an 8oz jar for under £5.
It's 2022, not 1982.
Some beekeepers need to grow some balls.
It's not a question of profiteering - it's a question of both value, and the cost of the related inputs.