Help your garden thrive while giving wild bees a safe place to nest.
The Bee Treasure Wild Bee Hotel does two jobs at once. It gives solitary, non-aggressive bees the shelter they've lost to vanishing meadows and tidy lawns — and in return, those bees pollinate your fruit, vegetables, and flowers. One small house. A garden that comes back to life.
3×
More pollination power than honeybees, bite for bite
50%
Drop in U.S. wild bee numbers over the past two decades
0
Stings to worry about — solitary bees are remarkably gentle
Good for your garden. Good for the bees.
Wild bees and gardens need each other. The Bee Treasure hotel simply brings them back together.
What it does for your garden
- More fruit set on apple, pear, plum, and berry plants
- Fuller harvests from tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, and beans
- Brighter, longer-lasting blooms across your flower beds
- A naturally balanced, living garden that hums all season
What it does for the bees
- Safe, dry tunnels to lay and protect their brood
- Replaces the wild nesting sites lost to development
- Tunnel sizes that welcome many different native species
- A chemical-free, natural-wood home they actually use
How it works
Place it
Hang, mount, or stand it in a sunny, south-facing spot about 4–6 feet off the ground, sheltered from heavy rain.
They move in
Wild bees scout the tunnels in spring, lay their eggs, and seal each chamber with a tidy cap of mud or clay.
Your garden blooms
As the bees forage nearby, your flowers, fruit, and vegetables get pollinated — and the next generation of bees emerges.
Designed around what bees really need
Natural materials, weather protection, and the right tunnel sizes — the details that turn a decoration into a real habitat.
Solid Cedar
Untreated, naturally weather-resistant wood — no varnish or chemicals.
Copper Roof
Sheds rain to keep the nesting tunnels dry, and ages beautifully.
Mixed Tunnels
Varied diameters welcome a wide range of native wild bee species.
3 Ways To Mount
Stand it, nail it, or hang it from the built-in rear steel hook.
"It's amazing to see that bees actually use it. We hung it up and about two weeks later saw the first bees moving in. So happy we're doing something for these important little creatures."
"I didn't think a bee house would make any difference. It's been up three weeks and two of the tunnels are already sealed with clay — which apparently means there are eggs in there. Won over."
"Had a mason bee move in within the first week. The build quality is way better than anything I've seen at the big-box hardware stores. Solid purchase for the garden."
Questions, answered
Will these bees sting my family or pets?
Where should I put the bee hotel?
How long until bees actually move in?
Is this for honeybees?
Give wild bees a home — and your garden a future.
Add a Bee Treasure Wild Bee Hotel to your garden and watch the difference unfold, season after season.
Get Your Bee Hotel