Bridgeport, NJ08014
Fresh Produce Food Pantries in New Jersey
Fresh produce is the most commonly distributed category at food pantriesNew Jersey — apples, onions, potatoes, leafy greens, carrots, and seasonal fruit move through a network of refrigerated trucks and volunteer sort lines every week.
Most-distributed item
3,400+ confirmed pantries list fresh produce
Usually free
No cost at the overwhelming majority of sites
Bring a bag
Many sites hand items out loose or in boxes
Seasonal rotation
Selection reflects current harvest and grocery rescue
What to bring
- A sturdy reusable bag or small box — produce is often heavy and wet from refrigeration.
- A cooler for the car ride home on hot days, especially for leafy greens.
- Photo ID and proof of address if the pantry is first-time (many do not require either).
- Cash is not needed — fresh produce is distributed at no charge.
Find pantries with fresh produce in New Jersey
Enter a ZIP or city to see the nearest verified pantries stocking fresh produce, or tap a chip below to narrow this list.
Showing 50 of 64 verified pantries.
Bridgeport
5.0(45)
Food bank Free
Lambertville
5.0(11)
Lambertville, NJ08530
Food bank Free Mobile Bilingual
Hillsborough
4.8(25)
Hillsborough Township, NJ08844
Food bank Free Bilingual
Raritan
4.9(12)
Raritan, NJ08869
Food bank Free SNAP Help Bilingual
Helmetta
5.0(3)
Helmetta, NJ08828
Food bank Free
Bridgeton
4.7(10)
Bridgeton, NJ08302
Food bank Free Mobile
Bloomfield
4.8(5)
Bloomfield, NJ07003
Food bank Free No ID Bilingual
Dover
5.0(2)
Dover, NJ07801
Food bank Free SNAP Help Bilingual
Burlington
5.0(1)
Burlington, NJ08016
Food bank Free Mobile SNAP Help
West Orange
4.7(3)
West Orange, NJ07052
Food bank Free No ID Bilingual
Phillipsburg
3.7(3)
Phillipsburg, NJ08865
Food bank Free SNAP Help Bilingual
Showing the top 50 of 64 matches. Use the search above for proximity results.
Common Questions
Is the produce at food pantries still good?
Yes. Most fresh produce at pantries comes from grocery-recovery programs — items pulled from store shelves for cosmetic reasons (bruises, irregular shape, approaching but not past the sell-by date) or direct-from-farm gleaning. It is the same food that would have been sold at retail that morning. Inspect items at home just as you would any grocery, and use soft fruit or leafy greens within a few days.
Can I choose what produce I take home?
It depends on the pantry. "Client-choice" pantries operate like a small market where you pick your own items from refrigerated cases. "Pre-packed" pantries hand out a standard box that day, usually containing a mix of what arrived that morning. If you have strong preferences, ask at intake — many pantries will swap items for allergies or household size.
Do pantries carry culturally specific produce?
Increasingly, yes. Pantries in neighborhoods with significant Latino, Asian, Caribbean, or African populations often stock items like plantains, yucca, bok choy, collard greens, or peppers. National food-bank partnerships with ethnic wholesalers have expanded this substantially in the last five years. Ask your local pantry what they regularly receive.
How often can I visit for produce?
Most pantries allow one visit per week or twice per month, though mobile distributions and produce-only "pop-ups" typically have no visit limit at all. Fresh-food rescue programs frequently post extra distributions when a partner store has a surplus — follow the pantry on social media or sign up for their SMS list if they have one.
Looking beyond New Jersey?
Browse the national directory for every matching pantry across the US.
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