Your First Hive Inspection After Installing Bees - Ag Manufacturing dba Harvest Lane Honey

Your First Hive Inspection After Installing Bees

Your First Hive Inspection After Installing Bees

Installing a package of bees or a nucleus colony is one of the most exciting moments in beekeeping. After the bees settle into their new home, the next step is your first hive inspection.

This inspection helps confirm that the colony has accepted the queen, begun building comb, and is starting to establish itself successfully.

For most new beekeepers, this inspection happens  7 days after installing bees.

Opening the hive too early can disturb the colony while they are still organizing, but waiting too long may delay identifying issues like queen problems or feeder concerns.

When to Perform the First Inspection

A good rule of thumb is to inspect the hive seven days after installation.

By this time:

  • The bees have begun drawing comb
  • The queen should be released from her cage (if a package was installed)
  • Eggs may already be present (really hard to see at this point)
  • The colony has begun organizing brood and food stores

Choose a warm, calm day when many bees are out foraging. Mid-morning to early afternoon usually works best.

What You Should Bring

Before opening the hive, make sure you have your basic tools ready:

  • Bee suit or veil
  • Smoker and fuel
  • Hive tool
  • Frame grip (optional)
  • Feeding syrup

Having everything ready before you start helps keep the inspection calm and efficient.

Step-by-Step First Hive Inspection

1. Light the Smoker

Start your smoker before opening the hive. A few gentle puffs at the entrance and under the lid helps calm the bees and encourages them to move down into the hive.

Avoid using too much smoke. A little goes a long way.

2. Remove the Lid and Inner Cover

Carefully remove the outer cover and inner cover. Move slowly and deliberately to avoid crushing bees.

You may see bees clustering under the cover or along the top bars. This is normal.

3. Check the Feeder

You should have installed your bees in a hive a feeder (entrance, in hive or top feeder) and used sugar syrup or Liquid Feed to fill it. 

  • The feeder is still accessible
  • Syrup levels are dropping
  • Bees are actively feeding

New colonies rely heavily on feed while they build comb. Your bees are more likely to die from starvation at this point than any other problem.  Make sure you feed. 

4. Inspect the First Frame

Start by removing an outside frame first. This gives you room to work without rolling or crushing bees.

Look for early signs of progress such as:

  • Fresh white wax comb

5. Look for Eggs or Young Brood

You may see signs that the queen is laying.

You may see:

  • Tiny white eggs standing upright in cells
  • Very small larvae in the bottom of cells
  • Workers forming a brood pattern in the center frames

The hive is still young seeing the queen and eggs may not happen this first inspection. Don't panic.

6. Check Comb Development

During the first week, bees often begin drawing comb on several frames.

Look for:

  • Straight comb being built from the top bars
  • The colony beginning to organize brood in the center frames

If comb is being drawn, the colony is progressing normally.

7. Reassemble the Hive

After inspecting a few frames, carefully return them to their original order and spacing.

Close the hive gently and make sure:

  • Frames are pushed tightly together
  • The inner cover and lid are secure
  • Feeders are refilled if needed

Keeping inspections brief during the first weeks helps the colony stay focused on building.

What If You Don’t See Eggs?

If you do not see eggs during the first inspection, don’t panic.

Possible reasons include:

  • The queen was released only recently
  • Weather slowed colony activity
  • Eggs are difficult to see at first

Check again in about 7 days. By then you should see eggs remember they are still very tiny and hard to see. 

Tips for New Beekeepers

Keep inspections short
Early colonies benefit from minimal disturbance.

Work slowly and calmly
Smooth movements reduce defensive behavior.

Watch bee behavior
A calm colony often means things are progressing well.

Focus on progress, not perfection
Your goal is simply to confirm the colony is developing.

What Happens Next?

After the first inspection, most new colonies will continue building comb and expanding rapidly.

Future inspections will focus on:

  • Brood pattern development
  • Comb building progress
  • Food stores
  • Hive space management

Within a few weeks, the colony will begin to look more organized and productive as the queen increases egg laying.

Starting beekeeping is an incredible experience, and that first hive inspection is the moment when you truly begin to see the colony come to life. With calm handling and regular observation, your bees will quickly establish a strong and healthy hive.

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