Egg Prices Collapse as Once-Empty Shop Shelves Now Overstuffed

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    A year ago, empty egg shelves in grocery stores were a symbol of stubborn food inflation. Shoppers paid record prices, scrambling to beat per-customer limits and stocking up whenever cartons appeared.

    Today, the picture has flipped — and while that’s good news for US consumers, egg farmers are feeling the whiplash.

    After ramping up production to meet last year’s frenzied demand and hedge against bird flu losses, US producers now face a glut. Consumer prices have fallen to their lowest levels in two years, squeezing farm margins and pushing some operators below breakeven.

    Americans on average paid $2.577 for a dozen large grade A eggs in January, a 59% drop from last March’s record high of $6.227, when avian influenza outbreaks decimated flocks and sent prices soaring. The sharp correction reflects a rapid effort to expand the number of hens to offset the risk of avian influenza, as producers bet tight markets would persist.

    Instead, supply has overtaken demand.

    “We had farmers that worked really hard to make sure that they have extra hens on hand,” said Emily Metz, president of the American Egg Board. “As a result, we have a very strong supply right now of eggs. That’s why the market is where it is.” Consumer Egg Prices Drop From Bird Flu-Spurred Record

    Average price per dozen for grade A large eggs, not seasonally adjusted

    https://preview.redd.it/61jmzo118cug1.jpeg?width=1080&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=da42802d7774cf0c694da6b5bca3c7e8437f9616

    Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics

    There were 309 million layer hens producing table eggs as of Jan. 1, the most since December 2024, according to US Department of Agriculture data. Egg companies riding the wave of higher prices invested to help farmers expand output, while the Trump administration — under pressure to tame grocery inflation — boosted imports to an estimated 122.5 million dozen eggs in 2025, more than four times year-earlier levels.

    That’s sent prices plummeting. Wholesale egg prices, which usually are passed down to the retail level after a lag, at one point in January reached the lowest level since 2017. The USDA forecasts eggs this year averaging $1.25 a dozen, down 67% from the prior year.

    Metz said many producers are now operating below breakeven, and prices are likely to remain under pressure given “a lot of supply, and more supply coming on board.”

    The financial strain is already being felt at top US shell egg producer Cal-Maine Foods Inc. The company in January reported a 19% drop in quarterly net sales from a year earlier, led by a 28% drop in shell egg sales. The company also noted a jump in the size of breeder flocks as well as chicks.

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