US Egg Prices Soar Amid Avian Flew

2025-10-24 14:34 By Felipe Alarcon 1 min. read

US egg prices rose past $1.8 per dozen, rebounding from May 2023 lows of $1.06 seen October 10th after a new wave of highly pathogenic avian influenza has tightened supply just as seasonal demand rises.

Outbreaks that began in September have led to the culling of roughly 5.5 million egg-laying hens and about 1.2 million turkeys, removing laying capacity from an already fragile pipeline and raising the immediate ratio of demand to available shell eggs.

Replacement pullets take months to mature into productive layers, so any reduction in flocks cannot be offset quickly.

At the same time some US wholesalers and distributors had run down inventories after earlier oversupply and lower spring prices, leaving less buffer to absorb fresh losses, while imports that helped damp price spikes earlier in the year remain relatively small and regionally concentrated.

Near-term demand is also stepping up with Thanksgiving buying patterns and stronger retail purchases of eggs and egg products.



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