US Egg Prices Rebound from 2019 Lows

2026-01-23 16:14 By Felipe Alarcon 1 min. read

US egg prices rose above $0.65 per dozen, rebounding from their lowest levels since 2019 of $0.33 seen January 13th as near term supply and demand conditions tightened.

Renewed avian influenza outbreaks forced the culling of millions of laying hens, shrinking flock sizes and reducing wholesale availability, which quickly reversed the prior downtrend in negotiated prices.

At the same time, a fresh wave of bird flu in Europe, particularly in the Netherlands’ most egg intensive production region, disrupted cross border flows and pushed international buyers into the open market, reinforcing global supply tightness.

Higher and more volatile feed costs have further lifted marginal production expenses, limiting producers’ ability to restore output quickly.

On the demand side, an intense Arctic cold snap boosted short term retail consumption through home cooking, baking, and precautionary restocking ahead of winter storms, turning relatively small supply shortfalls into a sharp rebound.



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