US Egg Prices Surge Higher
2026-01-29 18:31
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
US egg prices jumped back above $1.20 per dozen from a multi year low near $0.33 on January 13 as a rapid tightening in physical supply met a short lived demand shock.
On the supply side, renewed outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza triggered fresh culling of laying hens across several major US producing states, cutting flock sizes and reducing wholesale availability just as inventories were starting to rebuild.
That domestic shortfall was compounded by new bird flu cases in Europe, especially in the Netherlands’ most egg intensive region, which disrupted export flows and pushed foreign buyers into the spot market, tightening global availability.
Elevated feed costs, led by corn and soybean meal, have also lifted marginal production costs, slowing the pace of output recovery.
On the demand side, a severe Arctic cold snap in mid January boosted near term retail buying through increased home cooking, baking, and precautionary restocking, amplifying the price response.