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Egg Prices Are Soaring Again. Here's Why

A shopper takes a carton of eggs from the cooler in a grocery store in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, April 6, 2024.

Tom Williams / Contributor / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

  • Avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, has disrupted the nation's egg distribution for the second time in two years.
  • Wholesale egg prices have more than doubled in the past four months, and retail prices have followed.
  • Prices could quickly tumble, though, as recent inspections suggest commercial egg producers may have made progress in containing the recent outbreak.

Avian influenza, or bird flu, is wreaking havoc on the nation's chicken flocks—and egg prices for U.S. consumers.

Egg prices have surged since late spring, rising amid a surge in avian influenza in the nation's commercial poultry flocks. (There was a similar outbreak in late 2022.) The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in July estimated that avian flu had sickened over 3 million birds, or roughly about 1% of the nation's supply of egg-laying chickens.

Eggflation Is Back

The average wholesale price of a dozen large Grade A eggs has more than doubled in the past four months, climbing to $4.44 last week from $2.11 in early May. In just the past month, wholesale prices have risen 40%. Retail prices have followed, with the same size and grade averaging $3.20 per dozen in August, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

One supermarket chain in the Midwest, which typically has lower retail egg prices than others because of its proximity to many large producers, sold a dozen large Grade A eggs for $3.99 Friday morning—25% more than August's national average retail price.

What's Next For Egg Prices

The wholesale price surge suggests retail prices will likelyℱ rise further when the ꦡBureau of Labor Statistics reports September price data next month.

Consumers endured a similar avian-induced market surge in late 2022 and early 2023, when average retail prices reached an all-time high of $4.82 per dozen. However, they fell about as quickly as they♓ rose, plunging to more normal levels near $2 per dozen by mid-2023.

Producers whose flocks contract avian flu must quickly quarantine and euthanize them. They then must pass USDA testing and inspection to ensure no traces of the disease remain at their facilities. The USDA found no U.S. commercial flocks with bird flu in August, which may indicate progress on controlling the spread of avian flu. If that is the case, prices may return to normal relatively quickly.

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  1. Aphis.USDA.gov. ""

  2. Mymarketnews.ams.usda.gov. "—May 03, 2024."

  3. mymarketnews.ams.usda.gov. "— Aug. 09, 2024"

  4. Mymarketnews.ams.usda.gov. "—Sept. 06, 2024."

  5. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "."

  6. National Chicken Council. ""

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