Americans are spending nearly double on eggs compared to a few weeks ago, as bird flu cases continue to affect supplies, and frozen egg storage volumes remain lower than last year.
Thanksgiving demand for eggs was the lowest since 2015, the USDA said. However, “with one less week between Thanksgiving and Christmas this year, wholesale demand, which normally experiences a short decline in the immediate post-Thanksgiving period, is expected to hold in anticipation of the start of the December cookie baking season,” the report said.
The latest wave of bird flu is disrupting supplies of cage-free eggs. California, Nevada, Washington, and Oregon all require eggs sold in their states to be cage-free.
American Egg Board President Emily Metz said, “We’re having to move eggs from other areas of the country that are producing cage-free to cover that low supply in those states, because those states only allow for cage-free eggs to be sold.”
Chad Hart, a professor and agricultural economist at Iowa State University, said the egg industry is working to rebuild the flock but that this can also limit supplies because farmers need to hold back some eggs to hatch into new chickens.
Flu Situation
According to data from the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), 6.26 million birds have been affected by the flu in the past 30 days as of Nov. 29. This includes both commercial and backyard flocks. California was the most affected state, with more than 5.12 million infected birds.“Egg prices for 2024 are raised based on recent prices and tight supplies. For 2025, egg price forecasts are raised in the first and second quarter as supplies recover,” the report said.
So far this year, the biggest outbreak occurred in Sioux, Iowa, back in May among a flock of over 4.28 million birds. This was followed by Ionia, Michigan, which saw an outbreak among 2.42 million birds in April.
“While the current public health risk is low, CDC is watching the situation carefully and working with states to monitor people with animal exposures,” the agency said.
