- Egg prices may approach record highs, just about two years after they peaked during the pandemic era.
- Highly pathogenic avian influenza, better known as bird flu, has killed millions of chickens and reduced egg supply. Consumer egg demand is also highest around Thanksgiving and Christmas.
- The trajectory of the bird flu outbreak is unclear.
It's dΓ©jΓ vu for grocery shoppers, as the price of those Grade A eggs has spiked in recent months, just two years after egg prices soared to record highs.
The average retail price of eggs in the U.S. has risen 38% since November 2023, according to consumer price index data issued Wednesday. Prices rose 8% last month alone.
A carton of a dozen large Grade A eggs cost $3.65 in November, up from $2.14 a year earlier, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
We've got the news you need to know to start your day. Sign up for the First & 4Most morning newsletter β delivered to your inbox daily. >Sign up here.
There are two primary reasons for the surge: bird flu, which has reduced egg supply, and the strong consumer demand that's typical around the winter holiday season, according to economists and market analysts.
"There's a very real chance we could flirt with record highs" for prices, said Brian Moscogiuri, vice president of Eggs Unlimited, an egg supplier.
Money Report
Grade A egg prices peaked at $4.82 a dozen in January 2023, having jumped from $1.93 in January 2022.
At a time of high pandemic-era inflation, eggs were a standout, with an annual inflation rate of 60% in calendar-year 2022, according to CPI data. They even entered the zeitgeist: Pop star Taylor Swift told comedian Trevor Noah at the Grammy Awards in February 2023 that her fans would "get on it" to help lower egg prices.
How a 'serious' bird flu outbreak is affecting egg prices
Now, as in 2022-23, highly pathogenic avian influenza β better known as bird flu β is a big culprit.
Bird flu is a highly contagious and lethal disease among birds, including chickens. The U.S. is in the midst of a "serious outbreak," Moscogiuri said.
The disease entered the U.S. in late 2021 and has lingered, experts said. Prior to that, the last time bird flu had impacted egg-laying chickens at commercial farms was in 2015, Moscogiuri said.
More from Personal Finance:
Economy faces 'some potential storms' in 2025
Here's the inflation breakdown for November 2024 β in one chart
Economists have 'really had it wrong' about recession
About 33 million commercial egg layers have been killed by bird flu in 2024, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
That has "caused an egg supply shortage," said Ryan Hojnowski, an egg analyst at Expana, an agricultural market research firm.
Roughly half of the commercial egg layer deaths for 2024 β about 15 million birds β have occurred since Oct. 15, according to CDC data. Wholesale egg prices are up 97% since mid-October, according to Expana.
"If you have one infection, chances are that d--- near all the birds are infected, or will be infected in a very short time," said Andrew Novakovic, a professor of agricultural economics at Cornell SC Johnson College of Business.
Thanksgiving, Christmas holidays raise egg demand
The egg supply shortage is also running headlong into peak season for consumer demand.
"Q4 is when we typically see the strongest demand for eggs as consumers tend to bake around the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays," Hojnowski said.
High demand and reduced supply have combined to lift prices, experts said.
"When we get past this holiday effect, I think we'll see some [price] softening," Novakovic said.
But the trajectory is difficult to predict, experts said.
For one, bird flu's staying power is unclear. There have been recent outbreaks in U.S. dairy cows, and "several recent human cases in U.S. dairy and poultry workers," the CDC said. As of Dec. 11, the current public health risk was "low," however, the CDC website said. Β
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Friday issued a federal order requiring testing of U.S. milk supply for bird flu, to help track and contain the virus.
"Like any infectious disease, it's a little hard to accurately forecast how it's going to progress," Novakovic said.