Date Published: 11/11/2025
Bird flu sends Spanish egg prices through the roof
Spain has now locked down all poultry farms as 14 new outbreaks detected across six regions
A dozen medium eggs that cost €2.14 back in February now fetch €3.14 today. Large eggs have jumped from €2.33 to €3.25 over the same period. According to the Spanish Consumers' Organisation, the cumulative increase since 2021 has reached a staggering 137%.
Roberto Barceló, president of the Consumers and Users Network Association, warns that what we're seeing now isn't the end of it. "This will lead to a further increase, a price hike higher than what we're seeing now," he said, noting that prices have already climbed 25% to 30% depending on egg type.
The culprit is bird flu, and it's spreading fast. This week alone, the cold snap has accelerated outbreaks across the country. The Ministry of Agriculture has confirmed 14 cases in Valladolid, Huelva, Toledo, Badajoz, Guadalajara and Madrid. Across the entire EU, there are now 139 active outbreaks, according to the Animal Disease Information System.
Spain keeps around 47.8 million laying hens and so far this year, 2.65 million birds have either died from the disease or been culled to prevent its spread.
Since the beginning of the year, outbreaks in the United States and various European countries led to the culling of millions of chickens, "which resulted in a decrease in the supply of this product, requiring imports."
Those imports meant much less supply available in Spain and large food chains increased prices for producers, which triggered a chain reaction right through to shoppers.
Then in July, bird flu hit home harder. Outbreaks in Castilla y León and Galicia forced the culling of hundreds of thousands of chickens, significantly reducing both supply and production on Spanish soil.
The good news, if you can call it that, is chicken meat prices have only risen 3.6% year on year. The reason is straightforward enough. Spain produces 1.7 million tonnes of chicken annually from farms with around 600 million birds. Most of these operations keep their chickens in closed facilities that are less vulnerable to outbreaks.
When disease does strike, the impact gets diluted across such enormous numbers. The short life cycle of meat chickens, just six to eight weeks, also means flocks can be replenished relatively quickly.
Avianca, the interprofessional poultry organisation, insists there's no meat shortage.
This current wave of bird flu began in late 2020 and is considered the worst in history. It swept through Asia, Africa and Europe before hitting North America in 2021 and South America in 2022, where it even began infecting mammals.
The outdoor farming ban shows how seriously authorities are taking the threat. Wild birds carry the virus naturally, making any outdoor operation vulnerable. With winter settling in and temperatures dropping, conditions favour the disease's spread, which explains why outbreaks have intensified this week.
Image: Freepik
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