Home Food & Nutrition America’s Grocery Store Egg Shortage in Photos

America’s Grocery Store Egg Shortage in Photos

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America’s Grocery Store Egg Shortage in Photos
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Even if you’re not the type of person who eats two eggs for breakfast every single day, you’ve likely noticed that the egg situation in this country is a little bit weird right now. Shelves are empty, prices are high, and that’s all thanks to worsening outbreaks of avian influenza, or bird flu, which have killed millions of birds. There are also concerns about the virus, also known as the H5N1 virus, spreading to other animals, like cows, and humans.

As a result, egg prices are high. Egg-laying chickens are more susceptible to avian flu than chickens raised for meat for a variety of factors. They’re older, and spend much longer on the farm than chickens raised for meat, which are usually slaughtered within a matter of weeks. And while officials are intervening, ordering farms and markets to close and fully disinfect to stop the outbreaks, it’s likely that egg prices will remain high for the foreseeable future. It’s also possible that the shortages could worsen in the coming weeks if outbreaks continue, and the situation is already pretty bleak.

Over the weekend, I headed to three different grocery stores in my neighborhood in the Dallas suburbs — Trader Joe’s, Target, and Kroger — and the egg shelves at each were pretty bare. Every store also had its own version of a sign telling customers that the retailer was struggling to source eggs. “We are currently experiencing high demand and supplier shortages for eggs,” read the sign at Target. “We are actively seeking additional supply.” Others retailers, including Costco and Whole Foods, are limiting the number of cartons that customers can purchase.

Heading out to their own grocery stores, my colleagues at Eater saw similarly empty shelves, purchase limits, and lots of apologetic signage. Here’s what the egg situation looks like at grocery stores in cities across the country.

Sky high egg prices

Eggs were more than $1 each at H Mart in the Los Angeles area.

Cartons of eggs on a shelf with prices listed fo $13.49 and $11.99.

Kat Thompson

Sparse and totally empty egg shelves

That grocery stores are finding it difficult to keep eggs stocked has been apparent at stores including Whole Foods, Safeway, and Trader Joe’s. A Trader Joe’s in San Diego even used its empty egg shelves to stock other merchandise.

Empty refrigerator shelves.

Whole Foods in Burbank was clean out of eggs over the weekend.
Hilary Pollack

A mostly empty refrigerator case.

Empty shelves at a Whole Foods in New York City.
Nat Belkov

Refrigerated shelves stocked with sausage and biscuits but not eggs.

A freshly cleaned out Trader Joe’s shelf.
Amanda Luansing

Refrigerator shelves stocked with Topo Chico hard seltzer and White Claw.

Rather than leave the egg shelves empty, a San Diego Trader Joe’s that was all out of eggs for the day stocked its shelves with hard seltzer.
Catherine Sweet

Explanations and excuses from grocery stores

Some stores posted signs communicating the dire state of eggs in America.

A sign that reads “We are currently experiencing difficulty sourcing eggs that meet our strict animal welfare standards.

Signs limiting egg purchases to three cartons per customer were spotted at Whole Foods in Los Angeles and New York.
Nicole Adlman

A sign posted on a refrigerator case explaining higher egg prices due to supply shortages.

A Fred Meyer in Seattle with eggs on shelves but a posted explanation for higher prices.
Harry Cheadle

Empty egg shelves with a sign explaining the high demand for eggs.

A Target in the Dallas area wanted customers to know it was actively seeking more eggs.
Amy McCarthy



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