The Incredible Shrinking Egg Price Story
The Incredible Shrinking Egg Price Story
View 4 Comments Post a comment

Remember when egg prices were the canary in the coal mine for America’s economic collapse? Early in President Trump’s term, Democrats and their media allies couldn’t stop clucking about the cost of a dozen eggs. It was evidence, they insisted, of failed leadership and kitchen-table catastrophe. I don’t know about you, but I couldn’t turn on the television without seeing another breathless segment about breakfast becoming unaffordable. Cable news panic. Social media outrage. Concerned congressional statements. The works.

Funny how quiet the henhouse has gotten lately.

Here’s the news you probably won’t see splashed across the evening broadcasts — and believe me, this one’s worth savoring. Egg prices have plummeted to around $0.45 per dozen, the lowest level since 2019. That’s not a typo. After record highs driven by the avian flu crisis earlier in 2025, American consumers are now enjoying some of the most affordable eggs in years.

From Trading Economics (USDA data):

The sharp decline reflects rapid flock rebuilding after the HPAI shock earlier in 2025, which had driven prices to record highs through large scale culling. By late 2025 producers were restoring capacity, and NASS data show layer counts and monthly egg production stabilizing from earlier troughs, lifting effective supply well above the levels that had previously tightened the market.

The turnaround has been nothing short of remarkable — and here’s the part that really gets me — it happened without government price controls or emergency intervention packages.

Image

American Producers Delivered

You know what didn’t rescue breakfast tables across America? A congressional committee. Some new federal program. A task force with a clever acronym.

What actually saved your Sunday morning omelet was good old-fashioned market forces and the determination of American agricultural producers. Imagine that.

When bird flu devastated flocks and sent prices soaring, farmers didn’t sit around waiting for Washington to ride in on a white horse. They rebuilt. They adapted. They restored capacity the way American businesses have always done — by rolling up their sleeves and getting to work. The result? Supply stabilized, production normalized, and prices came back down to earth.

The ripple effects are already reaching consumers in tangible ways. Restaurants that had imposed those annoying “egg surcharges” — you remember those lovely line items on your diner receipt, right? — are rolling them back as wholesale relief filters through the system. That’s real money back in the pockets of working families who just want to grab breakfast without doing mental math.

This is what happens when you trust producers rather than regulators to solve problems. The free market works. Every single time we let it.

Where Are the Critics Now?

The silence from the left is absolutely deafening. And I mean deafening.

Those same voices who weaponized egg prices as a political cudgel just months ago have mysteriously lost all interest in the topic. No celebratory headlines. No acknowledgment that the crisis resolved itself through market mechanisms rather than government meddling. No credit where credit is due. Shocking, I know.

Let’s be honest about what we’d be seeing right now if the situation were reversed. If prices were still elevated? You can bet your last carton we’d be drowning in coverage. Prime-time specials. Demands for investigations. Congressional hearings with farmers being grilled under hot lights. Plenty of finger-pointing at the administration and somber warnings about Americans choosing between eggs and electricity.

But good news doesn’t fit the narrative, so it simply doesn’t get covered. That’s not journalism — it’s activism with a press badge, and the American people are wise to it.

The Bigger Picture

The egg price saga offers a small but telling lesson about our current political moment — one I won’t be forgetting anytime soon.

Markets work. American producers are resilient. And the media’s priorities tell you absolutely everything about their agenda and nothing about actual news value.

The next time prices spike on any commodity — and in a dynamic economy, they inevitably will — remember this moment. Remember who screamed the loudest on the way up and who went completely silent on the way down. Remember which side trusted American ingenuity and which side just wanted a talking point.

Your grocery bill just got a little lighter. The people who claimed to care so deeply about it don’t seem interested in sharing the good news. Perhaps that tells you all you need to know about what they actually cared about in the first place.

I’ll give you a hint: it wasn’t your breakfast budget.


Key Takeaways

  • Egg prices have plummeted to $0.45/dozen — the lowest since 2019.
  • American producers rebuilt flocks without government intervention or bailouts.
  • Democrats who weaponized high egg prices have gone conspicuously silent.
  • Free markets solved the problem that politicians tried to exploit.

Sources: tradingeconomics.com

January 17, 2026
mm
Cole Harrison
Cole Harrison is a seasoned political commentator with a no-nonsense approach to the news. With years of experience covering Washington’s biggest scandals and the radical left’s latest schemes, he cuts through the spin to bring readers the hard-hitting truth. When he's not exposing the media's hypocrisy, you’ll find him enjoying a strong cup of coffee and a good debate.
Cole Harrison is a seasoned political commentator with a no-nonsense approach to the news. With years of experience covering Washington’s biggest scandals and the radical left’s latest schemes, he cuts through the spin to bring readers the hard-hitting truth. When he's not exposing the media's hypocrisy, you’ll find him enjoying a strong cup of coffee and a good debate.