Breakfast is booming at US restaurants. Is it also contributing to high
egg prices?
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[February 14, 2025] By
DEE-ANN DURBIN
It's a chicken-and-egg problem: Restaurants are struggling with
record-high U.S. egg prices, but their omelets, scrambles and huevos
rancheros may be part of the problem.
Breakfast is booming at U.S. eateries. First Watch, a restaurant chain
that serves breakfast, brunch and lunch, nearly quadrupled its locations
over the past decade to 570. Eggs Up Grill has 90 restaurants in nine
southern states, up from 26 in 2018. Florida-based Another Broken Egg
Café celebrated its 100th restaurant last year.
Fast-food chains are also adding more breakfast items. Starbucks, which
launched egg bites in 2017, now has a breakfast menu with 12 separate
items containing eggs. Wendy’s reintroduced breakfast in 2020 and offers
10 items with eggs.
Reviews website Yelp said 6,421 breakfast and brunch businesses opened
in the United States last year, 23% more than in 2019.
In normal times, producers could meet the demand for all those eggs. But
an ongoing bird flu outbreak, which so far has forced farms to slaughter
nearly 159 million chickens, turkeys and other birds — including nearly
47 million since the start of December — is making supplies scarcer and
pushing up prices. In January, the average price of eggs in the U.S. hit
a record $4.95 per dozen.

The percentage of eggs that go to U.S. restaurants versus other places,
like grocery stores or food manufacturers, is not publicly available.
U.S. Foods, a restaurant supplier, and Cal-Maine Foods, the largest U.S.
producer of shell eggs, did not respond to The Associated Press'
requests for comment.
But demand from restaurants is almost certainly growing. Foot traffic at
U.S. restaurants has grown the most since 2019 for morning meals, 2019,
according to market research firm Circana. Pre-lunchtime hours accounted
for 21% of total restaurant visits in 2024.
Breakfast sandwiches are the most popular order during morning visits,
Circana said, and 70% of the breakfast sandwiches on U.S. menus include
eggs.
Eggs Up Grill CEO Ricky Richardson said breakfast restaurants took off
after the COVID pandemic because people longed for comfort and
connection. As inflation made food more expensive, customers saw
breakfast and lunch as more affordable options for eating out, he said.
The growth in restaurant demand reverses a pattern that emerged during
the pandemic, when consumers tried to stock up on eggs for home use but
restaurants needed fewer of them because many of them had to close for a
time, according to Brian Earnest, a lead economist for animal proteins
at CoBank.
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Eggs in a bowl after being cracked during the process of making a
fresh omelette at The Breakfast Brothers restaurant, Wednesday, Feb.
12, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)
 U.S. egg consumption declined for
more than five decades before reaching a low of 247 per person in
2008, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. As
nutritional research and marketing established eggs as an
inexpensive protein source instead of heart-clogging cholesterol
bombs, per capita consumption of egg products grew to the equivalent
of 292 fresh eggs in 2019, the data shows.
“Consumers think eggs are really fresh, so if you’re making
something with eggs, you know it’s fresh,” Earnest said.
Before the pandemic reduced demand and bird flu outbreaks impacted
supplies, the USDA had forecast that Americans would continue eating
more eggs. By 2023, the most recent year for which annual data is
available, they were down to 249 eggs per person.
Other trends have impacted the economics of eggs. To address animal
rights concerns, McDonald’s and some other companies have switched
to 100% cage-free eggs, which limits the sources they will buy from.
Ten states, including California and Colorado, have passed laws
restricting egg sales to products from cage-free environments.
“It makes the market much more complicated than it was 20 years
ago,” Earnest said.
The higher prices are hitting restaurants hard. Wholesale egg prices
hit a national average of $7.34 per dozen last week, according to
the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That was 51% higher than at the
beginning of the year. Wholesale costs may be higher than retail
prices since grocers use eggs as a loss leader to get customers in
the door.
Some chains, like Waffle House, have added a surcharge to help
offset the cost of eggs. Others may turn to egg substitutes like
tapioca starch for some recipes or cut egg dishes from the menu,
said Phil Kafarakis, the president and CEO of the International
Foodservice Manufacturers Association.
First Watch President and CEO Chris Tomasso said eggs are critical
for the chain's brand and are found in the majority of its
offerings, whether at the center of the plate or as an ingredient in
batters. So far, he said, the company has been able to obtain the
eggs it needs and isn't charging extra for them.
First Watch is also increasing portion sizes for non-egg items like
meat and potatoes, Tomasso said.
Richardson, of Eggs Up Grill, said he recently met with franchisees
to discuss adding a surcharge but they decided against it.
“Eggs have always been and will continue to be an important part of
American diets,” Richardson said.
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