… twelve?
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All the downvotes are from bakers
Seattle $5.99 in town, $4.99 outside the city, $5 farm signs by the road.
Chicago, $5.15, Aldi
So, we've got a range.
The cheapest set of generic eggs is the Penny Smart Grade A Large Eggs for $3.99, but my local grocery also has another set of eggs that appears to be equivalent in quality from the store brand for $4.99. There's also cage free for $7.99 and another cage free that looks to be identical from the same brand for $8.69. Generic organic (cage/etc not listed) in the plastic container is $6.99.
Western Nebraska, basically Wyoming: non organic are in the range of five bucks at the grocery store. Organic is anywhere from 6 to 8. I get locally-raise ones for 3.50 a dozen at my mechanic's shop :) Just have to pay cash.
This economy is stupid.
All prices in USD in case that wasn’t clear
Denver suburb, $7.99 per 18 A-large
I need to replace 4 chickens this spring, I expect more people buying them this year. Anyone who is allowed to keep chickens should consider it, IMO. Stupid easy to care for and if they get to run around and eat bugs the eggs are far superior.
Still not enough that I'm willing to get chickens. And probably still not as much as the real cost including currently externalized pollution costs. About $8 for the good ones. Around $5 for the factory farmed ones, but they are often sold out, the supply right now isn't meeting the demand.
This weekend the grocery store across the street was selling a dozen large for $8
One month ago: ~$3.29
Yesterday ~$5.49
For 18 eggs: ~$7.19
They only have grade A eggs that come in the fancy compressed paper boxes so that's what I normally get. Though eggs have been getting harder and harder to find since they've been struggling to restock them.
I was just recently in Japan and decided to go to a proper grocery store. A dozen eggs grade A was about $1.80 USD or 278 yen.
In Sjælland, Denmark: 3.7 USD if you buy nice, organic, local eggs. In Argentina, maybe 2USD. But they are not organic.
Just saw it was a USA question, I'm leaving it up for some international context
In the Netherlands. A dozen of eggs from Aldi € 2.68 = $ 2.82
They can be more expensive at other shops if bio etc
Woah I thought the Euro was more. Did it drop in value compared to the dollar recently?
https://www.x-rates.com/graph/?from=USD&to=EUR&amount=1
There was a bit of an upswin for the dollar since nov 5... weirdly, not sure how that guy inspires confidence
Yep. About €3 from the supermarket. Or about €6 fresh from the farm shop, but they are XL and often have a double yolk.
$4.30 / dozen. Atlanta, GA.
Here in northern Italy 10 medium eggs (free range) go for 1,99€. At a normal discount supermarket.
Dozen grade A large:
$4.69 from our more trendy expensive store.
$5.09 from our “cheap” store.
Weird that the expensive store is cheaper.
We have an Aldi, too, but they don’t have their price online.
I know it says USA but thought would be interesting to see the prices around the world.
UK, Asda, 12 Medium Free Range Eggs costs £2.70 or $3.37.
Edit: I could find cheaper that are not “free range”.
I'll just note that !AskUSA is a thing. That said holy fuck eggs are expensive in America. I buy those for two bucks.
I got a 404 error with Boost (the app) with your link. Is it this one? [email protected]
It is!
I didn't actually link it so thanks. Yeah that's the one.
This is a post right now because prices have (hopefully) temporarily spiked. My grocery store had a sign apologizing, blaming avian flu+high demand, and promising to keep their process competitive. I think 2 bucks is normal for us too but right now they're over $5.
That makes sense.
Costco, Minnesota; 18ct large $5.49
You have gold eggs?
That would be 18kt silly.
But the price!
That's just due to the gold flu!
I was curious and checked while shopping today. There weren't any, just a bare shelf.
Well, they're obviously normal price now, since it was all Bidens fault, and had nothing to do with poultry diseases.
$6.49 from Giant near Philly today, and somehow still sold out. Severe inventory issues...
$8.99 - a Safeway in the bay area
$5.59 for a dozen extra large cage free organic in the Midwest.
8.49
As of this moment: $5.49 for 12 large brown.
Last week I was able to get $4.49 for 12 large cage free.
Bird flu is obviously influencing prices quite a bit lately.
If you don't get helpful answers, try [email protected]
It's 3.39€ for 10 (medium?) organic/free-range eggs in Germany... Or $4.26 converted to dollar a dozen (including taxes).
Rewe in central Germany got free range for 2.69€.
$7.42 from Walmart, $10.65 for the ones I get (Vital Farms). This is from Colorado, USA.
$5.75 - SW Michigan
$6.50/dozen for the regular eggs. Surprisingly, only $10/dozen for free range 18pack. This is in Idaho at Albertsons (not the cheapest but not a high end grocery store)