The US leapt from #43 to #1 in Brazilian egg exports in 2025, with FOB climbing from US$ 38K to US$ 39.5M and a 25% market share in one year.
Brazil's egg export market has a new leader. In the 2025 accumulated period, the United States jumped from #43 to #1 among all destinations for Brazilian shell-egg exports. That is a 42-position leap in a single commercial cycle. FOB value shipped rose from US$ 38,000 to US$ 39.5 million, a gain of roughly one thousand times in absolute terms. The American share of Brazil's egg export basket climbed from near zero to 25.2%, making the US the top buyer of this product in 2025.
In 2024, the US barely showed up in the data. Under US$ 40,000 in purchases, negligible participation, no history of regular trading in this corridor. One year later, it accounts for a quarter of everything Brazil ships in this category. This type of ranking rupture has no recent precedent in Brazil's animal protein trade flow at MDIC ComexStat. Most major egg-importing nations take years to build market share of this magnitude. They do it gradually and progressively, not in single-year jumps like this one.
The highly pathogenic avian influenza outbreak that swept US flocks between 2024 and 2025 was the largest in the country's history. The USDA recorded losses of over 100 million laying hens and breeders. With domestic production impaired and inventories falling, the American market needed alternative suppliers with speed and scale. Brazil stepped in as a natural substitute: it was already exporting eggs to other markets such as Europe and the Middle East, and it holds an expanding flock. Exchange rates helped too. The real depreciated against the dollar throughout 2025, making Brazilian eggs cheaper at the American end in relative terms. That combination of exceptional external demand with a favorable exchange rate is rare and, when it arrives, volumes respond in non-linear ways.
For farms and trading companies operating this corridor, the picture is opportunity with real entry barriers. The US market requires full lot traceability, sanitary certification issued by Brazil's MAPA, and strict compliance with USDA import regulations, including animal welfare and pasteurization requirements where applicable. Companies without these credentials cannot ship. The 2025 accumulated volume came primarily from large accredited exporters in Brazil's South and Southeast. Smaller producers face difficulty entering this corridor without partnerships with specialized trading companies. MAPA accreditation combined with USDA authorization typically takes six to eighteen months, far longer than a spot demand cycle.
The key variable for the rest of 2026 is the pace of US flock rebuilding. USDA publishes biweekly updates on laying capacity recovery. If those reports confirm accelerated recovery in H2 2026, the window for imported product demand narrows sharply. Brazilian market share of 25% could fall before any company manages to build a continuous, profitable operation in this corridor. Entry timing matters as much as shipment size. Those who entered in 2025 with medium-term contracts are in a stronger position than those trying to negotiate spot today.
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