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Brazil's egg exports to the US jump roughly 1,000-fold through April

The US jumped from 43rd to #1 in Brazil's shell egg exports, FOB reaching US$39.5M and a 25.2% share in the first four months of 2026.

ByKyrodata Editorial Desk··4 min
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Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter
Editorial illustration on Brazilian foreign trade for the foreign trade chapter

Summary

  • •The US jumped from 43rd to #1 in Brazil's shell egg exports through April 2026.
  • •FOB climbed from US$38K to US$39.5M — up roughly 1,000-fold.
  • •Share rose from 0.0% to 25.2%, with the US absorbing a quarter of total Brazilian egg exports.
  • •The surge was driven by avian influenza-related flock losses in the US and USDA emergency import windows.
  • •The emergency-window nature of demand means the channel could close as quickly as it opened.

Forty-two positions in under a year. Through April 2026, the United States became the top destination for Brazilian shell egg exports, absorbing 25.2% of total shipments and US$39.5 million in FOB. In the same four months of the prior year, the US sat 43rd — with just US$38,000 in purchases.

Who moved

The jump: roughly 1,000 times in absolute FOB value. Figures like that signal a commercial debut from near zero, not incremental growth. The US was effectively absent from Brazil's egg export map a year ago. The channel didn't open gradually; volume arrived in a concentrated burst across the first four months of 2026.

The driver: avian flu, again

Highly pathogenic avian influenza returned to devastate US laying flocks in late 2025, replicating the 2022–2023 outbreak that forced Washington to tap global supply. With domestic inventories compressed and retail egg prices hitting record highs, the USDA opened emergency import windows for countries with recognized sanitary status. Brazil — certified by MAPA for shell egg exports since 2023 — was positioned to fill that gap, and it did. Brazil is the world's third-largest egg producer, with surplus export capacity that could respond quickly to the opening.

One-quarter of Brazil's eggs go to one buyer

#1 partner concentration at 25% creates a single-point dependency on an emergency-driven buyer. Emergency demand has an expiration date. When US flocks recover and domestic prices normalize, purchase volumes can drop as quickly as they rose. Exporters who built cold-chain and logistics infrastructure exclusively for this lane need a contingency plan before the restock cycle closes. Alternative markets — Mexico, the UAE, Caribbean nations — can absorb some volume but require separate sanitary certifications and qualification timelines.

Scenario if the trend holds

The key leading indicator is USDA data on US laying-flock repopulation. Recovery cycles for commercial-layer operations average 12 to 18 months from peak culling. If repopulation accelerated in Q4 2025, the second half of 2026 could already bring purchase deceleration. The USDA APHIS import reviews — updated quarterly — will signal when the window narrows. The current opening could last one or two more quarters; extending to two full years seems unlikely unless the flock-recovery pace disappoints.

Brazil's production scale enabled the fast response

Brazil is the world's third-largest egg producer, with annual output exceeding 50 billion units according to IBGE. That scale meant the US$39.5 million shipped to the US represented a tiny fraction of domestic production — the US channel didn't strain local supply. Fast response was possible precisely because of that surplus. The flip side: when the channel closes, the volume that flowed to the US will need to be redirected. Having alternative certified markets lined up before that moment is the operational discipline that separates exporters who rode this wave profitably from those who got caught over-exposed.

What this means for you
For exporters
  • Negotiate contracts with shorter terms (90–120 days) rather than long-dated commitments, given the emergency-window nature of US demand; avoid over-committing capacity to a single buyer.
  • Use this cycle to lock in APHIS certification documentation and sanitary protocols — the emergency channel can become a permanent one if Brazil demonstrates consistent supply and sanitary reliability.
For importers
  • Track the spread between Brazilian FOB price and US domestic spot price weekly; the import flow holds as long as that spread exceeds landed-cost (freight plus cold chain plus duties).
  • Monitor USDA weekly egg inventory and retail price reports as the leading signal for demand continuity from US buyers.

This analysis is written by the Kyrodata Editorial Team from official data. See our methodology →

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Sources

  • ·MDIC ComexStat — capítulo 0407 (2025)
  • ·Kyrodata — dashboard interativo SH4 0407 (2025)
  • ·IBGE — Estatística da Produção Pecuária (2025)

Topics

ExportsUnited StatesAgribusinessMarket Share

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