Egg companies made $1.22 billion as Americans paid over $6 a dozen; now they'll donate 53 million eggs in DOJ settlement
DOJ alleges US egg producers manipulated price benchmark Egg producers agree to donate millions of eggs under settlement Why US egg prices soared to record
DOJ alleges US egg producers manipulated price benchmark Egg producers agree to donate millions of eggs under settlement Why US egg prices soared to record highs before falling sharply Companies reject price-fixing claims: DOJ details investigation Debate over whether the penalties go far enough The sharp rise in egg prices that frustrated households across the United States has taken another turn after federal authorities and a coalition of states secured settlement agreements with three of the country's largest egg producers. While shoppers watched the price of a basic grocery staple climb to levels rarely seen before, investigators were quietly examining whether part of that increase was driven by more than supply shortages. The outcome does not amount to a finding of guilt, and the companies involved continue to reject allegations that they acted unlawfully. Even so, the agreements mark one of the biggest government actions involving the egg industry in recent years, combining financial penalties, food donations and new rules intended to limit contact between competing producers over pricing practices.The settlement follows an investigation led by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) alongside attorneys general from 17 states. Authorities alleged that Cal-Maine Foods, Versova and Hickman's Egg Ranch worked together over several years to influence a benchmark used throughout the egg industry.According to the complaint, the companies coordinated information submitted to Urner Barry Publications, whose daily price index helps determine wholesale egg prices across the country.Supermarkets, restaurants and food distributors often rely on those benchmark figures when negotiating purchases, meaning even relatively small movements can affect prices paid by businesses and consumers alike.The alleged conduct covered the period from June 2022 until March 2025.Instead of proceeding through lengthy court battles, the producers agreed to settle the claims without admitting liability or wrongdoing.Together they will provide more than 53 million eggs to food banks and charitable organisations while paying a combined $3.3 million that will be divided among participating states.
Court approval is still required before the agreements become final.Cal-Maine will donate 30 million eggs and pay $1.5 million. Versova has agreed to provide 20 million eggs along with an $800,000 payment, while Hickman's will contribute 3.25 million eggs and pay $1 million.Beyond the financial terms, each company must introduce stronger antitrust compliance measures. The agreements also prohibit communications with competitors about pricing decisions or bidding strategies, an area that formed the centre of the government's allegations.Fortune reports, “Consumers paid record prices while dominant egg producers reported extraordinary profits, yet the result is another settlement that corporations can treat as the cost of doing business rather than meaningful accountability,” said Angela Huffman, president of Farm Action.The investigation unfolded after egg prices reached historic highs during 2025. In March of that year, the average retail price for a dozen eggs climbed above $6, placing extra pressure on household grocery budgets.The industry consistently argued that the increase reflected an unprecedented outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza. Millions of laying hens were destroyed to contain the disease, reducing supplies at a time when demand remained strong.That explanation was widely accepted as an important part of the price surge, although consumer advocates questioned whether limited competition within the industry had allowed some producers to earn unusually large profits while supplies remained tight.Since then, prices have fallen sharply. As poultry flocks recovered, average retail prices dropped below $2.20 per dozen by May 2026, despite bird flu continuing to affect parts of the industry.Government lawyers said one aspect of the investigation stood out.