The worldwide Blueberry Price Index comprising prices by 14 international retailers ended week 45 (November 3, 2025) down 1.1%, showing market stability.
According to Italian Berry, Carrefour, Walmart, Albert Heijn and 11 others that week sold berries at between €5.73 and 36.76 ($6.6-42.31) a kg.
The cheapest weight category was the 454-gram punnet at €5.73 ($5.44) while the dearest the 125-g one at €15.92 ($18.33) minimum.
Offers of 125 grams also commanded the week’s highest maximum price range for all sizes at €36.76 ($42.31).
Arguably the most affordable when taking into account weight and content was the 1-kg size, which averaged €12.99 ($14.95).
Helping with price stability despite the slight dip were 57% of the 14 retailers that kept their rates stable week-on-week.
While 36% of the above retailers decreased their berry prices during the week, only 7% raised theirs.
Poland Market Courts Stability as Peru Supplies Europe
The same stability was true in actual blueberry markets, principally in Poland, following the July harvest. Peru’s early season supplies to Western Europe are also helping keep rates even.
Before November 3, blueberry prices in Krakow in the country’s south were 0.9% up week-on-week, to minimum €10.89 ($12.54) /kg.
In the capital Warsaw, however, the weekly rates remained put at the equivalent of €6.07-6.28 ($6.99-7.23) a kg.
Similar unchanged pricing also informed rates in Kalisz in central Poland where 250 g punnets stabilized at €3.14 ($3.61) a kg.
The evening out of worldwide blueberry prices owes somewhat to increases in early season sales from Peru into the western world.
By week 40, Peru had exported 215,000 tonnes or 54% of its 2025 target of 400,000 tonnes.
Europe had by early November 2025 absorbed 35% of the cargo, just behind the United States with 44% and China with 15%.
Still, the Peruvian Blueberry Growers and Exporters Association expects this year’s volumes to decrease as the season progresses. Could this whet up the rates of blueberries, whose popularity lies in health benefits? Skim the statistics below to find out how pricing has fared historically.
Worldwide Blueberry Prices Statistics
Production is the heart and soul of blueberry prices and is therefore a starting point for any market survey. According to the International Blueberry Organization (IBO), worldwide production grew more than double in the decade ending 2023, to 1.78 million tonnes. A year later (2024), global production would score a first-time record of 2 million tonnes.
Prices however continued to change despite the glut, depending to changing patterns in key sources like Peru. In 2023 for example, Fox Weather reported price surges in the West after the El Nino slashed the Peru crop. Between September and early November 2023, U.S.’ retail rates for blueberries appreciated by 60%, to $6 a pound. The Netherlands likewise saw its imports in 2023 drop by 67% after Peru’s exports slashed by 50% that year. This drove retail rates in Holland to €9-11($10.36-12.66) a kg.
In the early November 2025 context, global prices were relatively stable at around €5.73 to 36.76 ($6.60-42.31) a kg. This was per an Italian Berry compilation of 14 international retailers from mainly Europe, the U.S. and Australia. Peru’s 2025 crop however looked likely to reduce later in the season, possibly elevating prices once again. Any such change affects the U.S. the most since it buys much of Peru’s volumes. For example in the period ending November 3, it commanded 44% of Peru’s 2025 blueberry exports up to that point.
What is the historical blueberry producer index in the United States?
Given its importance as a blueberry market, the United States tracks farm-gate prices annually. Below is a snapshot of the January 1991-June 2025 producer index, courtesy the Federal Reserve, St. Louis.
| Highlight Year/month | Producer Price Index [points] |
| June 2025 | 40.93 |
| May 2023 | 63.21 |
| April 2017 | 79.5 |
| June 2010 | 16.3 |
| May 1999 | 56.1 |
| December 1991 | 100.0 |
