ca57910929
Copy 10 marketing content files from the cmo/content-phase1 branch of cartsnitch/agents into content/marketing/, preserving the blog/, email/, and social/ subdirectory structure. Co-Authored-By: Paperclip <noreply@paperclip.ing> Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
99 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
99 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Shrinkflation Report: The Incredible Cost of Eggs, Milk, and Yogurt in 2026"
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slug: shrinkflation-dairy-eggs-2026
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date: 2026-04-15
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author: CartSnitch Team
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category: Shrinkflation Report
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tags: [shrinkflation, dairy, eggs, milk, yogurt, grocery prices]
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status: draft
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series: shrinkflation-case-studies
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description: "Dairy is the most emotionally charged aisle in the store. Egg prices swing wildly, yogurt containers keep shrinking, and milk pricing defies logic. We tracked the numbers."
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---
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# Shrinkflation Report: The Incredible Cost of Eggs, Milk, and Yogurt in 2026
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If any grocery category makes people angry, it's dairy. Eggs became a political talking point. Milk prices vary by dollars between stores a mile apart. And yogurt — once the quiet, affordable staple — has been shrinking so steadily that the standard container size has changed twice in a decade.
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Here's what's actually happening, backed by the data.
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## Eggs: the roller coaster nobody asked for
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Egg prices are a case study in volatility masquerading as inflation:
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| Period | Average Price (Dozen, Grade A) | Context |
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|--------|-------------------------------|---------|
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| Jan 2020 | $1.47 | Pre-pandemic baseline |
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| Jan 2023 | $4.82 | Avian flu supply shock |
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| Jun 2023 | $2.67 | Supply recovery |
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| Jan 2024 | $2.51 | Stabilization |
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| Jan 2025 | $3.89 | Second avian flu wave |
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| Jan 2026 | $4.12 | Elevated "new normal" |
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*Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Average Price Data*
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The headline number is dramatic enough. But here's what the averages hide:
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- **Store-to-store variation is massive.** In a single metro area, we've seen dozen-egg prices range from $3.29 to $5.99 on the same week. That's an 82% spread for the identical product.
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- **"Cage-free" premiums have compressed.** As conventional egg prices rose, the gap between conventional and cage-free narrowed — sometimes to just $0.50-0.80. Consumers paying the premium are getting less differentiation for their dollar.
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- **Pack size games.** Some retailers have introduced 10-packs and 8-packs at prices that look cheaper but cost more per egg. A $3.99 ten-pack is $0.40/egg — worse than a $4.49 dozen at $0.37/egg.
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## Yogurt: the 6-ounce container that used to be 8
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Yogurt is ground zero for quiet shrinkflation. The standard single-serve yogurt container has been on a slow, steady diet:
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| Period | Standard Container Size | What Changed |
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|--------|------------------------|--------------|
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| Pre-2010 | 8 oz | The original standard |
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| 2011-2015 | 6 oz | Most major brands downsized |
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| 2020-2023 | 5.3 oz | "Greek yogurt" containers normalized this size |
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| 2024-2026 | 5 oz (emerging) | Several brands testing smaller sizes |
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The price journey alongside the shrinkage:
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| Brand / Product | 2023 Size | 2023 Price | 2026 Size | 2026 Price | Per-oz Change |
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|----------------|-----------|------------|-----------|------------|---------------|
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| Chobani Greek (single) | 5.3 oz | $1.49 | 5.3 oz | $1.79 | **+$0.06/oz (+20.1%)** |
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| Yoplait Original | 6 oz | $0.79 | 5.3 oz | $0.89 | **+$0.04/oz (+30.5%)** |
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| Dannon Light & Fit | 5.3 oz | $1.09 | 5.3 oz | $1.29 | **+$0.04/oz (+18.3%)** |
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| Oikos Triple Zero | 5.3 oz | $1.59 | 5.0 oz | $1.69 | **+$0.04/oz (+12.5%)** |
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| Store brand Greek | 5.3 oz | $0.99 | 5.3 oz | $1.09 | **+$0.02/oz (+10.7%)** |
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*Sources: Manufacturer product pages, USDA FoodData Central, and retailer pricing data.*
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Yoplait's move is the most striking: **shrink AND raise** in the same period. The sticker price went up $0.10 — noticeable but not alarming. The size dropped from 6 oz to 5.3 oz — barely visible on the shelf. Combined effective increase: 30.5%.
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## Milk: the price that makes no sense
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Milk pricing has always been chaotic, but the current situation is particularly hard for consumers to navigate:
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- **A gallon of whole milk** averaged $4.15 nationally in early 2026 (BLS data). But store-to-store variation runs $3.29 to $5.49 within a single zip code.
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- **Half-gallon pricing has gotten worse.** Many brands now price their half-gallon at 55-65% of their gallon price, making the "convenience" upcharge steeper than ever. If you're buying two half-gallons because you can't use a full gallon before it expires, you're paying a 10-30% premium.
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- **Organic milk premiums are compressing** — similar to eggs. Conventional prices rose faster than organic, shrinking the gap from $2-3 to $1-1.50 in many markets. If you were on the fence about organic, the math has shifted.
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- **"Ultra-filtered" and specialty milks** (Fairlife, etc.) have seen 15-20% price increases since 2023 while maintaining sizes. These are pure price increases, no shrinkflation — but they're happening alongside the general dairy confusion.
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## The multi-pack trap
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One of the sneakiest moves in dairy is the shift in multi-pack sizes:
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- **Yogurt multi-packs** have gone from 12-count to 10-count to 8-count at some brands, while per-pack pricing creeps up. A Chobani 8-pack is $8.99 in many stores — that's $1.12 per 5.3 oz cup, or $0.21/oz. Buying singles at $1.79 each is actually worse at $0.34/oz, but the multi-pack itself has lost 33% of its unit count since the 12-pack era.
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- **Cheese slices** packages went from 24-count to 22-count (Kraft Singles) while prices rose. The per-slice cost has increased over 25% since 2023.
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- **Butter** has seen some of the least shrinkflation (hard to shrink a stick), but prices are up 18-22% since 2023, making it one of the few dairy categories with transparent price increases.
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## What you can do
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1. **Compare egg prices weekly.** Egg prices are the most volatile in the dairy case. Checking two stores can easily save $1-2 per dozen.
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2. **Watch yogurt unit pricing.** Container sizes are a moving target. The shelf tag's price-per-ounce is the only reliable comparison.
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3. **Do the milk math.** If your household uses less than a gallon per week, a gallon might still be cheaper than two half-gallons — even if some milk gets wasted.
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4. **Watch multi-pack counts.** Don't assume the pack you always buy still has the same number of items. Check the count every time.
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5. **Use CartSnitch.** We track dairy prices and package sizes across stores automatically. When your yogurt shrinks or your egg prices spike, you'll know before you get to the register. [Sign up for early access](#).
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## The bottom line
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Dairy hits every household, every week. It's one of the top 3 grocery budget categories, and it's being squeezed from every direction: volatile prices, shrinking containers, disappearing multi-pack counts, and store-to-store pricing gaps that can add up to $20-30 per month for a family of four.
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The data is clear. The question is whether consumers have access to it. That's what we're building.
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---
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*This is the third in a series of CartSnitch Shrinkflation Reports. Previous: [Your cereal box lost 2 ounces this year](#) | [The incredible shrinking chip bag](#)*
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