Today Egg Rate in Bengaluru Karnataka
Updated: 13 Jun 2026, 9:56 AM IST
All Sizes โ Bengaluru
7-Day History – Bengaluru
Karnataka| Date | 1 Egg | Tray/30 | ยฑ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 07 Jun 2026 | โน6.25 | โน188 | โ |
| 08 Jun 2026 | โน6.30 | โน189 | โฒ |
| 09 Jun 2026 | โน6.30 | โน189 | โ |
| 10 Jun 2026 | โน6.35 | โน191 | โฒ |
| 11 Jun 2026 | โน6.40 | โน192 | โฒ |
| 12 Jun 2026 | โน6.50 | โน195 | โฒ |
| Today | โน6.50 | โน195 | โ |
One record per day. Tap โฒโผ to see exact change amount.
๐ Price Trend Chart – Bangalore 13 June 2026
Note: Price trends are based on historical city rate data. Charts populate as data is updated over time. Decreasing Increasing
City Comparison โ Karnataka
| Market / City | 1 Egg | Tray (30) | 100 Eggs | Peti (210) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospet | โน5.60 | โน168 | โน560 | โน1,176 |
| Bengaluru CC | โน6.20 | โน186 | โน620 | โน1,302 |
| Mysuru | โน6.30 | โน189 | โน630 | โน1,323 |
| Bengaluru | โน6.50 | โน195 | โน650 | โน1,365 |
| Chitradurga | โน6.50 | โน195 | โน650 | โน1,365 |
| Chikmagalur | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| Bidar | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| Bellary | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| Shimoga | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
Egg Price Comparison by City
| Market | Piece | Tray | 100 Pcs | Peti |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Baharampur | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 2. Ambur | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 3. Salem | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 4. Kharagpur | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 5. Tirunelveli | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 6. Chennai | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 7. Bardhaman | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 8. Kumbakonam | โน6.80 | โน204 | โน680 | โน1,428 |
| 9. Coimbatore | โน6.70 | โน201 | โน670 | โน1,407 |
| 10. Bellary | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 11. Shimoga | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 12. Chikmagalur | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 13. Bidar | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 14. Kolkata | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 15. Purulia | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 16. Habra | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 17. Malda | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 18. Ranaghat | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 19. Bolpur | โน6.65 | โน200 | โน665 | โน1,397 |
| 20. Aurangabad | โน6.60 | โน198 | โน660 | โน1,386 |
| 21. Ahmednagar | โน6.60 | โน198 | โน660 | โน1,386 |
| 22. Nanded | โน6.60 | โน198 | โน660 | โน1,386 |
| 23. Wardha | โน6.60 | โน198 | โน660 | โน1,386 |
| 24. Thane | โน6.60 | โน198 | โน660 | โน1,386 |
| 25. Erode | โน6.55 | โน197 | โน655 | โน1,376 |
| 26. Deoghar | โน6.52 | โน196 | โน652 | โน1,369 |
| 27. Dhanbad | โน6.52 | โน196 | โน652 | โน1,369 |
| 28. Srikakulam | โน6.50 | โน195 | โน650 | โน1,365 |
| 29. Anantapur | โน6.50 | โน195 | โน650 | โน1,365 |
| 30. Hindupur | โน6.50 | โน195 | โน650 | โน1,365 |
Rates are indicative and may vary by local market. Verify with vendors before purchasing.
About NECC & Egg Pricing
NECC - National Egg Coordination Committee
NECC is the world's largest association of poultry farmers, dedicated to determining fair selling prices. Founded by Dr. B.V. Rao, the "Father of Indian Poultry Industry," NECC ensures that consumers' buying and farmers' selling rates remain among the lowest globally (35%-40%).
Factors Influencing Egg Rates in India
- Feed Cost: Corn and soybean feed account for 75-80% of production cost, directly impacting egg rates.
- Disease Outbreaks: Avian influenza and other diseases can cause massive production losses.
- Seasonal Demand: Festivals like Diwali and Christmas, plus weather conditions, influence demand.
- Government Interventions: Feed subsidies or import tariffs help stabilize prices.
- International Trends: Global market conditions affect supply chain and retail prices.
Egg Consumption in India
Per capita availability of eggs has increased from 62 annually in 2014-15 to 103 in 2023-24. The national egg market is projected to reach US $209.46 million by 2029, growing at 13.77% CAGR.
Understanding Wholesale Egg Rates
Wholesale egg rates refer to bulk rates paid by distributors and retailers. These rates change frequently based on market conditions, demand and supply, and weather. NECC provides daily rate guidelines that serve as standard national egg prices, though they are advisory and not compulsory.
7-Day Egg Price History in Bangalore
Historical data for Bangalore will appear here after the first data sync.
Egg Rates in Nearby Cities & States
- Egg Rate in Robertsonpet
- Egg Rate in Kalaburagi
- Egg Rate in Gulbarga
- Egg Rate in Gadag
- Egg Rate in Bagalkot
- Egg Rate in Tumkur
The egg rate in Bangalore today is determined every morning by the National Egg Coordination Committee (NECC) and serves as the wholesale benchmark for traders, retailers, hotels, cloud kitchens, and bulk buyers across Bengaluru. Check the rate table below for today’s confirmed per egg, tray, 100-egg, and peti prices. Your team updates the numbers daily – the rest of this page stays permanent and keeps building search authority over time.
Bangalore is a consumption-first city. It does not produce eggs at any meaningful scale. The city receives fresh eggs daily from the outskirts of Karnataka and from other states like Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. With a metropolitan population exceeding 14 million and one of the densest concentrations of restaurants, tech campuses, hospitals, and hotel chains in South India, Bengaluru’s daily egg demand is enormous and remarkably consistent. That steady demand, combined with multi-state supply dependency, is exactly why the current egg price in Bangalore moves every single day.
Egg Rate in Bangalore – Wholesale, Retail and Supermarket Breakdown
There is a real and consistent price gap between the NECC wholesale rate and what you pay at your local shop. Here is how the Bangalore egg price chain looks on any given day.
| Buyer Type | Price Per Egg | What You Should Know |
|---|---|---|
| NECC Wholesale | See table above | Bulk mandi traders, large institutional buyers |
| Retail / Kirana Store | +8% to +12% | Covers last-mile delivery and shopkeeper margin |
| Supermarket | +12% to +18% | Adds packaging, cold storage and brand overhead |
| Nati / Desi Egg | Rs 8 to Rs 12+ | Free-range hens, unregulated, seller-dependent pricing |
If your supplier quotes more than 15% above today’s NECC wholesale rate without a clear reason, you have grounds to negotiate or look for a supplier closer to the mandi chain.
Bangalore trades at a noticeable premium over production hubs like Namakkal and Barwala. Namakkal produces 65% of Tamil Nadu’s total egg output and exports to neighbouring states including Karnataka, Kerala, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra. Eggs from Namakkal travel roughly 350 kilometres before reaching Bengaluru wholesale markets, and every kilometre adds cost. Unlike Delhi, which depends on supply from Barwala, Bangalore gets eggs from geographically closer sources in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu – which is part of why its prices tend to be more stable and less volatile than North Indian markets.
What Is the NECC and Why Does the Bangalore Egg Rate Follow It?
The National Egg Coordination Committee – NECC – is India’s apex egg pricing body, founded by Dr. B.V. Rao and registered on May 14, 1982. It is also the world’s largest association of poultry farmers. Every morning, NECC publishes city-wise wholesale benchmark rates based on live production data, poultry feed costs, transport expenses, and regional demand signals collected from across all producing zones in the country.
The Bangalore NECC rate is officially listed under Bengaluru (CC), where CC stands for Consumption Centre. This is NECC’s own classification and it tells you something important – Bengaluru is not a supply node in the national egg trade. It is a demand sink, served by multiple surrounding production states simultaneously.
The daily rate is announced before 6:00 AM. It is a suggested benchmark, not a legally enforced price. Traders and retailers are free to transact above or below it based on local supply conditions and buyer-seller negotiations. In practice, the NECC rate functions as the morning anchor that the entire Bengaluru egg trade prices itself around.
Why the Egg Price in Bangalore Changes Every Day
Understanding what moves the daily egg rate in Bangalore helps traders time purchases better and helps consumers make sense of fluctuations at their local shop.
Supply from Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh is the primary lever. Namakkal operates around 1,100 poultry farms with more than 45 million layer birds, producing around 3.5 crore eggs daily, of which the bulk is exported to other states. When production at Namakkal dips – due to summer heat stress on hens, a disease scare, or a seasonal flush – Bangalore feels the impact on its egg price within 24 to 48 hours. There is no buffer production in the city itself.
Poultry feed cost is the single most consistent driver of sustained price trends. Corn and soybean together account for 75 to 80% of farm-level production costs according to industry data. Any commodity price spike at the origin end gets absorbed by farmers first, then passed up the chain to the NECC rate within days. When feed costs ease, prices follow with a slight lag.
Seasonal demand in Bangalore is more stable than North Indian cities because the climate is mild year-round. Winter does not create the same sharp consumption spike here that it does in Delhi or UP. However, the October to December festive window – covering Navratri, Dussehra, Diwali, Christmas, and New Year – does push food service demand from restaurants, caterers, and institutional canteens noticeably higher, and the egg rate in Bangalore typically climbs 8 to 15% during this period.
School and college calendars matter more than most people realise. When academic institutions reopen after summer break or board exam periods, canteen and mess procurement resumes at scale across the city. This institutional demand return creates a predictable uptick in the egg rate today in Bangalore each June and January.
Bird flu alerts can cause the sharpest and most sudden price movements. Any confirmed case in Karnataka or neighbouring Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh triggers immediate consumer hesitation at the retail level. A bird flu alert in Karnataka once prompted Kerala – a major buyer of Karnataka eggs – to swiftly impose a transport ban that threatened to flood the local market with unsold stock. Even a rumour of an outbreak can drop Bengaluru egg prices by Rs 0.50 to Rs 1.00 per egg within two trading sessions, regardless of whether actual supply is affected.
About the Bangalore Egg Market
Bangalore – officially Bengaluru – is the capital of Karnataka and the third-largest city in India by population. With an estimated metropolitan population of well over 14 million, egg consumption in Bangalore is among the highest in southern India. The city’s egg demand is driven by a uniquely diverse buyer base: millions of households, thousands of restaurants and dhabas, a massive cloud kitchen and food delivery ecosystem, large corporate and hospital cafeterias, and an ever-growing student population in hostels and paying guest accommodations.
The eggs rate in Bangalore is officially tracked by NECC under the Bengaluru Consumption Centre zone. This zone designation reflects the reality that Bengaluru does not set supply – it absorbs it. Local wholesale markets across the city distribute incoming stock from multiple supply states simultaneously, which gives Bengaluru’s egg price a degree of stability that single-source cities do not enjoy. When Tamil Nadu supply tightens, Karnataka farm output partially compensates. When fuel costs spike from one direction, suppliers from shorter routes pick up the slack.
India produces approximately 149 billion eggs annually, making it the world’s second-largest egg producer after China. Per capita egg consumption has risen from 62 eggs per person in 2015 to 106 eggs in 2024-25 according to the Basic Animal Husbandry Statistics published by the Government of India. Bengaluru’s per capita consumption likely runs above this national average given its high-income urban demographic and the city’s deeply embedded egg-based food culture across breakfast, street food, and home cooking.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the egg rate in Bangalore today?
Today’s egg rate in Bangalore as per the NECC wholesale benchmark is shown in the price table at the top of this page. The table is updated every morning before 7 AM and covers per egg, per dozen, per tray of 30 eggs, per 100 eggs, and per peti of 210 eggs. Retail buyers should add 8 to 12% above the wholesale figure to estimate what they will pay at their local shop.
What time is the Bangalore egg rate updated each day?
The NECC announces the Bengaluru egg rate before 6:00 AM every morning based on overnight market data and fresh supply arrivals. This page updates before 7:00 AM. Always check after 7 AM to confirm the day’s verified rate before making any bulk purchase, sale, or procurement decision.
Why is the egg price in Bangalore higher than Namakkal or Barwala?
Namakkal and Barwala are production hubs where eggs are farmed locally. Bangalore is a consumption city that imports eggs from Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, and Karnataka farms. Every kilometre of transport adds cost – and Namakkal eggs travel roughly 350 kilometres to reach Bengaluru markets. That logistics gap is why the current egg price in Bangalore consistently runs Rs 0.20 to Rs 0.50 higher than production-end rates.
What is the 1 peti egg price in Bangalore today?
One standard peti contains 210 eggs. The current peti rate for Bangalore is shown in the rate table above and updated daily. You can also verify it by multiplying today’s per egg NECC rate by 210. Confirm the exact count with your supplier before placing a bulk order as some traders loosely use peti to mean 200 eggs.
What is the difference between NECC rate and retail egg price in Bangalore?
The NECC rate is the daily suggested wholesale benchmark used by bulk traders and mandi buyers. Kirana stores and local shops add 8 to 12% above this for handling and margin. Supermarkets add 12 to 18% more for packaging, cold storage, and brand costs. On a day when the NECC rate is Rs 5.75, you might pay Rs 6.20 at a local shop and Rs 6.50 to Rs 6.80 at a supermarket.
Is the egg rate in Bangalore and Bengaluru the same thing?
Yes. Bangalore and Bengaluru refer to the same city – the capital of Karnataka. NECC officially lists it as Bengaluru (CC). All rates on this page apply to the entire Bengaluru metropolitan distribution zone including the city core and surrounding wholesale supply areas.
Why do eggs cost more in Bangalore during festivals and school reopening periods?
Food service demand – from restaurants, caterers, hotel kitchens, and institutional canteens – spikes significantly during the October to December festive window and again in June and January when academic institutions reopen. This institutional demand surge absorbs supply faster than farm output can adjust, pushing the egg rate in Bangalore noticeably higher for several weeks at a time.
What are nati or desi eggs and how are they priced differently in Bangalore?
Nati or desi eggs come from backyard or free-range hens rather than commercial layer farms. They are not covered by the NECC benchmark and are priced independently by individual sellers based on demand and perceived quality. In Bangalore, nati egg prices typically range from Rs 8 to Rs 12 per egg or more, compared to the commercial egg rate of Rs 5.50 to Rs 6.50 at retail. They are popular among buyers seeking free-range or organic options and are commonly found in local weekly markets.