Today Egg Rate in Barwala | Haryana NECC Live Price (2026)



Today Egg Rate in Barwala Haryana

Updated: 13 Jun 2026, 9:56 AM IST

Today
Tray Rate (30 Eggs)
₹155.40
₹5.18 per egg
13 June 2026
Yesterday
Yesterday's Rate
₹155.40
No Change Today
Desi
Desi / Country Egg
Not tracked for this area

All Sizes – Barwala

1 Egg (Single)
₹5.18
6 Eggs (Half Tray)
₹31.08
12 Eggs (Dozen)
₹62.16
100 Eggs
₹518.00
210 Eggs (Peti / Crate)
₹1,088

7-Day History – Barwala

Haryana
Date 1 Egg Tray/30 100 Pcs Peti/210 ±
07 Jun 2026 ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
08 Jun 2026 ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
09 Jun 2026 ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
10 Jun 2026 ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
11 Jun 2026 ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
12 Jun 2026 ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
Today ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088

One record per day. Tap ▲▼ to see exact change amount.

📈 Price Trend Chart – Barwala   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 – Haryana

Market / City 1 Egg Tray (30) 100 Eggs Peti (210)
Barwala ₹5.18 ₹155 ₹518 ₹1,088
Kurukshetra ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Kaithal ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Karnal ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Rohtak ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Gurgaon ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Ambala ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Hisar ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Panchkula ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Sirsa ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Panipat ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208
Gurugram ₹5.75 ₹173 ₹575 ₹1,208

Egg Price Comparison by City

Market Piece Tray 100 Pcs Peti
1. Asansol ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
2. Siliguri ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
3. Nagercoil ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
4. Vellore ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
5. Bankura ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
6. Baharampur ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
7. Ambur ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
8. Salem ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
9. Kharagpur ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
10. Tirunelveli ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
11. Chennai ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
12. Bardhaman ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
13. Kumbakonam ₹6.80 ₹204 ₹680 ₹1,428
14. Coimbatore ₹6.70 ₹201 ₹670 ₹1,407
15. Hubli ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
16. Bagalkot ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
17. Gadag ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
18. Tumkur ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
19. Bellary ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
20. Shimoga ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
21. Chikmagalur ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
22. Bidar ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
23. Kolkata ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
24. Purulia ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
25. Habra ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
26. Malda ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
27. Ranaghat ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
28. Bolpur ₹6.65 ₹200 ₹665 ₹1,397
29. Navi Mumbai ₹6.60 ₹198 ₹660 ₹1,386
30. Gondia ₹6.60 ₹198 ₹660 ₹1,386
Share Today's Rate
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Last Verified 13 Jun 2026, 9:56 AM IST

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.

Looking for today’s egg rate in Barwala? This page lists the latest NECC egg price for Barwala, Haryana, refreshed daily so you always see the current market rate.

The Barwala egg rate today is set by the National Egg Coordination Committee (NECC) every morning before 6 AM. Check the rate table below for today’s per egg, tray, 100-egg, and peti prices, updated fresh each day for wholesalers, retailers, traders, and bulk buyers across North India.

Barwala is the largest egg trading hub in North India and the second-largest poultry market in Asia. Its NECC wholesale rate is the one number that moves egg prices across Delhi, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and parts of UP and Rajasthan, every single day.

Whether you are a mandi trader, kirana owner, hotel buyer, catering supplier, or household consumer tracking grocery costs, this page gives you the verified Barwala egg rate the moment it is published each morning.

Barwala Egg Rate Today – NECC Price Table

Manually updated every morning. Last update: check page timestamp.

UnitQuantityToday’s Rate
Per Piece1 Egg
Dozen12 Eggs
Tray30 Eggs
100 Eggs100 Eggs
Peti (Crate)210 Eggs

Rates reflect NECC wholesale benchmark for Barwala mandi. Retail prices are typically 10-15% higher.

Yesterday’s Rate vs Today – Quick Comparison

YesterdayTodayChange
Per Egg (NECC)
Tray (30 Eggs)
Peti (210 Eggs)

Barwala Selling Rate vs NECC Rate – What You Actually Pay

The NECC rate and the Barwala selling rate are not the same number. The NECC figure is a wholesale benchmark for bulk mandi transactions. By the time an egg reaches your local shop, the price has passed through one or two more hands – each adding their margin.

Buyer TypePrice Per EggNotes
NECC WholesaleSee table aboveDirect mandi, bulk purchase
Retail / Kirana+10% to +15%Handling and shopkeeper margin
Supermarket+15% to +20%Packaging, cold storage, branding
Nati / Desi Egg₹7.00–₹9.00+Backyard hens, unregulated pricing

If your supplier is quoting more than 15% above today’s NECC wholesale rate, you have a clear basis to negotiate, or switch to a mandi-connected supplier.

Fill in daily. A steady rise over 5+ days signals seasonal tightening or feed cost pressure. Three or more consecutive dips usually indicate a flush period – often the best window for bulk buyers to stock up.

Barwala vs Other Egg Markets – Rate Comparison

MarketStateToday’s NECC Rate
BarwalaHaryana
DelhiDelhi
LudhianaPunjab
NamakkalTamil Nadu
HyderabadTelangana
MumbaiMaharashtra
KolkataWest Bengal

Barwala consistently trades at a small discount compared to consumption cities like Delhi and Mumbai. The reason is simple, Barwala is a production hub, not a consumption city. Eggs don’t travel far, so logistics costs stay low. Delhi’s NECC rate is typically ₹0.10–₹0.20 higher than Barwala’s on any given day.

What Is the NECC and Why Does the Barwala Rate Follow It?

The National Egg Coordination Committee, NECC – is India’s apex egg pricing body, established in 1982. Every morning, NECC publishes city-wise wholesale benchmark rates based on live production data, poultry feed costs, transport expenses, and regional demand signals.

The Barwala NECC rate is announced before 6:00 AM daily. It is not a retail price and it is not legally binding on any trader. It is the wholesale benchmark that the entire North Indian egg trade uses as its daily reference point. Retailers add 10-15% on top. Supermarkets add another 3–5% for packaging and cold storage.

When you check this page, you are seeing the closest thing to a ground-truth wholesale price in the Barwala market each day.

Why Barwala Egg Prices Change Every Day

Five factors consistently drive daily movement in the Barwala egg rate. Understanding them helps you time purchases smarter.

Poultry Feed Cost Maize and soybean account for over 70% of total egg production expenses at the farm level. Any spike in commodity prices at Haryana’s grain mandis pushes farm-gate production costs up within days, and the NECC rate follows. This is the single biggest driver of sustained price trends in Barwala.

Seasonal Demand Cycles Winters drive North India’s strongest egg demand. November and December consistently see the highest Barwala rates of the year because cold weather increases consumption across households, dhabas, and canteens simultaneously. Summer heat reduces hen laying efficiency, which tightens supply and provides price support even when household demand is softer.

Flush Periods When too many birds across North Haryana farms enter peak lay simultaneously, supply floods the market. Rates can fall ₹0.30–₹0.50 per egg within a single week during a flush. These periods are temporary and self-correct once supply normalises. but they are excellent buying windows for traders with storage capacity.

Fuel and Logistics Costs A ₹2 per litre diesel increase adds roughly ₹0.05–₹0.08 per egg in transportation costs to distant markets. Barwala’s immediate region absorbs less of this than far-off markets like Bihar or Uttarakhand, but fuel prices still factor into the daily mandi rate.

Bird Flu Alerts Any confirmed or suspected bird flu case in Haryana or Punjab causes an immediate demand collapse. Rates can drop ₹0.50–₹1.00 per egg within two or three trading sessions during a scare, regardless of actual supply conditions on the ground.

About the Barwala Egg Market

Barwala, located in Panchkula district, Haryana, is the dominant egg production and wholesale trading center for all of North India. It is widely recognised as the second-largest poultry hub in Asia.

Its farms, cold chain networks, and mandi infrastructure supply eggs daily to Delhi NCR, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jammu, and parts of Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan. The NECC rate published for Barwala each morning is not merely a local number, it functions as the wholesale price floor for the entire northern egg supply chain.

India now produces approximately 149 billion eggs annually, making it the world’s second-largest egg producer after China. Per capita egg consumption rose 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. Barwala sits at the centre of the supply system that meets this growing demand across the northern half of the country.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is today’s Barwala egg rate as per NECC?

Today’s Barwala NECC egg rate is updated in the rate table at the top of this page every morning before 7 AM. The rate covers per egg, per tray (30 eggs), per 100 eggs, and per peti (210 eggs) prices at wholesale. Retail buyers should add 10–15% to arrive at their expected local market price.

What time does the Barwala egg rate get updated?

The NECC announces the बरवाला अंडा रेट every morning before 6:00 AM based on fresh mandi arrivals and overnight market conditions. This page updates before 7:00 AM. If you are making a bulk purchase or sale decision, check the rate after 7 AM to ensure you have the day’s confirmed figure.

What is the 1 peti egg rate in Barwala today?

One peti contains 210 eggs. The current peti rate for Barwala is listed in the rate table above, updated daily. At any given rate, multiply the per-egg price by 210 to calculate the peti cost. Always confirm the exact egg count with your supplier — some traders use “peti” loosely to mean 200 eggs.

What is the difference between NECC rate and Barwala selling rate?

The NECC rate is the daily suggested wholesale benchmark for bulk mandi traders. The Barwala selling rate — what retailers actually charge — is typically 10–15% higher to cover last-mile transport, handling, and shopkeeper margin. Supermarket prices are a further 3–5% above retail due to packaging, branding, and cold storage costs.

Why is the Barwala egg rate lower than Delhi or Mumbai?

Barwala is a production hub, not a consumption city. Eggs produced locally do not travel far, keeping logistics costs minimal. Delhi and Mumbai are consumption cities where eggs arrive from distant farms, adding transport and handling costs at every stage. Delhi’s NECC rate is typically ₹0.10–₹0.20 higher than Barwala’s on any given day.

What causes the Barwala egg rate to rise suddenly?

Sudden price spikes in Barwala are usually caused by a combination of rising maize or soybean prices increasing farm costs, heat stress in summer reducing hen laying rates, festival or wedding season demand spikes, or a bird flu scare in a competing supply region that diverts buyers toward Barwala stock.

Is the Barwala NECC rate mandatory for traders?

No. The NECC rate is a suggested benchmark, not a legally enforceable price. Traders, retailers, and distributors are free to trade above or below it depending on local supply, buyer-seller negotiations, and volume. The rate functions as a daily price anchor — not a regulated ceiling or floor.

What is a flush period and how does it affect Barwala egg prices?

A flush period occurs when a large number of hens across farms in North Haryana enter peak lay simultaneously, pushing supply well above current demand. During a flush, Barwala egg rates can drop ₹0.30–₹0.50 per egg within a week. These periods typically last 1–3 weeks and represent the best opportunity for bulk buyers and traders with cold storage to stock up at lower rates.

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