US grocery prices rose in April, but gas spikes weren't the only reason
[May 13, 2026] By
DEE-ANN DURBIN
Americans paid more for their groceries last month, but high gasoline
prices resulting from the Iran war were only one of the reasons why.
Prices for food eaten at home rose 2.9% in April compared to the same
month a year earlier, according to government figures released Tuesday.
That was the highest year-over-year inflation rate for the category
since August 2023.
Prices at restaurants, fast-food chains and other places to get prepared
meals also increased, putting overall food prices up 3.2% in the last
year, the Labor Department’s consumer price index showed.
Fuel prices have soared while the Iran war prevents cargo ships from
passing through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital corridor for global oil
supplies. Diesel fuel powers fishing boats, tractors and the trucks that
ship 83% of U.S. agricultural products. As of Tuesday, the average price
per gallon was up 61% from a year ago, according to AAA.
The meat, produce and dry goods vendors that supply Sparrow Market, a
small independent grocer in Ann Arbor, Michigan, all added fuel
surcharges to their deliveries in recent weeks, owner Raymond Campise
said. Wholesale prices for meat, produce and some other products also
have gone up, he said.
“For independent markets operating on narrow margins, even small
increases can have a major impact,” Campise said.

The full impact of rising energy costs on food likely has not hit retail
grocery prices yet in the U.S., according to Purdue University
economists Ken Foster and Bernhard Dalheimer. Higher costs to produce,
process, store and transport food can take three to six months to show
up on supermarket shelves, where prices typically fall slowly once
increased, they said.
“Most of what we’re seeing now in the food price chain probably predates
the conflict," Foster, a professor of agricultural economics, said.
"We’re cautiously waiting to see what the June numbers and the May
numbers might show as they come out in terms of ... the extent to which
energy shocks in the Strait of Hormuz and shipping blockades and so
forth are going to impact food prices.”
The consumer price index measures changes in what people in U.S. cities
paid at retail stores for meat, bread, milk, produce and other grocery
staples. Over the last 20 years, grocery prices increased an average of
2.6%, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Prices for perishable and refrigerated products tend to increase faster
than prices for packaged goods when energy is an issue. Consumers paid
6.5% more for fresh fruit and vegetables in U.S. cities last month than
they did in April 2025, and 8.8% more for meat, the Labor Department
reported.
But U.S. trade policies and extreme weather also have weighed on U.S.
food prices in the last year. In July 2025, the Trump administration
imposed a 17% duty on fresh tomatoes imported from Mexico; consumer
prices rose 40% in the 12 months before April.
Dry weather in the Western U.S. has been one of many factors pushing up
beef prices, which in April were 15% higher year-over-year. Coffee
prices were up 18.5%, partly due to drought and other weather conditions
that have hurt global coffee production in recent years.
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A person looks at the fresh fish at a grocery store Monday, May 11,
2026, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
 “Today's CPI showed that food prices
have been rising 3.2 percent in the past year, but the story behind
that number is more complicated than just an energy shock,” said
Dalheimer, an assistant professor of macroeconomics and trade in
Purdue’s Department of Agricultural Economics.
Prices for some foods remained more or less flat or declined over 12
months. Milk and chicken dipped slightly. Butter cost 5.8% less in
April than it did a year earlier. Egg prices fell 39% as farmers
rebuilt flocks that were decimated by an ongoing bird flu outbreak.
Food prices and broader inflation are likely to feature prominently
in November's midterm elections. During his 2024 campaign, President
Donald Trump often cited the prices of bacon, cereal, crackers and
other groceries as reasons why voters should return him to the White
House.
Some food producers say they're struggling now because of higher
fuel costs. The Southern Shrimp Alliance, which represents shrimpers
in eight states, said some boats haven't left the dock this spring
because they can't catch enough shrimp to compensate for the cost of
diesel.
Fuel typically makes up 30% to 50% of the costs for U.S. shrimpers,
but because they supply only 6% of the shrimp that Americans
consume, they have limited ability to raise prices or add surcharges
for fuel, the organization said.
Higher fuel prices may also be impacting food costs in other ways.
Part of April's 5% annual increase in prices for nonalcoholic
beverages may be due to the petroleum derivative that goes into
making plastic bottles, Foster said.
“It’s possible some of that’s starting to seep down the supply chain
and get into those prices,” he said.
Over the next year or more, Americans could also see higher food
prices due to spiking fertilizer costs, since around 30% of the
world's fertilizer travels through the Strait of Hormuz.

Fertilizer costs are less of an issue for U.S. farmers this year,
since many already had fertilizer supplies in place before the war
began, according to Foster. But the effects could become more
noticeable next year if the war drags on, he said.
“I expect the Iran conflict to impact the coming years’ food prices
through a couple of channels. One, the energy costs and
transportation handling. The other would be through packaging
costs,” Foster said. “If the conflict were to last longer, then we
might see more coming online as fertilizer prices start to impact
longer-term planting decisions and cropping decisions.”
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