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Home Business Economy

Why are food prices rising so fast?

August 20, 2025
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Pritti Mistry and Emer Moreau

Business reporters, BBC News

Getty Images A woman in a pale green jacket holds a jar of instant coffee and looks at the label while standing in the supermarket coffee and tea aisle.Getty Images

Food price inflation has risen for four months in a row

The cost of everyday food items from instant coffee to beef and fruit juices has continued to rise.

The latest inflation data shows food and non-alcoholic drink prices rose 4.9% in the year to July, the highest annual rate of food and drink inflation since February 2024.

So why is this? And are there any signs these price rises in supermarkets, restaurants and cafes could ease soon?

Lewis Clare Lewis is wearing a dark sweater with a tweed flat cap on his head. He holds a gingery-brown chicken close to his chest while standing outside a barn, with a partly cloudy sky and part of a building visible in the background.Lewis Clare

Lewis Clare’s family farm near Manchester has been running for 250 years

One contributing factor is the climate.

Drought in the UK has meant that crop yields were lower this year, while extreme weather in other countries has raised the wholesale prices of goods like coffee beans and cocoa.

A bad harvest means good crops are “worth more money”, according to one farmer.

Lewis Clare, who produces organic oats and pigs on his 160-acre farm near Manchester, said: “The weather is going to be driving costs up.”

He went on: “I hate to say I think it’s going to go up even more.

“This year has been a problem. It’s been incredibly dry, the crops and yields have been terrible.”

Global events like the war in Ukraine also affect supply chains and push prices up.

Mr Clare said he used to produce eggs but had to remodel his business after Russia invaded Ukraine.

“Whether it’s some kind of extreme weather event or something dramatic like the war in Ukraine, the farmers are the first to feel it, because we are at the frontline, and then it sort of trickles down through to the consumer six to 18 months down the line,” he said.

Business owners have also had to grapple with a rise in the minimum wage, as well as higher employer National Insurance Contributions, which they’ve had to pay since April.

Jane Matthews, operations director of the Ice Cream Farm in Cheshire, said her business is constantly having to absorb rising costs, from payroll to food to energy.

“We’re being squeezed on all corners,” she told BBC News. But, she added, the company was conscious that “customers’ budgets are also squeezed”.

She said the company felt it had no choice but to pass on these costs to their customers.

“You’ve got to make these decisions now so you can keep going, [otherwise] you might not to be able to employ more people or [have to] close certain things during the year.”

Research published on Tuesday showed that many people are cutting back on fast food and casual dining, replacing it with smaller treats like coffee or a bar of chocolate.

Ms Matthews said she had noticed this through the number of picnics on the farm.

“People might bring a basic picnic and supplement it with a bag of chips for the kids,” she said.

“So we’ve embraced that in the hope that they will still spend here.”

Elaine Doran Jane Matthews, a white woman wearing a white blouse, stands in front of an ice cream counter. Elaine Doran

Jane Matthews is operations director of the Ice Cream Farm in Cheshire

‘Inflation makes everything more expensive’

For many families, the weekly supermarket shop is the most obvious indicator that the cost of living is still going up, especially when the cost of everyday staples is rising.

Rapid rises in food prices hit low-income families the hardest, according to the Resolution Foundation think tank.

Lalitha Try, an economist at the Resolution Foundation, said that low-income families spend a greater portion of their money on food, so they are more sensitive to price rises at the supermarket.

People and families with a higher income have options if they want to cut back, such as switching to own-brand products, but lower-income households are often already doing that, so there are fewer choices to make, she said.

Danni Hewson, the head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said consumer trends were also a factor, as demand for high-protein meals had also helped drive up the price of beef.

Even then, households with higher incomes were not immune to rising inflation, she said.

“Most people live to their means, so they may have a car payment, a chunky mortgage, or pay private school fees, and all of those things are what equates to their standard of living they’re used to enjoying,” she said.

“But inflation makes everything more expensive and at some point even people on chunky salaries are having to ask questions about how far their money will stretch and what they might have to give up or change in order to keep the bills in check.”

While the headline inflation figure for food and drink was 4.9%, it is worth remembering that it only shows how much prices have changed over the last year.

In the five years to July, the price of food and non-alcoholic drinks rose by around 37%.

The Bank of England expects food price inflation to peak at around 5.5% at the end of the year, before falling to between 2% and 3% in 2026.

But the Bank said there are “uncertainties” around this prediction. Retailers could come under pressure to minimise price increases if consumers vote with their feet and sales fall. But equally, more extreme weather in other parts of the world could raise wholesale prices even more, which would ultimately be passed on to customers.

It also strengthened expectations that the Bank will slow down the pace of interest rate cuts, as inflation remains above its 2% target.

Ruth Gregory, deputy chief economist for Capital Economics, noted that high food prices risked changing people’s expectations about the rate of future price increases.

But she added that given food inflation – and inflation in general – was rising along the lines of the Bank’s expectations, it was unlikely to have much impact on decisions about future interest rate cuts.

The next set of inflation figures, published in a month’s time, will be closely watched.



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