Chennai Egg Rate Today
Updated 13th July 2026 · Source: NECC Chennai
Today’s Rate
₹7.35 /piece
Tray Price
₹220.50 (30 Eggs)
Retail Price
₹8.23
Supermarket Rate
₹8.09
The latest Chennai egg rate for 13th July 2026 is ₹7.35 per egg based on NECC market data. Today’s tray price is ₹220.50, with 100 eggs costing ₹735.00 and one peti priced at ₹1,543.50. Retail and supermarket prices currently stand at ₹8.23 and ₹8.09. Check the updated Chennai egg price table and chart below to see this month complete report.
PRICE TREND
Chennai Egg Rate Summary & Trend
Discover recent trends in Chennai’s egg market through the summary below. Check the highest, lowest, and average prices for this month, then follow the interactive chart to see how rates have changed over time.
Highest
₹7.35 on 13 Jul
Lowest
₹7.20 on 11 Jul
Average
₹7.22 So far this month
FULL BREAKDOWN
Chennai Egg Rates (Last 30 Days)
Access Chennai’s egg prices from the last 30 days in the table below. Compare daily rates for individual eggs, trays, 100 eggs, and petis to better understand recent market activity and pricing trends.
| Date | Piece (₹) | Tray/30 (₹) | 100 Pcs (₹) | Peti/210 (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 Jul 2026 | ₹7.35 | ₹220.50 | ₹735.00 | ₹1,543.50 |
| 12 Jul 2026 | ₹7.30 | ₹219.00 | ₹730.00 | ₹1,533.00 |
| 11 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 10 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 09 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 08 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 07 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 06 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 05 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 04 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 03 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 02 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 01 Jul 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 30 Jun 2026 | ₹7.20 | ₹216.00 | ₹720.00 | ₹1,512.00 |
| 26 Jun 2026 | ₹7.15 | ₹214.50 | ₹715.00 | ₹1,501.50 |
| 25 Jun 2026 | ₹7.15 | ₹214.50 | ₹715.00 | ₹1,501.50 |
| 24 Jun 2026 | ₹7.15 | ₹214.50 | ₹715.00 | ₹1,501.50 |
| 21 Jun 2026 | ₹6.99 | ₹209.70 | ₹699.00 | ₹1,467.90 |
| 20 Jun 2026 | ₹6.99 | ₹209.70 | ₹699.00 | ₹1,467.90 |
| 19 Jun 2026 | ₹6.99 | ₹209.70 | ₹699.00 | ₹1,467.90 |
Chennai Egg Market Overview
Chennai is one of the most active egg markets in South India. The city handles large volumes of eggs every day, driven by a population of over 10 million people and a commercial food sector that spans everything from small tiffin centres to large hotel chains. Tracking the Chennai egg rate is something traders, retailers, and food businesses here do every single morning.
Within Tamil Nadu, Chennai functions as both a major consumption centre and a distribution hub. Eggs arrive here from Namakkal and other production districts, move through wholesale channels, and then spread out to retail markets, supermarkets, restaurants, and households across the city and its suburbs.
Chennai carries a CC designation from NECC, which stands for Consumption Centre. This means Chennai does not set a production-level price like Namakkal does. Instead, the NECC Chennai rate reflects what eggs cost after accounting for production prices in Tamil Nadu plus the transport and handling costs involved in moving them into the city.
Major wholesale activity in Chennai is concentrated in areas like Koyambedu, one of Asia’s largest wholesale markets, where egg traders and commission agents handle large daily volumes. Prices at Koyambedu often set the reference point for what retailers across the city charge that day.
Businesses that buy or sell eggs in Chennai track the daily rate closely because even a small movement in the NECC Chennai rate changes the landed cost of a large order significantly. A ₹0.25 per egg change on a 5,000-egg daily order is ₹1,250 per day. That is not a number anyone in the trade ignores.
Chennai’s egg market is large, fast-moving, and directly connected to Tamil Nadu’s production heartland. What happens in Namakkal on any given morning typically shows up in Chennai’s wholesale price by the next day.
How Chennai Egg Prices Compare with NECC Rates
The NECC egg rate for Chennai is the official suggested wholesale price published every morning by the National Egg Coordination Committee. In simple terms, it is the wholesale rate — the price at which eggs are expected to change hands in bulk between suppliers and commercial buyers.
This is important to understand clearly. The NECC rate is not the retail price you pay at a shop. It is the benchmark for wholesale trade. Retail prices are always higher because they include the retailer’s margin, handling costs, and last-mile delivery.
Small differences between the NECC rate and what buyers actually pay in Chennai’s wholesale markets are normal. These differences are caused by a few factors specific to the city:
- Local demand pressure: On days when demand in Chennai is unusually high, wholesale buyers sometimes pay slightly above the NECC rate to secure their supply. Commission agents know demand is strong and price accordingly.
- Transport variables: If eggs have to travel from a more distant source because Namakkal supply is tight, the extra transport cost gets added to the landed price, pushing it above the standard NECC rate.
- Market timing: Buyers who purchase later in the day sometimes pay different rates than those who buy in the early morning when the full day’s supply has arrived and prices are freshly set.
The NECC egg rate for Chennai is your most reliable daily starting point. Whether you are buying wholesale or retail, knowing this number tells you immediately whether the price you are being quoted is reasonable.
Chennai Egg Supply Network
Chennai does not produce its own eggs at a meaningful scale. The city is a consumer. Every egg in a Chennai shop, restaurant, or supermarket arrived through a supply chain that typically begins more than 300 kilometres away.
Understanding this supply network explains why the Chennai egg rate moves the way it does, and why prices here can sometimes differ from what you see in nearby production cities.
Namakkal: Chennai’s Primary Egg Source
Namakkal in Salem district is India’s most important egg production centre and the single biggest source of eggs for Chennai. The district is home to thousands of commercial layer farms, and it produces hundreds of millions of eggs every month.
Most of what arrives at Chennai’s wholesale markets each morning started its journey in Namakkal the previous night. Trucks load up at farm collection points, drive through the night, and deliver to wholesale agents in the city before markets open in the morning.
This overnight supply chain is remarkably efficient most of the time. But it also means Chennai is sensitive to anything that disrupts Namakkal supply. If production dips or roads are blocked, the shortage shows up in Chennai’s wholesale price the very next day.
Other Supply Sources
While Namakkal dominates, Chennai also draws supply from other areas when needed:
- Other Tamil Nadu production districts: Districts like Erode, Coimbatore, and Salem have growing poultry farm activity and contribute to Chennai’s supply, particularly when Namakkal output is under pressure.
- Andhra Pradesh: When Tamil Nadu supply falls short, eggs come in from large-scale farms in Andhra Pradesh. The longer distance adds transport cost, which pushes the Chennai egg rate higher on those days.
- Chittoor district: Chittoor, just across the Tamil Nadu-Andhra Pradesh border, is another regular supply source for Chennai due to its proximity and strong poultry production base.
From Wholesale to Your Doorstep
Once eggs arrive in Chennai, they move quickly through several layers before reaching the end buyer:
What Causes Chennai Egg Prices to Change?
The egg rate in Chennai does not move for abstract reasons. Every price shift connects back to something specific happening either in the supply chain or in the city’s demand patterns. Here are the factors that matter most in Chennai specifically.
Most price movements in Chennai’s egg market can be traced back to either a change in what is coming in from Namakkal or a change in how much the city wants to buy on that day. Both sides of that equation are worth watching.
Buying Eggs in Chennai: Wholesale vs Retail
How you buy eggs in Chennai determines what you pay. The same egg costs a different price depending on where you are in the supply chain and how much you are buying. Here is a practical breakdown.
| Buyer Type | Wholesale | Retail |
|---|---|---|
| Who typically buys this way | Restaurants, tiffin centres, hotels, bakeries, caterers, institutional buyers, and egg traders | Households, small shops, and individual buyers |
| Typical minimum purchase | One tray (30 eggs) or more, usually hundreds to thousands per order | Any amount, including single eggs |
| Price per egg | At or close to the NECC rate | Typically ₹0.75 to ₹1.50 higher than NECC rate |
| Where to buy | Koyambedu wholesale market, commission agents, direct supplier arrangements | Local shops, neighbourhood vendors, supermarkets |
How Different Buyers in Chennai Approach Egg Purchasing
The way buyers in Chennai secure their daily egg supply varies significantly based on their scale and needs.
- Restaurants and tiffin centres: Most buy through a regular commission agent relationship. They typically place a daily order the evening before, and eggs arrive early the next morning. The rate is renegotiated daily or agreed weekly based on the NECC reference.
- Hotels and catering companies: Large properties and caterers often negotiate monthly supply contracts with wholesale distributors. This gives them price stability and guaranteed daily delivery, which matters when you are running a kitchen at scale.
- Bakeries: Chennai has a strong bakery industry, particularly in neighbourhoods like Mylapore, Adyar, and T. Nagar. Bakeries tend to buy in large weekly volumes and are very price-sensitive because eggs are a core input in their production.
- Households: Most households in Chennai buy retail, either from neighbourhood shops or morning market stalls. The convenience of buying close to home comes at a small premium over the wholesale rate.
For any business buying more than 100 eggs daily, understanding the NECC egg rate for Chennai before placing an order is a basic step that can save a meaningful amount over the course of a month.
Why Chennai Egg Prices Matter to Businesses
For most households, a ₹0.50 change in the egg rate is a minor inconvenience. For a business in Chennai that buys eggs daily, the same change is a serious cost management issue. This is why so many commercial buyers in the city check today’s egg rate in Chennai every morning before the market opens.
Across all of these business types, one habit is common. They check the Chennai egg rate every morning before committing to purchases or adjusting menu costs. This page updates daily with the latest NECC rate for Chennai so you have that number the moment you need it.
In a city the size of Chennai, egg prices are not just a market statistic. They are a daily business input that affects food costs, menu pricing, procurement planning, and profit margins across thousands of businesses every single day.
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