NECC Egg Price · Daily City Update

Bangalore Egg Rate Today

Updated 13th July 2026 · Source: NECC Bangalore

Today’s Rate

₹7.25 /piece

Tray Price

₹217.50 (30 Eggs)

Retail Price

₹8.12

Supermarket Rate

₹7.98

As of 13th July 2026, today’s Bangalore egg rate is 7.25 per piece according to NECC Bangalore. A tray of 30 eggs costs ₹217.50, while 100 eggs and one peti are priced at 725.00 and 1,522.50 respectively. The current retail and supermarket rates are ₹8.12 and ₹7.98. Check the updated Bangalore egg price table and chart below to see this month summary.

PRICE TREND

Bangalore Egg Rate Summary & Trend

See how egg prices have changed in Bangalore over recent weeks. Review the month’s highest, lowest, and average prices, then use the interactive chart below to follow the latest pricing trend.

Highest

7.25 on 13 Jul

Lowest

7.10 on 10 Jul

Average

₹7.12 So far this month

Per-piece price, last 15 days ₹7.05 → ₹7.25

FULL BREAKDOWN

Bangalore Egg Rates (Last 30 Days)

Browse Bangalore’s egg prices from the last 30 days in the table below. Check daily rates for individual eggs, trays, 100 eggs, and peti to compare recent price movements and historical data.

Date Piece (₹) Tray/30 (₹) 100 Pcs (₹) Peti/210 (₹)
13 Jul 2026 ₹7.25 ₹217.50 ₹725.00 ₹1,522.50
12 Jul 2026 ₹7.20 ₹216.00 ₹720.00 ₹1,512.00
11 Jul 2026 ₹7.15 ₹214.50 ₹715.00 ₹1,501.50
10 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
09 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
08 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
07 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
06 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
05 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
04 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
03 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
02 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
01 Jul 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
30 Jun 2026 ₹7.10 ₹213.00 ₹710.00 ₹1,491.00
26 Jun 2026 ₹7.05 ₹211.50 ₹705.00 ₹1,480.50
25 Jun 2026 ₹7.05 ₹211.50 ₹705.00 ₹1,480.50
24 Jun 2026 ₹7.05 ₹211.50 ₹705.00 ₹1,480.50
21 Jun 2026 ₹3.98 ₹119.40 ₹398.00 ₹835.80
20 Jun 2026 ₹3.95 ₹118.50 ₹395.00 ₹829.50
19 Jun 2026 ₹3.95 ₹118.50 ₹395.00 ₹829.50
Bangalore Egg Market

Bangalore’s Egg Market Overview

The Bangalore egg rate is one of the most searched daily egg prices in South India. As one of India’s fastest-growing cities, Bengaluru has an egg market that is large, commercially active, and driven by a uniquely diverse mix of consumers — from millions of urban households to one of the country’s biggest concentrations of hotels, restaurants, cafes, and corporate food operations.

Unlike many cities that rely primarily on household consumption to drive egg demand, Bangalore’s market is shaped significantly by its commercial food sector. The city’s dense restaurant culture, its large IT workforce eating in office cafeterias, and its booming cloud kitchen and food delivery ecosystem make Bengaluru a high-volume, commercially intensive egg market every single day of the week.

CC
NECC Consumption Centre
12M+
City region population
Daily
High-volume egg demand
Multi
Commercial buyer segments

Bangalore holds a CC (Consumption Centre) designation from NECC. This means the published NECC egg rate for Bangalore already reflects the transport cost of getting eggs from production areas like Namakkal into the city. Bangalore does not set a production-level price — it receives supply and its rate is calibrated accordingly.

Wholesalers, retailers, restaurants, and food businesses across Bengaluru track the daily egg rate closely because the city’s scale means even a small per-egg price change affects costs significantly. A large cloud kitchen or hotel buying 2,000 eggs daily feels a ₹0.25 change as ₹500 in additional daily cost, which is why the NECC rate for Bangalore is checked every morning without exception by serious buyers.

Bangalore’s egg market is not seasonal in the same way as cooler northern cities. Demand here runs at a high base level year-round, driven by commercial food businesses that operate every day regardless of weather or season.

Price Structure

Why Bangalore Egg Prices Are Different from Production Hubs

Bangalore’s egg prices are structurally different from what you see in production cities like Namakkal or Barwala. The reasons are specific to Bengaluru’s geography and supply chain, not just generic “transport adds cost” explanations.

Namakkal: Bangalore’s Primary Supply Source
Namakkal in Tamil Nadu is the single biggest source of eggs for Bangalore. The two cities are roughly 350 kilometres apart by road. Trucks load up at Namakkal’s farm collection points in the afternoon, drive overnight, and arrive at Bangalore’s wholesale markets before dawn. This overnight supply chain is efficient but adds real transport cost to every egg’s price before it even reaches a wholesale agent.
Karnataka’s Own Production
Karnataka does have commercial layer farming activity, particularly in districts like Chikkaballapura, Kolar, and parts of Hassan and Tumkur. However, local Karnataka production does not come close to meeting Bangalore’s daily demand. The city supplements heavily with Namakkal supply and, when needed, eggs from Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.
Why Farm-Gate Prices Are Lower
A farmer selling eggs in Namakkal gets significantly less per egg than the NECC rate for Bangalore. The gap between the Namakkal farm-gate rate and the Bangalore wholesale rate reflects transport cost, fuel, driver wages, loading and unloading, and any handling losses during transit. This gap is real and consistent. It is not a market inefficiency — it is the actual cost of moving eggs 350 kilometres overnight.
When Prices Move Independently
Bangalore’s egg price can move differently from Namakkal’s on any given day. If demand in Bangalore spikes due to a festival or a large institutional order, wholesale agents in the city may price above the NECC rate to manage limited incoming supply. Conversely, on days of heavy supply arrivals and moderate demand, Bangalore prices may ease slightly below the suggested NECC rate. Local supply-demand dynamics always overlay the national benchmark.

For any buyer in Bangalore, the key number is the NECC CC rate for Bengaluru, not the Namakkal production rate. The two figures serve different purposes and relate to different points in the supply chain.

Wholesale Market

Understanding Bangalore’s Wholesale Egg Market

Bangalore’s wholesale egg market operates on a tight daily cycle. Eggs arrive overnight, prices are set by commission agents at wholesale markets in the early morning, and buyers from across the city place their orders before the working day begins. Understanding how this works helps buyers get better pricing and avoid paying unnecessary premiums.

Wholesale Buying

Wholesale egg buying in Bangalore is concentrated at major wholesale markets in areas like KR Market (Krishna Rajendra Market), Yeshwanthpur, and key points in Whitefield and Electronic City — areas where large commercial kitchens and food distribution businesses are active.

The buyers who come to these wholesale points are not households. They are:

  • Hotels and large restaurants: Properties ranging from budget hotels to five-star establishments buy eggs in daily bulk quantities. A mid-sized hotel in Indiranagar or Koramangala might purchase anywhere from 500 to 3,000 eggs per day depending on occupancy and food operations.
  • Cloud kitchens: Bangalore has one of India’s highest concentrations of cloud kitchens. These operations serve delivery-only menus and often run multiple brands from a single kitchen, creating concentrated egg demand that is difficult to fully appreciate from the outside.
  • IT company cafeterias: Bangalore’s technology sector employs hundreds of thousands of people who eat in employer-subsidised cafeterias. These operations buy eggs at volume, and many negotiate weekly or monthly supply contracts directly with wholesale distributors.
  • Institutional buyers: Hospitals, college hostels, and large residential complexes across the city buy eggs regularly through wholesale channels to manage food costs at scale.

For all of these buyers, the day starts with checking the morning rate before committing to their daily order. That is why the today egg rate in Bangalore wholesale market is one of the most practically useful pieces of information on this page.

Paper Rate vs NECC Rate

Two rate figures come up regularly when egg traders in Bangalore discuss daily prices. Understanding the difference between them is useful for anyone buying eggs at a wholesale level.

Rate Type What It Is Who Uses It How It’s Set
NECC Rate Official suggested wholesale benchmark published daily by NECC before 7 AM IST National reference used by traders, commercial buyers, and price-tracking platforms Set by NECC based on production data, demand signals, and regional market feedback
Paper Rate Rate declared by local trader associations or market groups at the start of each trading session Used by buyers and sellers at local wholesale markets and mandis in Bangalore Set by local trader groups based on that morning’s supply arrivals, demand, and the prevailing NECC rate

In practice, the paper rate and the NECC rate for Bangalore track each other closely most of the time. They can diverge slightly when local supply is tighter or heavier than the NECC rate anticipates. A paper rate running consistently above the NECC rate is a reliable signal that Bangalore’s local supply is under pressure. A rate running below the NECC benchmark suggests heavy arrivals and softer demand.

Experienced traders in Bangalore watch both figures. The NECC rate tells them what the national benchmark is. The paper rate tells them what is actually transacting in the market that morning. The gap between the two is the signal.

Commercial Demand

How Bangalore’s Food Industry Influences Egg Demand

No city in South India has a food industry quite like Bangalore’s. The combination of a cosmopolitan population, a large tech workforce, an enormous restaurant scene, and one of India’s most developed food delivery ecosystems creates commercial egg demand that is unusually high for a city that does not produce eggs locally.

Chef using trays of fresh eggs in a commercial kitchen in Bangalore, representing egg demand from restaurants, hotels, bakeries, cafés, cloud kitchens, and food businesses.
Restaurants and Cafes
Bangalore has one of the densest restaurant ecosystems in India. Neighbourhoods like Indiranagar, Koramangala, HSR Layout, and Whitefield are packed with food establishments ranging from South Indian breakfast spots to multi-cuisine restaurants. Eggs appear on almost every menu, and daily consumption across the city’s restaurant sector is enormous.
Bakeries and Patisseries
Bangalore has a strong bakery culture built over decades, with established bakery brands and a newer wave of patisseries and artisan bakers driven by the city’s affluent consumer base. Bakeries are volume egg buyers. Bread, cakes, croissants, pastries, and savoury bakes all depend on eggs, and bakeries purchase regularly and in quantities that make them sensitive to every daily price movement.
Cloud Kitchens
Bangalore is India’s cloud kitchen capital. These delivery-only food operations often run multiple brands from one kitchen, each with its own egg-intensive menu. A single cloud kitchen unit in Electronic City or Sarjapur Road might serve hundreds of delivery orders daily across brands, making eggs one of its highest-volume daily inputs. Cloud kitchens collectively represent a significant and growing share of Bangalore’s total egg demand.
Hotels and Banquet Operations
Bangalore’s hospitality sector is large and varied, from budget business hotels in Marathahalli and Hebbal to luxury properties in MG Road and UB City. Hotel breakfast operations, in-room dining, restaurant outlets, and banquet catering all consume eggs daily in high volumes. Conference and tech event seasons drive hotel occupancy up and push commercial egg demand higher with it.
IT Cafeterias
Corporate campuses across Whitefield, Electronic City, Manyata Tech Park, and Outer Ring Road feed thousands of employees at subsidised rates every working day. Egg dishes — omelettes, boiled eggs, egg curries — are cafeteria staples. IT cafeteria operators buy eggs through contracted vendors at negotiated wholesale rates, and their combined daily consumption across Bangalore’s tech corridors is substantial.
Food Delivery Ecosystem
Bangalore’s food delivery volumes are among the highest in India. Swiggy was founded here. Zomato has one of its largest market bases here. The egg dishes ordered through these platforms — from egg biryani to omelette sandwiches to breakfast rolls — flow through cloud kitchens and restaurants that buy eggs wholesale every morning. The delivery ecosystem effectively amplifies commercial egg demand beyond what is visible in restaurant footfall alone.

The combined effect of all these commercial demand sources is what makes Bangalore’s egg market behave differently from other South Indian cities of similar size. Even a modest collective increase in orders across the city’s food delivery platforms can translate into meaningfully higher daily egg procurement needs, pushing wholesale demand up without any change in household consumption.

In Bangalore, commercial food businesses likely account for a larger share of total daily egg consumption than in most comparable Indian cities. This is why the Bangalore egg rate tends to stay firm even during periods when household demand softens.

Seasonal Patterns

Seasonal Trends in Bangalore’s Egg Market

Bangalore’s climate is milder than most Indian cities, which means seasonal egg demand swings are less dramatic here than in cities like Delhi or Kolkata. But they do exist, and understanding them helps buyers plan purchases more effectively.

October to February
Peak Demand
Bangalore’s coolest months drive the highest household egg consumption of the year. Cooler evening temperatures increase appetite, and the city’s festival season — Diwali, Christmas, New Year’s — adds commercial catering and party demand on top. Hotel occupancy rises with business conference season and year-end tourism. The Bangalore egg rate typically runs at its highest during this window.
March to May
Softer Period
Pre-monsoon heat reduces household egg consumption somewhat. However, Bangalore’s commercial food businesses continue buying at near-normal volumes because restaurants, hotels, and cloud kitchens operate regardless of season. The egg rate softens but does not fall sharply the way it does in cities more dependent on household demand.
June to September
Monsoon Season
Bangalore’s monsoon is generally manageable, but heavy rain on key road connections from Namakkal can delay overnight supply arrivals. On days when truck deliveries are delayed, wholesale market arrivals are lower and prices spike short-term. Demand from IT cafeterias and restaurants remains steady throughout the monsoon, maintaining a solid commercial base under any supply disruption.

School Reopening and Its Effect on Egg Demand

One Bangalore-specific seasonal trigger is school reopening after summer vacation, typically in June. When schools reopen, several demand streams restart together:

  • School canteens and mid-day meal programs resume purchasing
  • Households returning from summer travel resume normal cooking patterns
  • College hostel and student mess facilities reopen after holidays

This collective restart of institutional and household demand in June coincides with the start of the monsoon, when supply can be intermittently disrupted. That combination makes June one of the more price-volatile months in Bangalore’s egg calendar.

Technology Sector Influence on Demand Patterns

Bangalore has a demand pattern that most Indian cities do not: corporate event season. Between September and December, Bangalore hosts a high volume of technology conferences, product launches, investor summits, and corporate offsites. These events fill hotel banqueting operations and push commercial catering demand up across the city at the same time as festival season household demand is rising.

This overlap between peak corporate event season and festival-driven household demand in the October to December window is a Bangalore-specific factor that pushes the egg rate here higher during this period than the city’s generally mild climate would otherwise suggest.

Unlike most Indian cities where seasonal egg price patterns are driven mainly by weather and festivals, Bangalore’s egg market is also shaped by the business calendar of the technology sector. That is a market behaviour pattern unique to Bengaluru.

Browse Popular Cities Egg Rates

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QUESTIONS

FAQs

As of 13th July 2026, today’s Bangalore egg rate is 7.25 per piece according to NECC Bangalore. A tray of 30 eggs costs ₹217.50, while 100 eggs and one peti are priced at 725.00 and 1,522.50 respectively.

Unlike production hubs, Bangalore is primarily a consumption market. Most of its eggs come from Namakkal (Tamil Nadu) and Karnataka’s own production zones, such as Dharwad and Haveri, and are transported daily to meet the city’s high demand.

Bangalore’s rates include added transport and logistics costs since eggs travel from producing regions like Namakkal and Dharwad, unlike self-sufficient hubs where prices stay closer to the farm-gate rate.

Egg prices in Bangalore change daily, following NECC updates that reflect local demand, transport/fuel costs, and supply from production regions.

Price spikes in Bangalore are usually driven by high institutional demand (cafes, hotels, restaurants), festival season, school-reopening demand, or fuel price hikes that raise transport costs from supplying regions.