How tomatoes have become the latest symbol of America’s affordability squeeze – Firstpost


Tomatoes, a staple ingredient found everywhere from fast-food sandwiches to fine dining dishes, are increasingly serving a purpose beyond the kitchen: They have become a persistent reminder of escalating living costs.

The price of the popular red fruit has surged more sharply than that of any other food item over the past year, making it one of the latest sources of frustration for consumers.

“The tomato has become a symbol of something much deeper,” Isaac Bernal Carbajo, a chef based in New York City who bemoaned the way price hikes are affecting life’s “simplest pleasures,” tells the Associated Press (AP).

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“Something as basic as buying fresh vegetables is starting to become a serious financial decision for many families.”

How inflation has hit grocery stores in the US

According to the latest Consumer Price Index, tomato prices have climbed roughly 40 per cent compared to a year ago, far outpacing increases in other grocery categories.

Coffee prices have risen 18.5 per cent, beef roasts 17.8 per cent, and frozen fish and seafood 12 per cent, among other products that have come to represent the growing affordability pressures facing Americans.

Another measure of inflation released on Thursday indicated that overall prices were 3.8 per cent higher in April than they were a year earlier, marking the strongest annual increase in nearly three years.

How Trump 2.0 agenda has influenced inflation

In addition to fluctuations in crop production, analysts point to two major elements of US President Donald Trump’s second-term agenda as contributing factors behind higher tomato prices:
the conflict with Iran and tariff policies.

The war pushed up fuel prices and transportation expenses, while the United States also exited an agreement that had permitted tomatoes from Mexico to enter the country duty-free. Mexico supplies the bulk of tomatoes consumed in the US.

Speaking to AP, Usha Haley, an economist at Wichita State University, describes the situation as “a perfect storm of trade policy, extreme weather and Mideast policy.”

US tomato growers welcomed the decision to leave the agreement last July, arguing that it would support the revival of a domestic industry that had been steadily shrinking.

For consumers, however, the consequences have been less favourable. Although Washington withdrew from the Mexico tomato accord in July, the effects were not immediately visible on store shelves because imports continued to arrive during late winter and early spring.

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Once those shipments entered the market, they became subject to a 17 per cent tariff.

“Tariffs are undeniably a big driver of the price inflation,” Brett Massimino, a business professor at Virginia Commonwealth University tells AP. “Because the US relies on Mexico for the majority of its tomato supply, any changes in trade policy can have a large impact.”

Federal figures show that tariff revenue collected on tomatoes skyrocketed from just $16,424 in 2024 to almost $4.6 million, representing an extraordinary increase of 27,879 per cent.

How customers have reacted

As those higher costs filter through the supply chain, frustrated shoppers have taken to social media, recording videos in grocery stores to complain about prices they claim have quadrupled.

Some
have even pledged to grow their own produce rather than pay as much as $8 per pound. The burden, however, has been especially significant for businesses that depend heavily on tomatoes in their menus.

Restaurant pricing tracker MarginEdge reports that grape tomatoes have seen the steepest increase, rising 65 per cent in only one month, while prices have climbed across virtually every tomato variety.

Phillip Coles, a professor of supply chain management at Lehigh University, believes prices are likely to ease later this year as domestically produced tomatoes reach the market.

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He adds that elevated prices will also “induce farmers to increase planting to meet the demand, but this takes longer because of the lead time.”

For now, though, companies such as Snarf’s Sandwiches, which includes tomatoes in nearly all of its sandwiches, are feeling the strain.

Wayne Humphrey, chief operating officer of Snarf’s, which runs dozens of locations across Colorado, Missouri and Texas, said the cost of a case of tomatoes had jumped from $27 to $93 within a year. Those increases come on top of rising costs for other essentials such as bread and beef, as well as higher labour expenses.

“That single ingredient now costs us more than $1.7 million in additional spend annually,” Humphrey tells AP.

“The math is getting harder to ignore.”

With inputs from AP

First Published:
May 29, 2026, 21:20 IST

End of Article

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