Bananas Monthly Price - Pakistan Rupee per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2001 - Jan 2019: 124.658 (371.23%)
Chart

Description: Bananas (Central & South America), major brands, US import price, free on truck (f.o.t.) US Gulf ports

Unit: Pakistan Rupee per Kilogram



Source: Sopisco News; Union of Banana-Exporting Countries (UPEB); Food and Agricultural Organization; US Bureau of Labor Statistics; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Bananas are a tropical fruit traded internationally in fresh form and priced on commodity markets by weight, commonly in US dollars per kilogram. The standard benchmark for physical trade is often quoted for bananas from Central America and Ecuador delivered free on board at US ports, which reflects export-quality fruit moving through established shipping channels. In commercial markets, bananas are usually sold as green, unripe fruit and ripened closer to the point of retail sale, because ripening is a managed stage in the supply chain rather than a field characteristic.

Bananas are a staple fresh fruit in many importing countries and a major item in supermarket produce departments. They are consumed primarily as a ready-to-eat fruit, but also enter food service, processing, and ingredient markets in dried, pureed, and baby-food forms. Because bananas are highly perishable and sensitive to handling, market pricing reflects not only farm production but also packaging, refrigeration, port logistics, and ripening capacity. Their trade is shaped by standardized varieties, especially the Cavendish group, which dominates export commerce because it tolerates shipping better than many local cultivars.

Supply Drivers

Banana supply is shaped by tropical climate, biological growth cycles, and the logistics of moving a fragile fruit over long distances. Commercial export production is concentrated in humid lowland regions of Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, and parts of Asia where temperatures remain warm year-round and irrigation is available. Ecuador, Central America, the Philippines, and India are long-standing production regions, though only some varieties are oriented toward export. The crop is propagated vegetatively, so plantations are established from plant material rather than seed, which makes disease management and planting material quality central to supply.

Because bananas grow continuously rather than in a single annual harvest, supply depends on plantation management, rainfall patterns, irrigation, and the timing of bunch development. Wind, flooding, drought, and temperature extremes can reduce yields or damage fruit quality. Fungal diseases and pests are persistent constraints, especially those affecting leaves and roots, because they reduce photosynthesis and shorten plantation life. Export supply also depends on packing facilities, cold-chain infrastructure, and port access; fruit must be harvested, packed, and shipped quickly to preserve quality. Production is relatively labor-intensive, and labor availability affects harvesting and field maintenance. Since plantations take time to establish and disease pressures can persist in soil, supply adjusts more slowly than in many annual crops.

Demand Drivers

Banana demand is driven by its role as an inexpensive, convenient fresh fruit with broad consumer acceptance across income groups. In many markets, bananas are purchased for household consumption, school meals, breakfast use, and on-the-go snacking because they are portable, naturally packaged, and require little preparation. Demand is relatively stable compared with many fruits because bananas are available year-round and are often treated as a staple rather than a discretionary purchase.

Substitution patterns matter. Bananas compete with apples, oranges, pears, grapes, and other fresh fruit in retail baskets, while processed forms compete with other fruit purees, dried fruits, and sweet snack ingredients. In food manufacturing, bananas are used in smoothies, baked goods, desserts, and infant foods, where texture and sweetness make them a functional ingredient. Seasonal demand can rise in colder months in importing countries when fresh fruit consumption patterns shift indoors, but the crop’s year-round availability moderates large swings. Income growth tends to support higher fruit consumption overall, though bananas often retain demand even at lower income levels because they are relatively affordable. Consumer preferences, ripening quality, and shelf life also shape demand because retail buyers favor fruit that can be distributed efficiently with limited spoilage.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Banana prices are influenced by exchange rates, freight costs, and broader changes in consumer spending. Because international trade is commonly invoiced in US dollars, a stronger dollar can affect purchasing power in importing markets and alter the local-currency cost of imports. Fuel prices matter because refrigerated shipping and inland transport are central to the supply chain. Interest rates can affect working capital costs for importers, distributors, and ripening operators, especially because bananas move quickly through inventory and require continuous logistics financing.

Storage economics are important: bananas are highly perishable, so they do not lend themselves to long-term warehousing in the way that storable commodities do. This limits classic inventory-driven contango or backwardation patterns, although short-term price differences can still arise from shipping delays, port congestion, or disruptions to cold-chain capacity. Banana prices also tend to be linked to broader fresh-produce inflation and to consumer demand for low-cost staples rather than to financial asset correlations.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 200133.58-
May 200139.3317.12%
Jun 200138.71-1.58%
Jul 200144.5014.96%
Aug 200143.64-1.92%
Sep 200136.59-16.16%
Oct 200130.07-17.83%
Nov 200130.772.33%
Dec 200131.040.89%
Jan 200226.11-15.89%
Feb 200231.3019.89%
Mar 200234.289.50%
Apr 200232.46-5.29%
May 200237.8816.67%
Jun 200239.093.20%
Jul 200232.38-17.15%
Aug 200225.01-22.75%
Sep 200229.0616.15%
Oct 200231.9610.00%
Nov 200223.49-26.51%
Dec 200236.8857.00%
Jan 200332.64-11.50%
Feb 200326.72-18.14%
Mar 200328.366.16%
Apr 200321.96-22.57%
May 200317.32-21.14%
Jun 200317.893.32%
Jul 200317.33-3.17%
Aug 200316.76-3.29%
Sep 200317.916.90%
Oct 200319.026.18%
Nov 200323.5123.59%
Dec 200321.17-9.95%
Jan 200424.6916.62%
Feb 200428.6916.23%
Mar 200429.292.09%
Apr 200430.463.96%
May 200432.285.98%
Jun 200434.747.63%
Jul 200434.940.59%
Aug 200432.18-7.90%
Sep 200431.85-1.05%
Oct 200429.61-7.04%
Nov 200429.10-1.69%
Dec 200429.752.23%
Jan 200534.8817.25%
Feb 200552.6250.85%
Mar 200546.71-11.24%
Apr 200534.88-25.32%
May 200536.895.74%
Jun 200529.25-20.71%
Jul 200523.86-18.43%
Aug 200523.870.04%
Sep 200535.3147.94%
Oct 200537.626.56%
Nov 200535.27-6.26%
Dec 200538.8910.26%
Jan 200641.306.18%
Feb 200650.9023.25%
Mar 200649.80-2.15%
Apr 200643.79-12.07%
May 200655.8627.57%
Jun 200639.12-29.97%
Jul 200633.76-13.70%
Aug 200632.58-3.51%
Sep 200632.660.27%
Oct 200633.322.02%
Nov 200636.439.31%
Dec 200640.1910.33%
Jan 200738.98-3.02%
Feb 200739.511.37%
Mar 200739.46-0.13%
Apr 200739.470.04%
May 200741.866.04%
Jun 200747.3113.02%
Jul 200744.11-6.76%
Aug 200742.35-4.00%
Sep 200740.01-5.51%
Oct 200740.050.10%
Nov 200739.64-1.04%
Dec 200739.790.40%
Jan 200842.246.15%
Feb 200848.3614.49%
Mar 200863.1830.62%
Apr 200861.82-2.14%
May 200862.380.90%
Jun 200858.61-6.05%
Jul 200851.01-12.96%
Aug 200859.6416.92%
Sep 200861.873.73%
Oct 200865.075.18%
Nov 200872.0010.65%
Dec 200865.64-8.83%
Jan 200964.99-0.99%
Feb 200974.8215.12%
Mar 200973.16-2.21%
Apr 200971.68-2.03%
May 200966.96-6.59%
Jun 200968.952.98%
Jul 200968.27-0.98%
Aug 200968.810.78%
Sep 200968.02-1.15%
Oct 200967.48-0.79%
Nov 200969.362.78%
Dec 200967.30-2.96%
Jan 201066.87-0.65%
Feb 201061.19-8.50%
Mar 201070.9415.94%
Apr 201069.71-1.73%
May 201067.50-3.17%
Jun 201081.9521.40%
Jul 201084.743.40%
Aug 201077.11-9.01%
Sep 201075.56-2.01%
Oct 201079.134.73%
Nov 201077.90-1.56%
Dec 201077.20-0.90%
Jan 201176.32-1.13%
Feb 201185.3811.87%
Mar 201185.400.02%
Apr 201187.222.14%
May 201186.07-1.32%
Jun 201184.13-2.26%
Jul 201182.65-1.76%
Aug 201182.36-0.36%
Sep 201183.140.96%
Oct 201182.60-0.66%
Nov 201183.471.06%
Dec 201184.050.69%
Jan 201285.782.06%
Feb 201297.1013.19%
Mar 2012103.526.62%
Apr 201293.44-9.73%
May 201286.69-7.23%
Jun 201289.563.31%
Jul 201290.691.25%
Aug 201289.81-0.97%
Sep 201290.861.17%
Oct 201291.610.82%
Nov 201289.35-2.47%
Dec 201291.452.35%
Jan 201390.73-0.78%
Feb 201390.20-0.59%
Mar 201392.262.29%
Apr 201388.55-4.02%
May 201389.601.18%
Jun 201389.800.22%
Jul 201392.653.17%
Aug 201396.914.60%
Sep 201399.142.30%
Oct 201398.90-0.25%
Nov 201398.950.05%
Dec 201398.54-0.41%
Jan 201498.12-0.43%
Feb 201499.921.83%
Mar 201495.88-4.04%
Apr 201490.84-5.25%
May 201489.84-1.10%
Jun 201491.682.05%
Jul 201491.870.21%
Aug 201496.344.87%
Sep 201494.34-2.08%
Oct 201492.62-1.82%
Nov 201491.75-0.94%
Dec 201491.870.13%
Jan 201591.77-0.11%
Feb 2015101.5310.63%
Mar 2015105.954.35%
Apr 2015105.04-0.86%
May 201595.76-8.83%
Jun 201593.69-2.17%
Jul 201595.672.12%
Aug 201598.362.80%
Sep 201599.150.80%
Oct 201597.29-1.87%
Nov 201598.120.85%
Dec 201597.46-0.67%
Jan 2016109.1311.98%
Feb 2016109.960.76%
Mar 2016105.79-3.79%
Apr 2016103.71-1.96%
May 2016103.720.01%
Jun 2016103.64-0.08%
Jul 2016105.902.19%
Aug 2016108.932.86%
Sep 2016104.66-3.92%
Oct 2016101.59-2.93%
Nov 2016100.62-0.96%
Dec 2016100.640.03%
Jan 2017104.854.18%
Feb 2017110.084.98%
Mar 2017112.191.92%
Apr 2017111.15-0.93%
May 2017114.292.83%
Jun 2017115.370.94%
Jul 2017116.180.70%
Aug 2017115.94-0.21%
Sep 2017115.950.01%
Oct 2017113.86-1.80%
Nov 2017113.880.02%
Dec 2017119.975.34%
Jan 2018124.924.13%
Feb 2018140.4112.40%
Mar 2018130.08-7.36%
Apr 2018134.103.09%
May 2018132.96-0.85%
Jun 2018138.534.19%
Jul 2018142.552.90%
Aug 2018137.73-3.38%
Sep 2018137.920.14%
Oct 2018146.936.53%
Nov 2018149.972.07%
Dec 2018156.744.51%
Jan 2019158.240.96%

Top Companies

Dole Food Co.
Website: http://www.dole.com/
Location: Westlake Village, CA, USA

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