Coconut Oil Monthly Price - Kuwaiti Dinar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2020 - Mar 2026: 441.286 (156.48%)
Chart

Description: Coconut oil (Philippines/Indonesia), bulk, c.i.f. Rotterdam

Unit: Kuwaiti Dinar per Metric Ton



Source: ISTA Mielke GmbH, Oil World; US Department of Agriculture; World Bank.

See also: Coconut Oil production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Coconut oil is a lauric vegetable oil extracted from the dried kernel, or copra, of the coconut palm. In commodity markets it is typically priced as a bulk edible oil in US dollars per metric ton, with the common reference benchmark being coconut oil, Philippines/Indonesia, CIF Rotterdam. That benchmark reflects traded cargoes delivered into a major European import hub and is used to compare physical market values across origins and destinations. Coconut oil is used in food processing, confectionery, bakery fats, and non-food applications such as soaps, detergents, personal care products, and some oleochemical feedstocks. Its fatty-acid profile gives it functional properties that differ from most other vegetable oils, especially its relatively high lauric acid content and solid-to-semi-solid behavior at moderate temperatures. Because it is a tropical tree crop product, its market is shaped by agricultural production rather than annual field cropping, and it often trades in relation to other edible oils and fats that can substitute in processing or formulation.

Supply Drivers

Coconut oil supply depends on the long-lived biology of the coconut palm, which grows in humid tropical climates and requires several years before bearing commercially useful fruit. Production is concentrated in tropical coastal and island regions, especially in Southeast Asia and parts of South Asia and the Pacific, where temperature, rainfall, and soil conditions support palm growth. Output is constrained by the perennial nature of the crop: planting decisions affect supply only after a long lag, and mature trees can remain productive for many years before aging, storm damage, or disease reduces yields. Weather sensitivity is important because drought, excessive rainfall, cyclones, and salt exposure can all affect flowering, nut set, and copra quality. Pest and disease pressure also matters, since coconut palms are vulnerable to a range of regional biological stresses that can reduce harvests over time.

The oil is produced from copra, so drying, storage, and transport infrastructure are central to supply quality and cost. Poor drying can raise free fatty acid levels and lower extractable value. Because coconuts are bulky and relatively low in value per unit weight before processing, logistics from farm areas to mills and export ports can be a persistent bottleneck. Supply also reflects competition from alternative uses of coconuts, including fresh consumption and coconut water, which can affect the volume available for oil extraction. Unlike annual oilseeds, coconut output does not respond quickly to price changes, so supply tends to adjust slowly through replanting, orchard rehabilitation, and changes in farm management.

Demand Drivers

Coconut oil demand comes from both food and industrial uses. In food applications it is valued for its melting behavior, flavor profile, and suitability in confectionery coatings, bakery fats, and processed foods. In non-food markets it is an important feedstock for soaps, surfactants, detergents, and personal care products because its lauric composition supports foaming and cleansing properties. These industrial uses create a structural link with the broader oleochemicals sector, where coconut oil competes with palm kernel oil and, in some formulations, with other vegetable oils and animal fats.

Demand is shaped by substitution. When relative prices shift, processors can reformulate blends using palm oil, palm kernel oil, soybean oil, rapeseed oil, or tallow, depending on the required melting point and chemical properties. Food demand is also influenced by consumer preferences for tropical oils, ingredient labeling, and the functional role of fats in processed foods. Because coconut oil is used in both staple and specialty products, demand is partly tied to household consumption and partly to industrial manufacturing cycles. Seasonal patterns can appear in food and personal care demand, but the larger structural driver is the balance between edible oil prices and the specific technical requirements of end users. Trade flows are important because many consuming regions do not produce coconuts at scale and rely on imports from tropical exporters.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Coconut oil prices are influenced by the US dollar because international trade is commonly invoiced in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect local-currency costs for importers and producer revenues for exporters. Like other storable agricultural commodities, coconut oil is sensitive to financing costs and inventory holding costs: higher interest rates raise the cost of carrying stocks, while lower rates can support larger inventories. The market can exhibit contango or backwardation depending on nearby supply tightness, shipping availability, and storage economics. Because coconut oil is part of the broader vegetable-oil complex, its price often moves with substitution flows among edible oils and fats, and with changes in freight, energy, and processing margins.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 2020282.00-
Jul 2020272.69-3.30%
Aug 2020299.9510.00%
Sep 2020316.275.44%
Oct 2020342.048.15%
Nov 2020418.3122.30%
Dec 2020445.656.54%
Jan 2021443.32-0.52%
Feb 2021436.90-1.45%
Mar 2021465.436.53%
Apr 2021500.297.49%
May 2021516.183.18%
Jun 2021502.74-2.60%
Jul 2021476.47-5.22%
Aug 2021449.22-5.72%
Sep 2021446.89-0.52%
Oct 2021579.9929.78%
Nov 2021592.442.15%
Dec 2021513.11-13.39%
Jan 2022609.8318.85%
Feb 2022649.566.51%
Mar 2022677.774.34%
Apr 2022639.51-5.65%
May 2022555.61-13.12%
Jun 2022520.96-6.24%
Jul 2022473.32-9.15%
Aug 2022425.14-10.18%
Sep 2022385.59-9.30%
Oct 2022343.35-10.95%
Nov 2022361.975.42%
Dec 2022355.12-1.89%
Jan 2023329.55-7.20%
Feb 2023332.390.86%
Mar 2023341.722.81%
Apr 2023328.88-3.76%
May 2023321.39-2.28%
Jun 2023311.03-3.23%
Jul 2023321.133.25%
Aug 2023338.105.28%
Sep 2023330.71-2.19%
Oct 2023323.26-2.25%
Nov 2023343.786.35%
Dec 2023341.44-0.68%
Jan 2024347.521.78%
Feb 2024360.523.74%
Mar 2024395.639.74%
Apr 2024438.6310.87%
May 2024430.49-1.86%
Jun 2024428.39-0.49%
Jul 2024450.885.25%
Aug 2024494.119.59%
Sep 2024529.327.12%
Oct 2024528.90-0.08%
Nov 2024577.059.10%
Dec 2024606.665.13%
Jan 2025610.140.57%
Feb 2025614.290.68%
Mar 2025726.1918.22%
Apr 2025761.984.93%
May 2025848.9311.41%
Jun 2025826.13-2.69%
Jul 2025866.924.94%
Aug 2025837.55-3.39%
Sep 2025791.66-5.48%
Oct 2025777.70-1.76%
Nov 2025746.46-4.02%
Dec 2025709.77-4.92%
Jan 2026671.53-5.39%
Feb 2026689.792.72%
Mar 2026723.294.86%

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