Fish (salmon) Monthly Price - Kuwaiti Dinar per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2020 - Mar 2026: 0.760 (36.44%)
Chart

Description: Fish (salmon), Farm Bred Norwegian Salmon, export price, Kuwaiti Dinar per Kilogram

Unit: Kuwaiti Dinar per Kilogram



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Salmon is a high-value seafood commodity traded primarily as farmed Atlantic salmon, with prices commonly quoted on an export basis in US dollars per kilogram. A widely used benchmark is the export price for farm-bred Norwegian salmon, which reflects conditions in one of the most important aquaculture supply regions. Salmon is sold in multiple forms, including whole fresh fish, fillets, frozen product, and processed portions, but benchmark pricing usually refers to whole fish at the farm gate or export point. The commodity is valued for its mild flavor, high fat content, and consistent flesh quality, which make it suitable for fresh retail, foodservice, and processing. It is also used in smoked products, sushi, ready meals, and chilled packaged seafood. Because salmon is a farmed animal protein rather than a mined or harvested crop, its market structure is shaped by biological growth cycles, feed costs, disease management, and cold-chain logistics. Prices are influenced by the balance between aquaculture output from northern hemisphere producing regions and demand from affluent consumer markets in Europe, North America, and Asia.

Supply Drivers

Salmon supply is dominated by aquaculture, especially in cold coastal waters where sea temperatures, fjord geography, and marine infrastructure support cage farming. Norway, Chile, Scotland, Canada, and parts of the North Atlantic and Pacific rim are long-standing production regions because they combine suitable water temperatures with access to sheltered sites and export logistics. Production is constrained by biology: salmon require several months to grow from smolt to harvest size, so supply responds with a lag to changes in stocking decisions, feed availability, and mortality. This lag makes output less flexible than many agricultural commodities.

Disease, parasites, and environmental stress are persistent supply risks. Sea lice pressure, bacterial infections, algal blooms, oxygen stress, and storm damage can reduce harvest volumes or raise production costs. Regulatory limits on site density, fish welfare, and environmental discharge also shape output by restricting expansion in some locations. Feed is another structural input, and the cost and availability of fishmeal, fish oil, and plant-based substitutes affect farm economics. Transport matters because salmon is highly perishable; air freight, refrigerated trucking, and cold storage are essential for reaching distant markets. Wild salmon exists as a separate supply stream, but it is much smaller in commercial price formation than farmed salmon and is more exposed to river conditions, ocean survival, and fishing quotas.

Demand Drivers

Demand for salmon is driven by its role as a premium protein in retail and foodservice. Consumers value it for convenience, perceived health attributes, and versatility in fresh, smoked, and prepared formats. Demand is strongest in markets with established chilled seafood distribution and high household purchasing power, including Europe, North America, and parts of East Asia. Because salmon is often purchased as a fresh or lightly processed product, demand is sensitive to refrigeration logistics, shelf life, and consumer preference for quality consistency.

Substitution is important. Salmon competes with other seafood such as trout, tuna, cod, shrimp, and whitefish, as well as with poultry and other animal proteins in prepared meals. When salmon prices rise relative to these alternatives, buyers may shift toward lower-cost proteins or toward frozen and processed seafood formats. Seasonal patterns also matter: consumption often strengthens around holidays, grilling seasons, and periods of higher restaurant traffic, while supply can be affected by biological harvest timing and weather. Income elasticity is relatively high compared with staple proteins, so demand tends to be more responsive to household income and foodservice spending than to basic caloric needs. Long-run demand is also shaped by the expansion of aquaculture-based seafood supply chains and by consumer familiarity with salmon as a standardized, branded product.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Salmon prices are influenced by exchange rates because international trade is commonly invoiced in US dollars while production costs are incurred in local currencies. A weaker local currency can improve farm-gate returns for exporters, while a stronger currency can compress margins. Feed costs link salmon to broader agricultural and marine ingredient markets, and energy prices affect refrigeration, processing, and transport. Because salmon is perishable, storage is limited relative to grains or metals, so inventory cannot be carried cheaply for long periods; this reduces the role of classic contango and backwardation, though short-term supply gluts or shortages can still affect nearby pricing. Demand also responds to general consumer spending conditions, especially in restaurant and premium grocery channels. Compared with many commodities, salmon has a stronger link to foodservice and retail margins than to industrial cycles.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 20202.09-
Jul 20201.79-14.37%
Aug 20201.73-2.99%
Sep 20201.66-4.36%
Oct 20201.60-3.50%
Nov 20201.600.29%
Dec 20201.695.24%
Jan 20211.743.02%
Feb 20211.835.04%
Mar 20212.2121.05%
Apr 20212.283.05%
May 20212.426.17%
Jun 20212.13-11.95%
Jul 20212.150.94%
Aug 20211.99-7.42%
Sep 20211.86-6.74%
Oct 20212.028.68%
Nov 20211.98-1.77%
Dec 20212.2413.12%
Jan 20222.438.19%
Feb 20222.6710.08%
Mar 20222.867.21%
Apr 20223.1710.70%
May 20223.231.90%
Jun 20223.04-5.90%
Jul 20222.72-10.63%
Aug 20222.28-16.00%
Sep 20221.91-16.45%
Oct 20222.057.61%
Nov 20222.175.58%
Dec 20222.4211.68%
Jan 20232.8216.61%
Feb 20232.902.92%
Mar 20233.4518.80%
Apr 20233.31-3.92%
May 20233.14-5.10%
Jun 20232.80-10.92%
Jul 20232.800.05%
Aug 20232.38-15.04%
Sep 20232.20-7.59%
Oct 20232.325.44%
Nov 20232.320.11%
Dec 20232.559.78%
Jan 20243.1423.09%
Feb 20243.160.70%
Mar 20243.12-1.24%
Apr 20243.378.07%
May 20243.410.97%
Jun 20242.66-21.99%
Jul 20242.26-14.94%
Aug 20242.280.90%
Sep 20242.12-6.92%
Oct 20242.08-1.81%
Nov 20242.247.45%
Dec 20242.4710.25%
Jan 20252.9720.17%
Feb 20252.57-13.33%
Mar 20252.57-0.03%
Apr 20252.46-4.38%
May 20252.29-6.76%
Jun 20252.29-0.10%
Jul 20252.04-10.71%
Aug 20251.89-7.53%
Sep 20252.2318.04%
Oct 20252.344.66%
Nov 20252.434.15%
Dec 20252.6910.40%
Jan 20262.762.77%
Feb 20262.811.89%
Mar 20262.851.23%

Top Companies

Pan Fish-Marine Harvest
Website: http://www.marineharvest.com/
Location: Oslo, Norway
Estimated Production: 100000 tonnes per year

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