Olive Oil, extra virgin Monthly Price - Bolivar Fuerte per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2011 - Aug 2018: 753,256,400.000 (5,443,201.00%)
Chart

Description: Olive Oil, extra virgin less than 1% free fatty acid, ex-tanker price U.K., Bolivar Fuerte per Metric Ton

Unit: Bolivar Fuerte per Metric Ton



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Olive Oil, extra virgin production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Extra virgin olive oil is the highest-grade edible oil obtained by mechanical extraction from olives, with low free fatty acidity and no chemical refining. In commodity markets it is commonly priced as olive oil, extra virgin, less than 1% free fatty acids, ex-tanker, quoted in US dollars per metric ton. The ex-tanker convention reflects bulk trade at port, before inland transport, packaging, or retail margins are added. Because quality depends on cultivar, harvest timing, milling speed, and storage conditions, the market often distinguishes extra virgin oil from refined olive oil and from lower-grade lampante oil that requires refining.

Olive oil is used primarily in food applications: cooking, salad dressings, sauces, preserved foods, and premium packaged oils. It also has a long-standing role in Mediterranean diets and food processing. Compared with many other vegetable oils, olive oil is less interchangeable in flavor-sensitive uses, so quality and origin matter alongside price. Its market structure is shaped by perennial tree agriculture, regional climate, and the fact that olives are harvested seasonally but oil can be stored and traded year-round.

Supply Drivers

Supply is concentrated in Mediterranean climates, especially Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco, and parts of the Levant, because olive trees require mild winters, hot dry summers, and well-drained soils. The crop is perennial, so output depends on orchard age, pruning, irrigation, and the biological cycle of the tree. Olive production often shows alternate bearing, where a heavy crop is followed by a lighter one, creating natural year-to-year variability even without major weather shocks. This biological pattern is a persistent feature of the market.

Weather is a central supply driver. Flowering and fruit set are sensitive to spring temperature and rainfall, while summer heat and drought affect fruit development and oil yield. Excess moisture can increase disease pressure, and pests such as the olive fruit fly can reduce both quantity and quality. Because extra virgin oil requires careful handling, delays between harvest and milling can lower grade and increase acidity.

Supply is also shaped by infrastructure and processing capacity. Mills, storage tanks, and port logistics matter because olives deteriorate quickly after harvest. Labor availability during the harvest season influences the pace of picking, especially where hand harvesting remains important. Expansion of supply is slow because new orchards take several years to reach productive maturity, and irrigation or mechanization requires capital and suitable land.

Demand Drivers

Demand for extra virgin olive oil is driven by household consumption, foodservice use, and industrial food manufacturing where flavor and labeling standards favor olive oil over neutral oils. It is especially important in cuisines that value taste, aroma, and perceived health attributes. Because extra virgin oil has a distinct sensory profile, it is less substitutable than refined vegetable oils in premium culinary uses, though consumers can switch to sunflower, canola, soybean, or refined olive oil when price differences widen.

Seasonality matters on the demand side as well. Consumption often rises around periods of home cooking and holiday food preparation, while food manufacturers and importers may build inventories ahead of consumption peaks. Demand is also influenced by income: higher-income consumers are more willing to pay for premium grades and origin-specific oils, while lower-income buyers are more price sensitive and may trade down to blended or refined oils.

Structural dietary preferences support long-run demand in regions where olive oil is a staple, and broader interest in Mediterranean-style diets reinforces use in many export markets. Packaging, labeling, and quality certification also shape demand because consumers often pay for traceability, acidity standards, and protected origin designations. In food manufacturing, olive oil competes with other edible oils on cost, functionality, and flavor, so substitution is common outside premium applications.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Because olive oil is internationally traded in US dollars, exchange-rate movements affect local-currency affordability and import demand. A stronger dollar tends to tighten purchasing power for non-dollar buyers, while a weaker dollar can support demand in importing regions. Freight costs and port congestion also matter because the benchmark is quoted ex-tanker, linking the market to shipping and storage conditions.

Olive oil is storable, so inventories smooth seasonal supply, but storage quality is important because oxidation and flavor degradation reduce value over time. This creates a relationship between nearby and deferred prices that reflects carrying costs, financing costs, and quality loss. Interest rates matter through inventory financing: higher carrying costs discourage long storage and can tighten nearby supply. Olive oil does not function as a broad inflation hedge in a mechanical sense, but it can participate in general food-price movements when agricultural costs, transport, and packaging expenses rise together.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 201113,838.48-
May 201113,574.73-1.91%
Jun 201113,285.42-2.13%
Jul 201113,176.73-0.82%
Aug 201113,377.041.52%
Sep 201112,925.72-3.37%
Oct 201112,923.66-0.02%
Nov 201113,004.300.62%
Dec 201112,297.77-5.43%
Jan 201211,842.63-3.70%
Feb 201212,165.182.72%
Mar 201212,115.43-0.41%
Apr 201212,156.300.34%
May 201211,678.35-3.93%
Jun 201211,571.12-0.92%
Jul 201211,460.32-0.96%
Aug 201212,496.589.04%
Sep 201215,320.0522.59%
Oct 201215,579.721.70%
Nov 201214,790.49-5.07%
Dec 201214,235.54-3.75%
Jan 201316,975.3319.25%
Feb 201322,828.7934.48%
Mar 201325,732.2912.72%
Apr 201325,170.55-2.18%
May 201324,175.70-3.95%
Jun 201324,464.781.20%
Jul 201324,478.470.06%
Aug 201324,201.90-1.13%
Sep 201324,050.70-0.62%
Oct 201323,490.15-2.33%
Nov 201323,271.40-0.93%
Dec 201322,803.04-2.01%
Jan 201422,629.47-0.76%
Feb 201422,252.67-1.67%
Mar 201422,539.101.29%
Apr 201422,407.07-0.59%
May 201422,332.29-0.33%
Jun 201422,785.442.03%
Jul 201424,009.105.37%
Aug 201424,909.253.75%
Sep 201425,118.700.84%
Oct 201423,953.67-4.64%
Nov 201425,545.906.65%
Dec 201426,610.514.17%
Jan 201525,944.38-2.50%
Feb 201526,202.350.99%
Mar 201524,719.53-5.66%
Apr 201525,115.311.60%
May 201527,055.557.73%
Jun 201527,319.300.97%
Jul 201528,201.733.23%
Aug 201531,708.8212.44%
Sep 201531,338.49-1.17%
Oct 201528,558.55-8.87%
Nov 201524,573.48-13.95%
Dec 201522,986.91-6.46%
Jan 201624,988.688.71%
Feb 201626,603.786.46%
Apr 201640,141.5050.89%
May 201638,483.75-4.13%
Jun 201638,007.54-1.24%
Jul 201638,812.532.12%
Aug 201639,721.952.34%
Sep 201640,636.852.30%
Oct 201639,146.19-3.67%
Nov 201639,182.000.09%
Dec 201639,825.291.64%
Jan 201741,418.394.00%
Feb 201744,131.706.55%
Mar 201744,230.640.22%
Apr 201743,784.86-1.01%
May 201746,235.925.60%
Jun 201746,204.90-0.07%
Jul 201746,742.851.16%
Aug 201746,498.56-0.52%
Sep 201746,026.64-1.01%
Oct 201745,897.37-0.28%
Nov 201745,550.54-0.76%
Dec 201745,494.28-0.12%
Jan 201847,835.315.15%
Feb 201892,591,250.00193,462.50%
Mar 2018168,991,200.0082.51%
Apr 2018237,807,000.0040.72%
May 2018267,546,900.0012.51%
Jun 2018296,811,700.0010.94%
Jul 2018462,531,500.0055.83%
Aug 2018753,270,300.0062.86%

Top Companies

Hojiblanca and Cordoliva
Website: http://www.hojiblanca.com/
Location: Málaga, Spain
Estimated Production: 8000 tonnes per year

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