Oranges Monthly Price - Rand per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Dec 2017 - Jun 2025: 14.042 (137.65%)
Chart

Description: Oranges (Mediterranean exporters) navel, European Union indicative import price, c.i.f. Paris

Unit: Rand per Kilogram



Source: INTERFEL, Fel Actualite hebdo; FRuiTrop; Marche Europeens Des Fruits et Legumes; World Bank.

See also: Oranges production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Oranges are a globally traded citrus fruit valued for fresh consumption, juice extraction, and processed ingredients such as concentrates, essential oils, and flavorings. In commodity markets, oranges are commonly referenced through import prices for fresh fruit or through citrus-related processing benchmarks; one example is the “Oranges, miscellaneous oranges CIF French import price, USD per kg” series, which reflects the cost of imported fruit delivered to France. Prices are typically quoted per kilogram, although citrus trade also uses cartons, boxes, and juice-equivalent measures in some contexts. The fruit is consumed both as a fresh snack and as a raw material for beverages, confectionery, and food manufacturing. Because oranges are highly perishable, quality, size, sugar-acid balance, and transportability matter as much as volume. The market links orchard production, refrigerated logistics, and processing demand, making oranges a classic agricultural commodity whose pricing reflects both biological constraints and trade frictions.

Supply Drivers

Orange supply is shaped by orchard biology, climate, and transport infrastructure. Production is concentrated in warm subtropical and Mediterranean climates where frost risk is limited and winter chilling is manageable. Long-established producing regions include Brazil, the United States, Mexico, Spain, Egypt, South Africa, and parts of the Mediterranean basin. Trees take several years to reach full bearing, so supply responds slowly to price signals. Once planted, orchards are exposed to weather shocks such as frost, drought, excessive heat, hurricanes, and rainfall patterns that affect flowering, fruit set, size, and juice content. Citrus diseases and pests also matter structurally; tree health can be impaired for many seasons, reducing yields and increasing replanting costs.

Harvest is seasonal, and the timing of picking affects both fresh-market quality and processing volumes. Because oranges are perishable, cold storage, packing facilities, and refrigerated shipping are essential. Bottlenecks in port handling or inland transport can limit exportable supply even when orchard output is ample. Production also depends on water availability and irrigation systems in many growing regions, making long-run supply sensitive to land and water constraints rather than only to farm prices.

Demand Drivers

Orange demand comes from two broad channels: fresh consumption and processing. Fresh oranges are purchased for direct eating, while processing demand is centered on juice, concentrate, pulp, and flavor extracts. Juice manufacturing creates a strong link between fresh fruit markets and industrial demand, since fruit that does not meet fresh-market appearance standards can still be used for processing. This creates substitution between table oranges and juice oranges, and between oranges and other citrus fruits such as tangerines, lemons, and grapefruit in some food applications.

Consumption is influenced by household income, urban retail access, and dietary habits. In many markets, oranges are associated with breakfast consumption and vitamin-C-rich diets, which supports steady baseline demand. Seasonal patterns are important: consumption often rises in cooler months in temperate regions, while supply from opposite hemispheres helps smooth availability across the year. Food service and packaged beverage industries also use orange-derived ingredients, linking demand to broader manufacturing activity. Long-run demand is shaped by competition from other fruits, changes in beverage preferences, and the degree to which consumers favor fresh fruit versus processed juice. Because oranges are widely recognized and versatile, demand tends to be relatively broad-based across consumer and industrial uses.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Orange prices are influenced by exchange rates, freight costs, and general inflation in agricultural inputs. Because international trade is common, a stronger U.S. dollar can make imported oranges cheaper in dollar terms for some buyers and more expensive in local-currency terms for exporters. Fuel prices matter through shipping, refrigeration, and packaging costs. Interest rates affect storage and working-capital costs, especially for traders and processors that hold inventory between harvest and sale. Where oranges are stored or processed into concentrate, inventory financing can shape nearby pricing relative to later delivery periods.

Like many agricultural commodities, oranges can show seasonal price patterns tied to harvest timing and storage life. However, perishability limits long-term warehousing, so spot market conditions often matter more than financial speculation. Broader macroeconomic conditions influence demand for fresh fruit and processed beverages through household purchasing power and food manufacturing activity.

MonthPriceChange
Dec 201710.20-
Jan 20189.29-8.97%
Feb 20189.23-0.55%
Mar 20188.75-5.23%
Apr 20189.205.18%
May 201811.0419.90%
Jun 201811.171.21%
Jul 201811.906.56%
Aug 201811.84-0.55%
Sep 201811.84-0.01%
Oct 201810.86-8.22%
Nov 201810.31-5.06%
Dec 201810.22-0.90%
Jan 20198.87-13.22%
Feb 20198.70-1.93%
Mar 20199.357.51%
Apr 20198.06-13.78%
May 20197.50-6.94%
Jun 20197.874.85%
Jul 20197.57-3.75%
Aug 20198.036.09%
Sep 20197.86-2.18%
Oct 20197.76-1.31%
Nov 20197.851.17%
Dec 20197.53-4.06%
Jan 20207.35-2.40%
Feb 20207.796.02%
Mar 20209.1317.19%
Apr 202010.6716.88%
May 202011.7910.49%
Jun 202011.13-5.55%
Jul 202011.06-0.63%
Aug 202010.67-3.58%
Sep 202010.19-4.50%
Oct 202010.03-1.50%
Nov 202010.120.87%
Dec 20209.63-4.82%
Jan 20219.52-1.14%
Feb 20218.58-9.92%
Mar 20219.004.87%
Apr 20218.50-5.54%
May 20218.591.12%
Jun 20218.913.66%
Jul 202110.0612.89%
Aug 202110.676.12%
Sep 202110.781.01%
Oct 20219.80-9.09%
Nov 202110.224.26%
Dec 202111.2510.14%
Jan 202212.248.81%
Feb 202211.12-9.21%
Mar 202211.553.89%
Apr 202213.6918.53%
May 202214.626.78%
Jun 202214.841.51%
Jul 202214.15-4.65%
Aug 202215.539.77%
Sep 202216.294.86%
Oct 202219.3919.07%
Nov 202219.16-1.22%
Dec 202219.06-0.53%
Jan 202318.63-2.23%
Feb 202323.2524.81%
Mar 202323.601.48%
Apr 202326.5412.47%
May 202326.841.13%
Jun 202326.31-1.96%
Jul 202327.394.11%
Aug 202331.1413.67%
Sep 202333.617.93%
Oct 202338.6515.00%
Nov 202338.10-1.42%
Dec 202335.55-6.70%
Jan 202431.40-11.68%
Feb 202437.0518.01%
Mar 202436.23-2.21%
Apr 202436.811.59%
May 202441.2712.11%
Jun 202441.691.03%
Jul 202441.990.72%
Aug 202443.463.49%
Sep 202444.923.38%
Oct 202445.651.61%
Nov 202446.070.93%
Dec 202448.725.74%
Jan 202548.10-1.26%
Feb 202535.34-26.54%
Mar 202526.33-25.49%
Apr 202526.631.13%
May 202525.00-6.12%
Jun 202524.24-3.02%

Top Companies

Cutrale
Website: http://www.cutrale.com/
Location: Brazil

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