Rice Monthly Price - New Zealand Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2016 - Mar 2026: 77.397 (13.50%)
Chart

Description: Rice (Thailand), 5% broken, white rice (WR), milled, indicative price based on weekly surveys of export transactions, government standard, f.o.b. Bangkok

Unit: New Zealand Dollar per Metric Ton



Source: US Department of Agricuture; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Rice is a staple cereal grain consumed by more than half of the world’s population and traded internationally in milled, rough, and parboiled forms. On commodity markets, the most widely cited reference for international trade is white rice with 5% broken kernels, often quoted as a nominal export price for long-grain milled rice from Thailand in US dollars per metric ton. That benchmark is useful because it reflects a standardized export grade that is broadly comparable across origins, even though local varieties, milling quality, and moisture content can differ.

Rice is primarily used as a food grain for direct human consumption, unlike many other cereals that are more heavily used as animal feed or industrial input. It is also processed into flour, noodles, starch, and fermented products in many consuming regions. Because rice is a bulk staple with relatively low unit value, transport, milling, storage, and quality preservation are important parts of its market structure. The commodity’s pricing reflects both physical grain characteristics and the logistics of moving a perishable agricultural product through a fragmented global trade system.

Supply Drivers

Rice supply is shaped by a combination of agronomy, water availability, and regional production systems. The main producing areas are in Asia, where warm temperatures, monsoon rainfall, river basins, and irrigated lowlands support paddy cultivation. China, India, Southeast Asia, and parts of South Asia dominate global output because rice grows best in environments with abundant water and long growing seasons. Outside Asia, production is concentrated in the United States, Brazil, Egypt, and a few other irrigated or temperate regions.

Unlike many grains, rice is highly sensitive to water management. Flooded paddy systems require reliable irrigation or seasonal rainfall, while upland rice depends more directly on precipitation. Drought, delayed monsoons, floods, and salinity intrusion can all reduce yields or disrupt transplanting and harvesting. Pest and disease pressure, including stem borers, blast, and bacterial blight, also affects supply because dense planting and humid conditions can encourage outbreaks.

Production is constrained by land and labor requirements, milling capacity, and transport from inland growing areas to export ports. Harvest timing is seasonal, but many producing countries have multiple cropping cycles where irrigation permits. Storage losses, grain breakage during milling, and quality deterioration from moisture or heat influence exportable supply. Because rice is often grown by smallholders, supply can be fragmented and slow to respond to price changes.

Demand Drivers

Rice demand is driven mainly by food consumption, making it less discretionary than many other agricultural commodities. In much of Asia, rice is a dietary staple and a central source of calories, so demand is relatively stable across income levels. In lower-income markets, consumption tends to be more price sensitive because rice competes with other staples such as wheat, maize, cassava, and potatoes. In higher-income markets, per capita consumption often levels off or declines as diets diversify, but total demand can still rise with population growth and urbanization.

Substitution patterns matter. Wheat products such as bread and noodles can replace rice in some diets, while rice can substitute for maize or cassava in others depending on local cuisine and relative prices. Broken rice and lower grades are also used in animal feed, brewing, and starch production, linking rice to industrial demand in a limited way. Parboiled rice and fragrant varieties serve distinct consumer preferences, so quality premiums can persist even when overall grain supply is ample.

Seasonality is important in many markets because consumption is steady while harvest arrivals are concentrated. Governments and households often hold rice as a food security staple, which supports demand for storage and inventory management. Cultural preferences, cooking habits, and the suitability of rice for dense urban populations reinforce long-run consumption patterns.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Rice prices are influenced by exchange rates, especially the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can make imported rice more expensive in local currency terms, affecting buying behavior in import-dependent countries. Freight costs, interest rates, and financing conditions also matter because rice is bulky and often stored in inventory before shipment or consumption.

Storage economics shape the term structure of prices. When carrying costs are high, nearby supplies can trade at a premium or discount depending on harvest timing, quality, and local availability. Because rice is a storable staple, inventories help smooth seasonal supply shocks, but storage is limited by spoilage risk, milling losses, and quality degradation. Rice also tends to respond to broader food inflation dynamics, since it is a core household expenditure in many countries and can be affected by substitution across staple grains.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2016573.18-
May 2016636.0010.96%
Jun 2016627.44-1.35%
Jul 2016620.89-1.04%
Aug 2016574.14-7.53%
Sep 2016525.12-8.54%
Oct 2016515.50-1.83%
Nov 2016509.31-1.20%
Dec 2016529.303.93%
Jan 2017531.210.36%
Feb 2017507.99-4.37%
Mar 2017527.533.85%
Apr 2017544.843.28%
May 2017607.3511.47%
Jun 2017634.354.45%
Jul 2017567.77-10.50%
Aug 2017537.17-5.39%
Sep 2017554.483.22%
Oct 2017557.240.50%
Nov 2017583.554.72%
Dec 2017584.010.08%
Jan 2018609.894.43%
Feb 2018581.64-4.63%
Mar 2018592.251.82%
Apr 2018621.484.94%
May 2018648.684.38%
Jun 2018615.30-5.15%
Jul 2018586.27-4.72%
Aug 2018607.193.57%
Sep 2018614.161.15%
Oct 2018625.931.92%
Nov 2018593.27-5.22%
Dec 2018591.07-0.37%
Jan 2019604.902.34%
Feb 2019597.19-1.27%
Mar 2019594.29-0.49%
Apr 2019613.663.26%
May 2019623.161.55%
Jun 2019636.692.17%
Jul 2019622.14-2.29%
Aug 2019668.147.39%
Sep 2019672.880.71%
Oct 2019669.70-0.47%
Nov 2019658.20-1.72%
Dec 2019657.11-0.17%
Jan 2020682.683.89%
Feb 2020703.903.11%
Mar 2020817.9516.20%
Apr 2020941.0515.05%
May 2020838.32-10.92%
Jun 2020806.72-3.77%
Jul 2020728.35-9.71%
Aug 2020765.705.13%
Sep 2020760.41-0.69%
Oct 2020710.33-6.59%
Nov 2020715.170.68%
Dec 2020735.492.84%
Jan 2021757.142.94%
Feb 2021768.851.55%
Mar 2021735.01-4.40%
Apr 2021694.76-5.48%
May 2021683.14-1.67%
Jun 2021655.22-4.09%
Jul 2021592.97-9.50%
Aug 2021578.69-2.41%
Sep 2021567.65-1.91%
Oct 2021569.310.29%
Nov 2021568.14-0.21%
Dec 2021590.303.90%
Jan 2022633.557.33%
Feb 2022640.471.09%
Mar 2022615.27-3.93%
Apr 2022635.723.32%
May 2022725.5114.12%
Jun 2022697.83-3.81%
Jul 2022673.92-3.43%
Aug 2022688.142.11%
Sep 2022738.927.38%
Oct 2022758.522.65%
Nov 2022730.25-3.73%
Dec 2022734.470.58%
Jan 2023807.639.96%
Feb 2023780.89-3.31%
Mar 2023767.69-1.69%
Apr 2023806.455.05%
May 2023819.531.62%
Jun 2023838.622.33%
Jul 2023878.084.71%
Aug 20231,058.4320.54%
Sep 20231,046.59-1.12%
Oct 2023999.20-4.53%
Nov 20231,000.890.17%
Dec 20231,040.053.91%
Jan 20241,069.832.86%
Feb 20241,018.41-4.81%
Mar 20241,006.85-1.14%
Apr 2024992.85-1.39%
May 20241,037.104.46%
Jun 20241,029.04-0.78%
Jul 2024979.36-4.83%
Aug 2024969.06-1.05%
Sep 2024932.77-3.74%
Oct 2024844.99-9.41%
Nov 2024864.192.27%
Dec 2024910.465.35%
Jan 2025848.39-6.82%
Feb 2025769.90-9.25%
Mar 2025742.57-3.55%
Apr 2025715.31-3.67%
May 2025726.631.58%
Jun 2025695.00-4.35%
Jul 2025653.41-5.99%
Aug 2025635.46-2.75%
Sep 2025635.01-0.07%
Oct 2025617.39-2.77%
Nov 2025651.925.59%
Dec 2025733.7912.56%
Jan 2026707.44-3.59%
Feb 2026680.20-3.85%
Mar 2026650.58-4.35%

Top Companies

Riceland Foods
Website: http://www.riceland.com/
Location: Stuttgart, Arkansas
Estimated Production: 2.5 million metric tonnes per year

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