Shrimp Monthly Price - Pula per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2006 - Oct 2023: 64.484 (120.13%)
Chart

Description: Shrimp , (Mexico), west coast, frozen, white, No. 1, shell-on, headless, 26 to 30 count per pound, wholesale price at New York

Unit: Pula per Kilogram



Source: US Department of Commerce, NOAA, Fishery Market News; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Shrimp is a widely traded seafood commodity priced in commodity markets by species, size grade, origin, and processing form, with quotations commonly expressed in US dollars per kilogram. Trade typically distinguishes between wild-caught and farmed shrimp, as well as peeled, head-on, headless, cooked, and frozen product forms. International benchmark pricing often reflects frozen shrimp traded through export channels from major producing regions in Asia and Latin America, with quality, count size, and certification standards affecting price differentials.

Shrimp is used primarily as a food product in retail, foodservice, and industrial prepared-food applications. It is valued for its mild flavor, high protein content, and adaptability to many cuisines. Demand is concentrated in markets with established seafood consumption habits, but shrimp also enters broader protein substitution patterns alongside fish, poultry, pork, and other shellfish. Because it is highly perishable, shrimp is usually processed, frozen, and transported through cold-chain logistics before reaching end users.

Supply Drivers

Shrimp supply is shaped by the interaction of marine ecology, aquaculture biology, and processing infrastructure. Wild shrimp harvests depend on coastal and continental shelf ecosystems, seasonal migration patterns, and fishing access in tropical and subtropical waters. Farmed shrimp production is concentrated in warm-water regions where pond aquaculture is feasible, especially in parts of Asia and Latin America. Temperature, salinity, water quality, and disease pressure strongly influence output, making shrimp farming sensitive to biological shocks and management practices.

Aquaculture production faces feed costs, hatchery performance, pond stocking cycles, and the need for reliable electricity, aeration, and cold storage. Disease outbreaks can reduce yields because shrimp are raised at high densities and have limited immunity to pathogens. Environmental constraints such as mangrove loss, water contamination, and coastal land availability also affect expansion. On the wild side, fuel costs, vessel access, and seasonal closures shape landings. Processing capacity, freezing plants, container availability, and port logistics matter because shrimp is commonly exported in frozen form and must move quickly through the cold chain.

Demand Drivers

Shrimp demand is driven by household consumption, restaurant use, and processed-food applications. It is a high-value protein with broad culinary flexibility, so it competes with fish, chicken, pork, and other seafood in both retail and foodservice channels. Demand tends to rise in markets where seafood is a regular part of the diet and where income growth supports greater consumption of premium proteins. In lower-income settings, shrimp is often more of an export commodity than a staple food.

Product form matters: peeled and deveined shrimp, cooked shrimp, and breaded or ready-to-cook products serve convenience-oriented buyers, while head-on and shell-on product is more common in certain regional cuisines. Seasonal consumption patterns often reflect holiday meals, grilling seasons, and restaurant traffic, though these patterns vary by market. Trade also responds to substitution with other shellfish such as prawns, crab, and lobster, as well as with white-fleshed fish. Food safety standards, traceability requirements, and sustainability certification influence market access and consumer preference over long periods.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Shrimp prices are influenced by the US dollar because international trade is commonly invoiced in dollars, so currency movements affect local producer returns and import costs. Freight rates, fuel costs, and cold-storage expenses also matter because shrimp is a processed and transport-intensive commodity. As with many traded foods, higher interest rates can raise financing costs for inventories, working capital, and aquaculture operations, which affects the economics of holding product through the supply chain.

Because shrimp is storable when frozen, market structure can show seasonal inventory effects and differences between prompt and deferred delivery values. Prices also respond to broader consumer spending conditions, especially in foodservice channels where shrimp is often treated as a discretionary protein. Correlation with other asset classes is usually indirect and mediated through exchange rates, energy costs, and general inflation in logistics and feed inputs.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 200653.68-
May 200657.106.37%
Jun 200662.369.23%
Jul 200662.910.87%
Aug 200657.44-8.69%
Sep 200656.98-0.79%
Oct 200655.50-2.60%
Nov 200653.24-4.08%
Dec 200652.32-1.72%
Jan 200754.143.48%
Feb 200754.540.74%
Mar 200756.804.14%
Apr 200757.952.02%
May 200759.272.28%
Jun 200761.934.48%
Jul 200762.350.69%
Aug 200763.011.05%
Sep 200761.36-2.63%
Oct 200759.34-3.28%
Nov 200760.041.17%
Dec 200762.133.49%
Jan 200864.013.02%
Feb 200867.665.70%
Mar 200868.621.41%
Apr 200867.68-1.36%
May 200867.21-0.70%
Jun 200870.755.27%
Jul 200872.001.77%
Aug 200873.391.92%
Sep 200872.13-1.72%
Oct 200880.4711.56%
Nov 200879.49-1.21%
Dec 200876.31-4.01%
Jan 200976.550.32%
Feb 200979.033.24%
Mar 200979.971.19%
Apr 200975.34-5.80%
May 200970.55-6.35%
Jun 200966.27-6.07%
Jul 200962.53-5.64%
Aug 200957.55-7.98%
Sep 200952.04-9.57%
Oct 200950.60-2.76%
Nov 200949.84-1.50%
Dec 200950.361.06%
Jan 201051.873.00%
Feb 201054.945.91%
Mar 201055.811.60%
Apr 201057.653.30%
May 201070.6422.52%
Jun 201087.6424.07%
Jul 201088.290.73%
Aug 201081.60-7.58%
Sep 201078.84-3.38%
Oct 201076.92-2.44%
Nov 201080.364.48%
Dec 201081.992.02%
Jan 201183.071.32%
Feb 201185.022.35%
Mar 201183.38-1.93%
Apr 201182.72-0.80%
May 201182.940.27%
Jun 201183.010.08%
Jul 201183.700.83%
Aug 201179.26-5.31%
Sep 201179.330.09%
Oct 201181.192.34%
Nov 201182.791.98%
Dec 201185.122.81%
Jan 201284.40-0.85%
Feb 201282.60-2.13%
Mar 201283.681.31%
Apr 201286.813.74%
May 201289.453.05%
Jun 201291.642.45%
Jul 201291.25-0.43%
Aug 201290.80-0.49%
Sep 201287.11-4.07%
Oct 201285.87-1.42%
Nov 201287.151.49%
Dec 201286.93-0.25%
Jan 201389.242.66%
Feb 201392.633.79%
Mar 201397.795.58%
Apr 2013101.053.33%
May 2013106.545.44%
Jun 2013117.6810.45%
Jul 2013125.136.33%
Aug 2013134.597.56%
Sep 2013137.352.05%
Oct 2013139.511.58%
Nov 2013145.274.12%
Dec 2013146.751.02%
Jan 2014151.373.15%
Feb 2014152.460.72%
Mar 2014151.33-0.74%
Apr 2014154.722.24%
May 2014156.351.05%
Jun 2014160.462.63%
Jul 2014167.734.53%
Aug 2014170.751.80%
Sep 2014166.62-2.42%
Oct 2014160.38-3.74%
Nov 2014159.91-0.29%
Dec 2014164.092.61%
Jan 2015167.021.79%
Feb 2015168.050.62%
Mar 2015173.052.98%
Apr 2015167.36-3.29%
May 2015155.53-7.07%
Jun 2015136.98-11.93%
Jul 2015122.98-10.22%
Aug 2015105.83-13.94%
Sep 201591.63-13.41%
Oct 201590.58-1.15%
Nov 2015103.2814.02%
Dec 2015109.145.68%
Jan 2016120.7810.66%
Feb 2016121.920.95%
Mar 2016119.14-2.28%
Apr 2016113.72-4.55%
May 2016115.771.81%
Jun 2016114.75-0.88%
Jul 2016112.84-1.67%
Aug 2016113.620.69%
Sep 2016126.0410.94%
Oct 2016130.843.80%
Nov 2016133.261.86%
Dec 2016141.586.24%
Jan 2017141.960.27%
Feb 2017142.480.37%
Mar 2017142.43-0.04%
Apr 2017144.841.70%
May 2017148.412.46%
Jun 2017151.772.26%
Jul 2017150.95-0.54%
Aug 2017131.24-13.05%
Sep 2017123.14-6.18%
Oct 2017123.940.65%
Nov 2017127.933.22%
Dec 2017124.44-2.73%
Jan 2018120.42-3.23%
Feb 2018121.671.04%
Mar 2018122.250.47%
Apr 2018124.031.46%
May 2018128.083.27%
Jun 2018128.260.14%
Jul 2018125.97-1.78%
Aug 2018127.140.93%
Sep 2018124.38-2.17%
Oct 2018123.14-1.00%
Nov 2018124.070.76%
Dec 2018125.871.45%
Jan 2019123.88-1.58%
Feb 2019123.84-0.03%
Mar 2019126.141.86%
Apr 2019125.23-0.72%
May 2019126.751.21%
Jun 2019129.171.91%
Jul 2019137.496.44%
Aug 2019143.914.67%
Sep 2019144.640.51%
Oct 2019146.881.55%
Nov 2019149.061.48%
Dec 2019150.290.83%
Jan 2020150.490.13%
Feb 2020154.112.41%
Mar 2020161.354.70%
Apr 2020169.134.82%
May 2020151.58-10.37%
Jun 2020142.01-6.31%
Jul 2020144.621.84%
Aug 2020146.381.22%
Sep 2020136.65-6.65%
Oct 2020129.98-4.88%
Nov 2020128.90-0.83%
Dec 2020127.71-0.93%
Jan 2021128.991.00%
Feb 2021130.080.85%
Mar 2021135.744.35%
Apr 2021135.830.07%
May 2021135.890.04%
Jun 2021143.745.78%
Jul 2021174.8521.64%
Aug 2021175.610.43%
Sep 2021162.87-7.25%
Oct 2021162.83-0.02%
Nov 2021167.012.57%
Dec 2021171.452.66%
Jan 2022171.480.02%
Feb 2022171.740.15%
Mar 2022173.240.87%
Apr 2022175.401.25%
May 2022183.894.84%
Jun 2022180.46-1.86%
Jul 2022177.47-1.66%
Aug 2022159.64-10.04%
Sep 2022150.62-5.66%
Oct 2022153.031.61%
Nov 2022150.23-1.83%
Dec 2022147.86-1.58%
Jan 2023146.24-1.09%
Feb 2023144.53-1.17%
Mar 2023145.670.79%
Apr 2023143.47-1.51%
May 2023146.952.43%
Jun 2023139.48-5.08%
Jul 2023129.52-7.14%
Aug 2023122.02-5.79%
Sep 2023118.97-2.50%
Oct 2023118.16-0.68%

Top Companies

Centralproteina Prima
Website: http://www.cpp.co.id/
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Estimated Production: 300 tonnes per day

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon