Sugar, U.S. import price Monthly Price - Trinidad and Tobago Dollar per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 0.328 (7.03%)
Chart

Description: Sugar (US), nearby futures contract, c.i.f.

Unit: Trinidad and Tobago Dollar per Kilogram



Source: Bloomberg, World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

U.S. import price for sugar refers to the price paid for raw or refined sugar entering the United States, typically quoted in U.S. dollars per kilogram. In commodity markets, sugar is commonly traded in standardized contracts for raw sugar, with the world benchmark centered on raw cane sugar futures and related physical differentials. The U.S. import price reflects the cost of sugar sourced from foreign suppliers and is influenced by the grade, polarity, freight, duties, and the balance between raw and refined material.

Sugar is a basic food ingredient and an industrial input used in beverages, confectionery, bakery products, dairy items, and processed foods. It also serves as a feedstock for fermentation in ethanol and other bio-based products in some producing regions. Because sugar is storable and widely traded, import prices transmit conditions in global supply chains, including harvest outcomes, logistics, and trade policy. The U.S. market is shaped by the interaction between domestic beet and cane production, imported raw sugar for refining, and world market availability.

Supply Drivers

Sugar supply is determined by agricultural cycles, climate, and the processing structure of cane and beet systems. Cane sugar production is concentrated in tropical and subtropical regions such as Brazil, India, Thailand, and parts of Central America, where warm temperatures and abundant rainfall support high-yield cane. Beet sugar production is concentrated in temperate regions, including the United States, Europe, and parts of Russia and Ukraine, where cool-season crops fit local agronomy. These geographic patterns persist because sugar crops are highly climate-dependent and costly to transport in unprocessed form.

Supply is vulnerable to weather shocks, including drought, excess rain, frost, and cyclones, which affect both cane growth and beet yields. Cane is a perennial crop with a harvest and milling cycle that creates seasonal supply concentration, while beet is an annual crop with planting and lifting windows that can be disrupted by field conditions. Disease, pests, and soil constraints also matter, especially where monoculture is common. Milling capacity, port access, rail links, and refinery logistics shape how quickly sugar reaches import markets.

Trade flows matter because many producing countries export raw sugar while importing refined products or vice versa. Freight costs, shipping bottlenecks, and tariff-rate quota arrangements influence the landed U.S. import price. Because sugar cannot be produced instantly in response to price changes, supply adjusts with a lag through planting decisions, acreage shifts, and mill utilization.

Demand Drivers

Sugar demand is driven by food manufacturing, household consumption, and industrial uses. It is a staple sweetener in beverages, confectionery, bakery goods, jams, sauces, and many processed foods. In the United States, a large share of demand is embedded in industrial food processing rather than direct household purchase, which makes demand relatively stable but sensitive to broader food consumption patterns and product reformulation.

Substitution is important. Sugar competes with high-fructose corn syrup, glucose syrups, artificial sweeteners, and non-nutritive sweeteners in different applications. The choice depends on relative prices, product formulation, taste, shelf life, and labeling requirements. In beverages and processed foods, manufacturers can switch among sweeteners where technology and regulation allow, so the import price of sugar is partly anchored by the economics of alternative sweetening inputs.

Demand also has seasonal features, with higher use in confectionery and baking around holiday periods in many markets. Population growth, urbanization, and rising consumption of processed foods support long-run demand, while health preferences and reformulation pressures can moderate per-capita use in some segments. Because sugar is both a food ingredient and an industrial input, demand tends to be less cyclical than that of many raw materials, but it remains sensitive to income, food prices, and substitution across sweeteners.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Sugar import prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because sugar is globally priced in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect the local-currency cost for foreign suppliers and the competitiveness of exports. Interest rates matter through financing and inventory holding costs, since sugar can be stored and financed over time. When storage is economical and nearby supply is ample, futures markets may exhibit contango; when nearby availability is tight, backwardation can emerge.

Broader commodity sentiment also matters because sugar is traded alongside other agricultural softs and can attract index-linked flows. Freight rates, energy costs, and refinery margins affect landed import values through transport and processing expenses. Sugar is not usually treated as a classic inflation hedge in the same way as some hard commodities, but it does respond to general food inflation dynamics and to shifts in the cost of carrying inventories.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 20214.66-
May 20214.802.93%
Jun 20214.932.68%
Jul 20215.409.66%
Aug 20215.14-4.93%
Sep 20215.343.97%
Oct 20215.543.72%
Nov 20215.54-0.04%
Dec 20215.48-1.05%
Jan 20225.28-3.71%
Feb 20225.27-0.15%
Mar 20225.412.60%
Apr 20225.471.20%
May 20225.40-1.33%
Jun 20225.34-1.11%
Jul 20225.20-2.56%
Aug 20225.261.17%
Sep 20225.20-1.12%
Oct 20225.12-1.53%
Nov 20225.344.11%
Dec 20225.472.52%
Jan 20235.41-1.17%
Feb 20235.471.10%
Mar 20235.673.78%
Apr 20236.158.35%
May 20236.353.31%
Jun 20236.14-3.27%
Jul 20235.74-6.55%
Aug 20236.004.62%
Sep 20236.345.52%
Oct 20236.624.42%
Nov 20236.680.98%
Dec 20235.95-10.99%
Jan 20245.93-0.19%
Feb 20246.214.65%
Mar 20245.94-4.29%
Apr 20245.87-1.22%
May 20245.60-4.64%
Jun 20245.600.02%
Jul 20245.60-0.04%
Aug 20245.33-4.73%
Sep 20245.411.35%
Oct 20245.674.90%
Nov 20245.680.10%
Dec 20245.47-3.64%
Jan 20255.40-1.22%
Feb 20255.532.38%
Mar 20255.540.18%
Apr 20255.601.07%
May 20255.47-2.28%
Jun 20255.26-3.89%
Jul 20255.402.69%
Aug 20255.471.18%
Sep 20255.33-2.47%
Oct 20255.19-2.57%
Nov 20254.99-3.90%
Dec 20254.93-1.31%
Jan 20265.001.42%
Feb 20264.71-5.66%
Mar 20264.995.92%

Top Companies

Südzucker AG
Website: http://www.suedzucker.de/
Location: Manheim, Germany
Estimated Production: 4.6 million tonnes per year

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