Chinese buckwheat export prices are broadly steady to mildly mixed, with organic offers easing and conventional values ticking higher in Beijing, while elevated freight to Europe caps upside in delivered prices. Healthy domestic demand and adequate stocks keep the market balanced in the very short term.
The buckwheat market in China is entering April with relatively calm but firm fundamentals. FOB Beijing prices show only marginal week‑on‑week moves, suggesting neither a supply squeeze nor a demand collapse. Higher international freight costs following geopolitical tensions around Iran are inflating CIF levels into Europe, dampening overseas buying interest even as Chinese-origin buckwheat remains competitively priced at origin. At the same time, domestic consumption of coarse grains, including buckwheat, is getting a seasonal boost from health‑focused spring foods, helping to absorb local supplies. With benign near‑term weather in North China and no fresh crop shock, short‑term price risks look modest and mostly freight‑driven rather than harvest‑driven.
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Buckwheat
hulled, organic
99.95%
FOB 0.67 €/kg
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Buckwheat
hulled, yellow
99.95%
FOB 0.61 €/kg
(from CN)

Buckwheat
hulled
FCA 1.23 €/kg
(from NL)
📈 Prices & Spreads
FOB Beijing buckwheat prices as of 1 April 2026 (converted to EUR at ~1 USD = 0.93 EUR): organic hulled around EUR 0.62/kg and conventional yellow hulled around EUR 0.56/kg, implying a modest organic premium and a slight week‑on‑week softening on the organic side versus a small uptick in conventional. In contrast, Polish-origin hulled buckwheat quoted ex-warehouse Dordrecht (NL) holds much higher at roughly EUR 1.14/kg conventional and EUR 1.63/kg organic, keeping a sizeable arbitrage between Chinese and European origins.
| Origin / Type | Location & Term | Latest price (EUR/kg) | 1-week move (EUR/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| CN hulled, organic | Beijing, FOB | ≈0.62 | -0.01 |
| CN hulled, yellow | Beijing, FOB | ≈0.56 | +0.01 |
| PL hulled, non-organic | Dordrecht (NL), FCA | ≈1.14 | 0.00 |
| PL hulled, organic | Dordrecht (NL), FCA | ≈1.63 | 0.00 |
Latest international commentary notes that rising freight rates linked to tensions in the Middle East are substantially increasing transport costs from China to Europe, lifting delivered prices and curbing some overseas demand even as origin prices remain relatively attractive. This helps explain the current stability in Beijing FOB values despite headwinds in export flows.
🌍 Supply, Demand & Trade Flows
On the supply side, China’s broader grain sector remains structurally strong, with record national grain output in 2025 and continued policy focus on yield gains and mechanization, which indirectly supports coarse grains like buckwheat through better seed and machinery access. There is no fresh evidence over the past three days of major acreage cuts or weather‑related buckwheat losses in China, suggesting near‑term availability is adequate.
Demand is underpinned by two forces. First, seasonal interest in healthier spring foods has lifted domestic orders for coarse grains, with recent consumer data showing online orders for oats and buckwheat jumping about 87% as Chinese consumers shift to lighter diets. Second, functional and health‑oriented processed foods increasingly incorporate buckwheat ingredients, such as popping pearls in nut‑based snacks and probiotic products, pointing to a gradual structural demand tailwind rather than a one‑off spike.
Internationally, the latest buckwheat market note highlights that soaring freight rates tied to the conflict around Iran are pressuring trade flows: import prices into China for foreign buckwheat are firming, while transport costs to Europe for Chinese product have “skyrocketed,” reducing buying interest there. This dynamic makes Chinese origin more competitive on the domestic market and in closer Asian destinations, while limiting its effective price competitiveness into Europe once logistics are included.
📊 Fundamentals & Weather
Fundamentally, stocks in China are described as sufficient, and the narrowing price gap between domestic and imported buckwheat has contributed to a firmer undertone in local prices without triggering a sharp rally. Broader grain demand signals from China, including increased activity in wheat auctions and steady feed demand expectations, also indicate a generally resilient cereals and pseudo‑cereals consumption backdrop.
Weather in Beijing and surrounding North China Plain areas over the coming three days looks mostly benign for spring fieldwork: forecasts call for mostly cloudy to sunny conditions with highs around 19–22°C and lows in the single digits, and no significant rainfall or cold events that would disrupt early planting or logistics. While buckwheat sowing in many northern regions typically comes slightly later in spring and early summer, the lack of weather stress supports stable short‑term supply expectations and transport from inland origins to export hubs.
📆 Short-Term Price Outlook (3 Days, EUR)
Given steady fundamentals, strong but not overheated domestic demand and freight‑driven pressure on export competitiveness, buckwheat prices in and around Beijing are likely to remain range‑bound in the very near term.
- CN Beijing, FOB, hulled organic: Expected to trade roughly in a band of EUR 0.61–0.63/kg over the next three days, with any softness limited by robust health‑food demand.
- CN Beijing, FOB, hulled conventional (yellow): Likely to hold around EUR 0.55–0.57/kg, supported by stable domestic interest and tighter arbitrage versus imports.
- EU (ex‑Dordrecht, PL origin, FCA): Prices around EUR 1.13–1.15/kg (non‑organic) and EUR 1.62–1.64/kg (organic) should remain broadly steady, as high sea freight from China restricts downside from extra competition.
💡 Trading Outlook & Strategy Notes
- Chinese exporters: Consider locking in freight where possible or targeting nearer Asian and Middle Eastern markets less affected by current long‑haul freight spikes to defend margins, rather than cutting FOB prices aggressively.
- European importers: With delivered Chinese buckwheat made more expensive by freight, existing stocks and regional supplies look attractive; partial forward coverage at current EUR levels appears reasonable while monitoring any easing in freight or geopolitical risks.
- Industrial and food manufacturers in China: Given stable origin prices and strong consumer interest, this window is suitable for short‑term procurement (weeks, not months) without urgent concern about a sharp near‑term rally, while keeping an eye on any weather‑driven news once buckwheat planting accelerates later in the season.



