Ukrainian flax prices are broadly stable at FCA 0.66–0.70 EUR/kg, with mixed moves on nearby EU FCA positions and a firm premium for organic origins. Black Sea logistics and war-related risks remain elevated but have not yet translated into a sharp price spike in flax.
The flax market in and around Ukraine is currently driven more by general oilseed and logistics sentiment than by crop-specific news. Spring sowing is progressing, though overall sowing pace for grains and industrial crops is still somewhat behind last year. Weather in key flax logistics hubs Kyiv and Odesa is seasonally cool and mostly dry, offering neutral‑to‑slightly supportive conditions for spring fieldwork. Export flows face headline risk from continued attacks on Black Sea infrastructure and new Ukrainian efforts to curb Russia’s “shadow grain fleet”, but commercial agricultural shipping from Ukrainian ports remains operational under the current security setup.
Exclusive Offers on CMBroker

Flax seeds brown
brown
99,95%
FCA 0.70 €/kg
(from PL)

Flax seeds brown
brown
98%
FCA 0.66 €/kg
(from UA)

Flax seeds brown
brown
98%
FCA 0.66 €/kg
(from UA)
📈 Prices
All prices converted and expressed in EUR/kg for comparability.
| Origin | Location / Term | Spec (brown) | Current price (EUR/kg) | Prev. price (EUR/kg) | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ukraine | FCA Kyiv | 98% non-organic | 0.66 | 0.66 | Stable |
| Ukraine | FCA Odesa | 98% non-organic | 0.66 | 0.66 | Stable |
| Ukraine → Poland | FCA Kiełczygłów (PL) | 99.95% non-organic | 0.70 | 0.74 | ⬇ |
| Ukraine → Germany | FCA Berlin (DE) | 99.95% non-organic | 0.78 | 0.74 | ⬆ |
| Canada | FOB Ottawa | 97% organic | 1.43 | 1.43 | Stable |
| Kazakhstan | FOB Astana | 97% organic | 1.82 | 1.82 | Stable |
| India | FOB New Delhi | 99.9% non-organic | 0.92 | 0.91 | ⬆ |
| India | FCA New Delhi | 99.9% non-organic | 0.89 | 0.85 | ⬆ |
Key takeaway: domestic FCA prices in Ukraine are steady, while EU‑side FCA values have diverged (slight softening in Poland, firmer in Germany), hinting at localized demand and logistics effects rather than a broad fundamental shift.
🌍 Supply & Demand
There is little flax-specific news in the past few days, but oilseeds as a group in Ukraine are supported by ongoing demand for edible oils, with Ukraine remaining a key global sunflower oil supplier. The current spring sowing campaign shows accelerated weekly progress and a narrowing gap versus last year, though total area is still modestly behind 2025, reflecting war-related constraints and input cost pressures.
In this context, flax competes for acreage with higher-profile oilseeds such as sunflower and rapeseed. Farmers’ decisions this spring appear driven chiefly by margin expectations in maize, sunflower and rapeseed, while flax acreage likely remains relatively stable. With no major production shock or export restriction headlines in the last three days, the near‑term balance for flax looks neutral, with sufficient spot availability in Ukraine and neighboring EU markets.
📊 Fundamentals & Logistics
Black Sea logistics remain a central risk factor. Recent Russian strikes on the port infrastructure in the Odesa region, including damage that led to a large sunflower oil spill near Chornomorsk, underline the fragility of export routes for all oilseeds and products. However, there is no indication that the agricultural export corridor has been shut down in the past 72 hours; flows continue under heightened security.
At the same time, Ukraine is intensifying efforts to counter Russia’s “shadow grain fleet” that moves commodities originating from occupied territories, signaling a tougher sanctions and monitoring regime for suspicious shipments. While this mainly targets illicit grain flows, it contributes to an environment of regulatory uncertainty and possible tighter scrutiny of Black Sea movements in general. For flax, the immediate impact is limited, but any broader escalation that constrains port capacity or raises freight and insurance costs could quickly feed into higher FOB and FCA replacement prices.
🌦 Weather Outlook (UA Focus)
Near-term weather in key Ukrainian flax logistics hubs is seasonally cool but not disruptive. Kyiv is experiencing daytime temperatures around +10 to +13°C with mostly cloudy skies and low-to-moderate precipitation, while Odesa is slightly milder, near +11°C on 1 May with mainly cloudy conditions and light winds.
Over the next three days, both regions are expected to see predominantly dry to only lightly showery weather, which is broadly favorable for ongoing fieldwork and transport. Soil moisture following a reasonably wet late winter/early spring remains adequate for early growth, and there are currently no signs of acute drought or flooding that would justify a weather premium in flax prices.
📆 Short-Term Price & Trading Outlook
Trading recommendations
- EU buyers (feed and crushing): Consider incremental coverage at current FCA Ukraine (0.66 EUR/kg) and FCA PL levels (0.70 EUR/kg) for nearby needs, as these still represent a discount to non‑Black Sea origins once logistics are included.
- Ukrainian sellers: With domestic FCA flat and Black Sea risks elevated but not yet fully priced in, it may be prudent to hedge a portion of Q2 shipments while keeping some volume unpriced in case of logistics‑driven rallies.
- Premium origins (CA, KZ, organic): Maintain offer discipline; current 1.40–1.80 EUR/kg FOB range looks sustainable given limited competition and stable demand in niche food and organic segments.
3‑Day regional directional outlook (1–4 May 2026)
- FCA Kyiv (UA): 0.66 EUR/kg – expected stable; no strong local demand or logistics shock visible.
- FCA Odesa (UA): 0.66 EUR/kg – bias steady to slightly firmer if further port incidents lift risk premiums, but base case is unchanged levels.
- FCA Kiełczygłów (PL): 0.70 EUR/kg – after recent easing, likely sideways as cross‑border flows remain adequate.
- FCA Berlin (DE): 0.78 EUR/kg – mild upward bias possible on ongoing demand from EU food and crushing buyers, but no sharp move expected over three days.






