Peru has cemented its role as a fast-growing Latin American spice exporter, while Indian dried chilli prices are currently stable to slightly softer in EUR terms. For the next weeks, supply from key origins looks comfortable, but freight and certification costs remain key swing factors for import margins.
Peru has become the second-largest herb and spice exporter in Latin America, supported by two decades of double‑digit growth and increasing demand for health‑oriented, traceable ingredients. Within this broader spice complex, chillies and paprika from Mexico and Peru compete directly with Indian dried chilli in premium blends and industrial use. At the same time, current FOB offers from India for organic and conventional dried chilli suggest a broadly balanced nearby market, with only marginal price easing visible over recent weeks. Buyers should use this window to secure medium‑term cover before logistics or policy shocks re‑price risk into the market.
Exclusive Offers on CMBroker

Chilli dried
powder, grade a
FOB 4.38 €/kg
(from IN)

Chilli dried whole
bird eye, grade a
FOB 4.63 €/kg
(from IN)

Chilli dried
with stem
FOB 2.14 €/kg
(from IN)
📈 Prices & Recent Moves
FOB India indications for dried chilli are currently steady to slightly weaker when expressed in EUR. Using an indicative 1 USD ≈ 0.94 EUR, the latest offers (updated 18 April 2026) translate approximately as follows:
| Product | Specification | Origin | FOB price (EUR/kg) | 1-week change (EUR/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chilli dried | powder, grade A, organic | IN, Andhra Pradesh | ≈ 4.12 | stable vs. 11 April |
| Chilli dried whole | bird eye, grade A, organic | IN, New Delhi | ≈ 4.35 | stable vs. 11 April |
| Chilli dried | whole, stemless, grade A, non‑organic | IN, Andhra Pradesh | ≈ 2.00 | stable vs. 11 April |
Over the past three to four weeks, EUR‑denominated prices for both organic and conventional grades have moved in a very narrow band, with earlier minor USD‑price softening already reflected in today’s quotations.
🌍 Supply & Demand Context
Regionally, Mexico remains the leading Latin American exporter of chillies and related spice products, with exports above USD 1.2 billion in 2025. Peru has firmly taken second place in the regional herb and spice ranking, with USD 600.9 million in 2025 exports and an average sector growth rate of 12.3% per year since 2000. Within Peru’s portfolio, paprika and other spices complement onion and ginger, positioning the country as a growing origin for industrial chilli and paprika users.
Peru’s supply base is geographically diversified across six regions, reducing the risk of weather or logistics disruptions in any single area. Tacna stands out with exports of USD 25.1 million in 2025 and almost ninefold growth since 2000. While Tacna’s mix is led by oregano and paprika, its integration into Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Ecuador and the EU underscores the region’s ability to meet phytosanitary and residue standards, which is increasingly important for chilli buyers seeking traceability and clean‑label claims.
📊 Fundamentals & Trade Policy Drivers
The long‑term expansion of Peru’s herbs and spices sector has been underpinned by an active network of bilateral and multilateral trade agreements, supporting preferential access for chilli, paprika and other spices into high‑value markets. In parallel, the international profile of Peruvian cuisine has built consumer‑level demand for Peruvian‑origin ingredients, indirectly supporting price resilience in premium segments of the chilli and paprika complex.
The recent Expo Hierbas & Especias event in Tacna signals a maturing industry that is now actively courting international buyers. For chilli and paprika markets, this translates into gradually deeper origin diversification away from a near‑exclusive reliance on India and Mexico. Over time, that diversification can temper price spikes driven by localised crop or logistics shocks, especially for EU and South American buyers that can switch between origins while maintaining certification and quality standards.
📆 Short- and Medium-Term Outlook
In the next 30–90 days, export momentum from Peru’s Tacna region is expected to remain strong, especially for oregano and paprika shipped to Brazil and the EU. While chilli is not highlighted as Tacna’s lead product, firm regional paprika flows into established buyers indicate continued demand for capsicum‑based ingredients, indirectly supporting dried chilli consumption in sauces, blends and processed foods.
Year‑on‑year growth of nearly 30% in Tacna export values implies that the comparison base for 2025 is now much higher. Maintaining such growth rates will be challenging, particularly if freight rates rise again for Latin American outbound routes. For chilli importers in Europe and South America, this means that current flat EUR‑price conditions could give way to higher landed costs if logistics tighten or if certification and traceability requirements add to compliance expenditure.
Over a 6–12 month horizon, Peru’s herbs and spices sector is well placed to keep gaining regional market share. As Mexico maintains its focus on sauces, chillies and herb blends, Peru’s emphasis on less‑processed dried herbs and spices—including paprika and related capsicum products—leaves scope for further expansion into industrial chilli channels. European and North American demand for clean‑label, traceable spice ingredients should reinforce a structural premium for compliant, origin‑certified chilli and paprika shipments from Peru and other quality‑focused origins.
💡 Trading Strategy Outlook
- Near-term procurement (0–3 months): With FOB India chilli prices stable in EUR and Latin American spice exports running smoothly, buyers may consider securing a moderate share of Q3–Q4 needs now, particularly for organic powder and bird eye whole grades.
- Origin diversification: Industrial users relying heavily on Indian chilli should gradually increase exposure to Latin American paprika and chilli‑containing blends from Peru and Mexico to hedge against regional crop or policy shocks.
- Quality and certification premium: Given the growing importance of phytosanitary compliance and traceability in the EU and North America, importers may prioritise suppliers with strong certification footprints, accepting a modest premium in exchange for lower re‑inspection and rejection risk.
📍 3-Day Directional Price Indication (EUR)
- FOB India – dried chilli whole, stemless (non‑organic): Sideways in the very near term, around ≈ EUR 2.00/kg, with limited volatility expected.
- FOB India – organic chilli powder and bird eye whole: Mildly firm bias but effectively range‑bound near ≈ EUR 4.10–4.35/kg as buyers assess logistics and demand into Europe and Asia.
- Latin America (Peru/Mexico) paprika and chilli‑related spice exports: Export flows remain robust; any short‑term price firming is more likely to come from freight or currency moves than from immediate supply tightness.

