Indian dill seed prices steady as organic premium narrows
Indian dill seed prices hold steady as organic weakens slightly. See current EUR-based price levels, drivers, weather impact and 3-day outlook for India.
Prices & Spreads
Recent mandi data put the Indian national average Suva price near INR 8,126/quintal (≈EUR 0.89/kg), with Gujarat markets such as Unjha trading in a similar band and showing only mild day-to-day volatility. Export-grade conventional dill seed from New Delhi currently sits around EUR 0.89–0.90/kg FOB, while organic material is near EUR 1.04–1.05/kg FOB after a small week-on-week decline.
Supply, Demand & Trade Flows
Domestic wholesale prices around INR 8,000–8,200/quintal suggest manageable supplies, with arrivals in Gujarat no longer at peak harvest levels, which removes some downward pressure. Export customs data show ongoing shipments of dill seed and related seed-spice blends to the US and other destinations through April 2026, confirming active trade but no sign of a sudden demand shock.
The broader Indian seed-spice complex, including coriander, is in consolidation after previous rallies, but reports highlight underlying tightness and accumulation in coriander futures, hinting that seed-spice buyers remain cautious about forward coverage. This backdrop limits downside for dill: importers are sensitive to price spikes but are still willing to pay a modest premium for reliable Indian-origin supplies.
Weather & Crop Conditions (India)
Dill seed in India is concentrated in Gujarat, Rajasthan and parts of Madhya Pradesh. While no very recent crop-specific alerts have been issued, the Indian Meteorological Department has flagged persistent heat episodes over Gujarat and adjoining Rajasthan during May, with above-normal maximum temperatures and occasional heatwave pockets.
For the coming days, IMD outlooks for Gujarat indicate mostly dry, hot conditions with no strong weather systems, as the southwest monsoon advance remains focused on southern and eastern regions. For current marketing of the 2025/26 crop, this mainly affects storage and handling conditions rather than yields, but persistent heat raises a mild risk of quality deterioration in poorly stored seed lots, supporting a quality premium for well-cleaned, sortexed product.
Market Drivers & Fundamentals
- Domestic price anchor: Stable APMC averages near EUR 0.89/kg point to a market in balance, with neither heavy distress selling nor aggressive stockpiling visible.
- Export continuity: Recent customs records confirm ongoing dill seed exports in mixed spice consignments, underpinning a steady export floor without signaling demand destruction.
- Seed-spice complex tightness: Coriander’s consolidation at elevated levels, with analysts describing the market as in an accumulation phase, shows that seed-spice fundamentals remain firm, indirectly supporting dill sentiment.
- Macro spice sentiment: Broader Indian spice commentary continues to emphasize strong export interest and relatively high values for several seeds, reinforcing the view that current dill prices are more likely a floor than a ceiling in the near term.
Trading Outlook (1–3 weeks)
- Importers (EU / Middle East): Use current flat conventional FOB levels around EUR 0.90/kg to secure short-term coverage; consider layering in organic purchases while the premium has narrowed, but avoid chasing volume if freight surcharges spike again.
- Indian exporters: With mandi prices stable and export demand steady, maintain offers but be flexible on small discounts for larger lots to keep pipelines filled; prioritize quality differentiation (cleaning, sortex) to capture a higher margin in a weather-stressed environment.
- Domestic traders: Given limited downside and potential seed-spice strength, carry moderate stocks rather than heavy positions; look for any temporary mandi dips below the current INR ~8,000/quintal band as buying opportunities.
3-Day Directional Price View (Region: India)
- Gujarat mandis (Suva): Sideways to mildly firm; hot, dry conditions and normal arrivals suggest prices holding near the current INR 8,000–8,300/quintal (≈EUR 0.88–0.90/kg) range.
- New Delhi FOB conventional: Stable; offers expected to remain around EUR 0.89–0.90/kg with limited scope for downside unless domestic mandis soften sharply.
- New Delhi FOB organic: Slight downside bias; after recent easing, organic could drift another EUR 0.01–0.02/kg lower if buyers resist higher premiums, but a sharp correction looks unlikely.