Indian dill seed markets are trading in a relatively quiet, price‑driven environment, with New Delhi FOB offers showing mild softness in organic grades and a flat tone in conventional segment. Over the last four weeks, organic dill seed FOB New Delhi eased from around EUR 1.27/kg to roughly EUR 1.22/kg (converted from USD quotes) amid comfortable spot availability and only selective export interest, while non‑organic sortex 99.95% material has held broadly steady near EUR 0.95/kg. The latest update dated 14 March 2026 indicates organic dill seed slipping another notch versus early‑March, suggesting that nearby demand from Europe and the Middle East is being covered without urgency and that buyers are resisting higher replacement costs seen in other seed spices like coriander and cumin. At the same time, India retains its status as the dominant global exporter of dill seed within the wider “other seeds” basket (ajwain, dill, anise, mustard, poppy, etc.), even though this segment saw a notable year‑on‑year decline in export volumes in 2023‑24, according to Spices Board data. Weather in North India, including Delhi and the key growing states of Rajasthan, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, has already turned seasonally warm but largely benign for late‑Rabi field operations, and the market is not currently pricing in any acute weather risk for the tail end of the 2025‑26 crop. Short‑term, this combination of soft export volumes, stable domestic flows and limited weather threat underpins a slightly bearish to neutral tone on dill seed, with EUR‑denominated FOB prices expected to edge sideways to marginally lower over the coming three sessions unless fresh export tenders emerge.
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📈 Prices – New Delhi FOB, Converted to EUR
All prices below are based on the user‑provided USD values converted at an indicative FX rate of 1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR. Levels are indicative for bulk FOB New Delhi offers.
| Product | Spec | Origin | Location | Delivery | Last Update (2026) | Last Price (EUR/kg, FOB) | Prev. Price (EUR/kg, FOB) | 1‑Week Δ % | 2‑Week Δ % | Sentiment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dill seeds | Organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 14 Mar | €1.20 | €1.21 | -0.8% | -4.1% vs 28 Feb | Slightly Bearish |
| Dill seeds | Organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 07 Mar | €1.21 | €1.24 | -2.2% | -3.7% vs 21 Feb | Soft |
| Dill seeds | Organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 28 Feb | €1.24 | €1.27 | -2.4% | -4.4% vs 14 Feb | Soft |
| Dill seeds | Organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 21 Feb | €1.27 | €1.29 | -1.6% | Flat vs 14 Feb | Softening |
| Dill seeds | Organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 14 Feb | €1.29 | €1.29 | 0.0% | n/a | Stable |
| Dill seeds | Sortex, 99.95% non‑organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 07 Mar | €0.93 | €0.93 | 0.0% | -1.8% vs 28 Feb | Neutral |
| Dill seeds | Sortex, 99.95% non‑organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 28 Feb | €0.93 | €0.95 | -1.8% | Flat vs 21 Feb | Mildly Soft |
| Dill seeds | Sortex, 99.95% non‑organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 21 Feb | €0.95 | €0.95 | 0.0% | Flat vs 14 Feb | Stable |
| Dill seeds | Sortex, 99.95% non‑organic | IN | New Delhi | FOB | 14 Feb | €0.95 | €0.95 | 0.0% | n/a | Stable |
Key Price Signals
- Organic dill seed FOB New Delhi has declined by roughly 6–7% in EUR terms from mid‑February to mid‑March 2026, pointing to a softening premium segment.
- Conventional sortex 99.95% material is almost unchanged over the same period, trading in a narrow EUR 0.93–0.95/kg band, indicating balanced nearby supply.
- The organic–conventional spread has narrowed from about €0.34/kg in mid‑February to around €0.27/kg by 14 March.
🌍 Supply & Demand Context (India‑Centric)
- Production geography: Dill seed in India is mainly produced in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, similar to other seed spices grown in the Rabi season.
- Export positioning: Recent trade data highlight India as the overwhelmingly dominant supplier of dill seed to the global market, accounting for about 93% of recorded export shipments.
- Spices Board basket: The Spices Board of India groups dill seed within “other seeds” (ajwain, dill, mustard, poppy, anise, etc.), a segment that saw around a 25% drop in export volumes in a recent half‑year period, signalling demand headwinds or buyer diversification.
- Export promotion: Dill seed is explicitly included in Rajasthan’s Spice Export Promotion Scheme, which supports freight subsidies for exporters buying from local mandis, helping sustain India’s competitive FOB pricing despite logistics cost pressures.
- Quality and compliance: Leading Indian exporters emphasise high essential‑oil content and compliance with APEDA/FSSAI and international standards (e.g. steam‑sterilised, certifiable organic), which keeps Indian dill embedded in Europe, North America and Middle East import programs.
📊 Fundamentals & Cross‑Spice Signals
- Seed spices complex: Cumin and coriander—major seed spices sharing similar agro‑climatic belts with dill—have seen strong price action recently on tighter supplies and sowing delays, particularly in Gujarat and Rajasthan. While dill seed is a smaller crop, these dynamics suggest farmers may have prioritised more remunerative cumin and coriander, potentially capping dill acreage.
- Export trends: India’s overall spice exports have grown in value, but volume gains are concentrated in high‑profile items like cumin, mint products and turmeric, while the “other seeds” basket that includes dill has underperformed, limiting upside demand pressure for dill seed in the near term.
- Compliance tightening: Episodes of heightened scrutiny on Indian spice quality and food safety standards have pushed processors to invest more in cleaning and sterilisation; however, for bulk dill seed, this has translated more into quality differentiation than into outright price inflation so far.
🌦 Weather Outlook – New Delhi & North India (Next 3 Days)
Weather conditions for New Delhi (a key reference point for North Indian spice trade flows) over the next three sessions are as follows:
| Date | Condition | High / Low (°C) | Market Impact Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15 Mar 2026 (Sun) | Hazy sunshine, chance of a morning thunderstorm; very unhealthy air quality | 30 / 18 | Minor disruption to early‑day loading possible if local showers materialise; otherwise normal mandi and port activity. |
| 16 Mar 2026 (Mon) | Hazy and very warm; very unhealthy air quality | 33 / 18 | Seasonally warm temperatures supportive of drying and handling of seed spices; no significant harvest risk. |
| 17 Mar 2026 (Tue) | Cloudy; very unhealthy air quality | 32 / 19 | Cloud cover may slightly improve daytime working conditions; logistics and loading expected to proceed normally. |
- Given that dill seed harvesting in the main producing states is largely complete by this stage of the Rabi cycle, the short‑term Delhi weather pattern poses low risk to standing crops.
- Potential impacts are confined to occasional handling or transport delays in and around Delhi mandis; no major price premium is expected as a result.
📆 3‑Day Regional Price Bias – Dill Seed FOB New Delhi (IN)
Baseline: Last organic FOB New Delhi quote around €1.20/kg; conventional sortex 99.95% approximately €0.93/kg.
| Date | Region | Grade | Expected Price Range (EUR/kg, FOB) | Bias | Drivers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 Mar 2026 | IN – New Delhi | Organic | €1.18 – €1.21 | Slightly Bearish | Soft export offtake, comfortable local stocks, benign weather. |
| 15 Mar 2026 | IN – New Delhi | Sortex 99.95% non‑organic | €0.92 – €0.94 | Neutral | Balanced domestic demand; buyers well‑covered nearby. |
| 16 Mar 2026 | IN – New Delhi | Organic | €1.18 – €1.22 | Slightly Bearish / Sideways | No fresh crop news; international demand steady but not aggressive. |
| 16 Mar 2026 | IN – New Delhi | Sortex 99.95% non‑organic | €0.92 – €0.95 | Sideways | Steady trade flows; competition from other Indian seed spices. |
| 17 Mar 2026 | IN – New Delhi | Organic | €1.18 – €1.23 | Neutral | Weather benign, no immediate tightening catalyst; scope for small trade‑driven spikes only. |
| 17 Mar 2026 | IN – New Delhi | Sortex 99.95% non‑organic | €0.92 – €0.96 | Neutral | Sideways pattern with low volatility expected. |
🎯 Trading Outlook – Action Points
- Importers / end‑users (EU, Middle East):
- Use current softness in organic FOB New Delhi (near €1.20/kg) to secure short‑ to medium‑term coverage, especially for pharma and herbal applications that require certified organic Indian origin.
- For conventional applications, stagger purchases around €0.93–0.95/kg FOB; no immediate need to chase the market higher given the neutral 3‑day outlook.
- Indian exporters:
- Focus on differentiating by oil content and cleanliness; quality‑linked premiums are achievable even in a flat price environment, particularly for steam‑sterilised and residue‑controlled lots.
- Leverage export promotion schemes (notably in Rajasthan) and competitive freight to defend market share in the “other seeds” basket where volumes have recently declined.
- Traders / speculators:
- Short‑term, the curve looks range‑bound with a mild downside bias in organic; aggressive long positioning is not favoured until there is evidence of stronger export demand or weather‑related supply issues.
- Monitor price behaviour in related seed spices (cumin, coriander) as any sharp rally there could re‑allocate acreage away from dill in the next season, tightening fundamentals with a lag.




