Organic dried basil export prices from Egypt and India are ticking slightly higher in early May, helped by currency moves and steady overseas demand, while broader spice markets remain subdued.
Export activity in both origins is underpinned by resilient agricultural shipments, relatively benign short‑term weather and a weak local‑currency backdrop, particularly in Egypt, which is firming euro‑denominated offers across dried herbs.
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Basil dried
FOB 2.32 €/kg
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Basil
Dried
FOB 1.22 €/kg
(from EG)
📈 Prices & Currency Impact
FOB organic dried basil offers are modestly firmer week on week in both Cairo and New Delhi, with euro‑denominated gains in Egypt amplified by a softer Egyptian pound against the euro, in line with recent moves seen in other dried herbs such as marjoram. Broader Indian spice futures have traded mixed, with some weakness in cumin and flat turmeric pointing to generally subdued speculative buying and cautious export demand, which is limiting any aggressive upside in basil. Overall, basil remains a niche but relatively stable segment inside the wider spice complex.
| Origin | Product | Term | Latest Indicative FOB Price (EUR/kg) | 1-week Change (EUR/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egypt (EG) | Organic dried basil | FOB Cairo | ≈1.13 | +0.02 |
| India (IN) | Organic dried basil | FOB New Delhi | ≈2.16 | +0.02 |
(USD reference offers converted at ~1 EUR = 1.08 USD for comparability.)
🌍 Supply, Trade Flows & Demand
Egypt continues to act as a key global hub for dried herbs, leveraging large cultivated areas, established processing capacity and active export channels into Europe and the Middle East. Recent commentary on Egyptian dried herb exports highlights that euro‑based buyers are facing firmer offers primarily due to FX, not tight raw material, suggesting supply is broadly balanced. Agricultural export volumes from Egypt overall have remained strong in 2026, indicating that logistics and port operations are functioning, even amid regional tensions.
India’s spice sector remains very well supplied, with recent reports noting higher arrivals in key APMC markets and mixed pricing across major spices. While basil is a small share of India’s spice basket, the same dynamics of ample availability and cautious export demand apply, keeping dried basil fundamentally well supplied. Trade‑side discussions also indicate that exporters are active but facing margin pressure in some Gulf destinations due to weaker downstream pricing, encouraging competitive offers on niche herbs.
📊 Fundamentals & Weather
Short‑term weather in key basil producing areas looks largely non‑disruptive. Around Cairo, the 3‑day outlook points to hazy sunshine, moderate daytime temperatures near the mid‑20s °C and cool nights, favourable for ongoing fieldwork and drying without major heat stress or rainfall interruptions. In northern India, New Delhi faces hot conditions near the high‑30s °C with increased cloudiness and scattered thunderstorms early next week, which may briefly interrupt harvesting or sun‑drying but should not materially affect overall availability.
Structurally, both origins continue to invest in certified organic herb production and quality control, with exporters in Egypt underscoring compliance with EU and USDA standards for dried basil. Currency remains a key driver for euro‑based prices: Egypt’s weaker pound supports local farm and processing margins even at steady dollar prices, while India’s more stable currency means euro‑denominated basil offers move more in line with underlying dollar levels and freight.
📆 Short-Term Outlook & Trading Strategy
- Buyers (EU/MENA): Consider covering near‑term organic basil needs from Egypt in the next 1–2 weeks, as FX‑driven firmness may persist but fundamental supply is comfortable, limiting sharp price spikes.
- Buyers (Asia / blended sourcing): Use India for premium or specialized cuts where quality differentials justify the higher price; negotiate on the basis of generally soft spice sentiment and higher arrivals in other crops.
- Sellers (Egypt & India): Maintain offer discipline in euros but stay flexible on freight and payment terms; with broader spices under pressure, competitive logistics can be the differentiator rather than base price cuts.
🔭 3-Day Directional Price Indication (EUR, FOB)
- Egypt – Organic dried basil, FOB Cairo: Mildly firm bias; euro prices expected to trade in a narrow higher band on FX support and steady export interest.
- India – Organic dried basil, FOB New Delhi: Largely stable with a slight upward tilt; broader spice softness caps gains, but no signals of discounting.

