Stable Goji Berry Prices in Europe as New Chinese Crop Approaches
Concise goji berry market report for June 2026: stable EU prices, steady China supply, logistics overview, and short-term trading outlook.
Prices & Market Tone
Wholesale indications for Chinese goji berries delivered into Northwest Europe are broadly stable in early June, with recent offers showing no change over the past month. This steadiness contrasts with still elevated retail prices across EU health-food channels, where organic goji berries commonly sell around EUR 29–33/kg, depending on pack size and brand positioning.
Overall market tone is described as balanced: buyers are sufficiently covered for nearby needs and see no immediate trigger for aggressive purchasing, while sellers remain reluctant to cut offers in view of firm logistics and labour costs in China. The lack of fresh bearish news on the 2026 crop is helping to anchor current levels.
Supply, Demand & Logistics
China remains the dominant origin for EU goji berry supplies, with core production concentrated in Ningxia and neighbouring north‑western regions. Publicly available logistics and trade commentary underline that China–Europe rail volumes have continued to expand in early 2026, offering an alternative to ocean freight for higher‑value and time‑sensitive cargoes.
On the seaborne side, major carriers report a still-challenging but functioning environment: reroutings and macro disruptions are keeping certain lanes tight, yet Europe-focused updates point to stable-to-firm ocean freight rates rather than fresh spikes, allowing dried fruit shippers to plan shipments with reasonable predictability.
Fundamentals & Weather
In China’s main goji belt (Ningxia and adjacent inland provinces), June typically marks the beginning of fresh harvest activity, with berries maturing through the summer. Recent Chinese ag-weather alerts have focused on wind and lodging risks for field crops and protected agriculture in parts of northern China, but no specific large‑scale damage has been reported for goji orchards.
An earlier report highlighted that goji cultivation continues to be supported by local development plans in Ningxia, reinforcing the medium-term supply base. With no acute weather shock currently visible, traders expect a broadly normal start to the 2026 harvest, though quality outcomes will depend on in‑season rainfall and sun exposure in the coming weeks.
Trade & Policy Backdrop
EU agri‑food trade continues to show resilient two‑way flows, with fruit and vegetable imports remaining a key growth driver for intra‑EU and extra‑EU trade. For goji berries, China’s role as primary origin remains secure, but importers are watching broader EU–China trade tensions and regulatory tightening for possible indirect effects on niche products.
A notable change ahead is the EU’s removal of the customs duty‑free threshold for low‑value e‑commerce consignments from July 1, 2026, which could gradually shift part of the goji trade from small parcel flows to more formal wholesale and B2B channels. This may marginally increase landed costs for direct‑to‑consumer shipments but is unlikely to disrupt established containerised imports for wholesale buyers.
Trading Outlook (Next 2–4 Weeks)
- Buyers (EU importers, packers): Consider maintaining hand‑to‑mouth coverage into early Q3 while monitoring first harvest quality signals from Ningxia. Use any temporary freight softness on China–Europe lanes to secure logistics capacity ahead of peak fruit and nut shipping later in the year.
- Sellers (Chinese exporters, EU stock‑holders): With no clear bearish catalyst, holding offers near current levels appears justified; modest discounts may be needed only for slower‑moving sizes or specifications if early crop sentiment turns more comfortable.
- Retail and brand owners: Given the persistent gap between retail and origin prices, there is room to use promotions tactically without eroding margin, especially if competition from other dried fruits (e.g., berries) intensifies during summer campaigns.