Prices for dried thyme have inched higher in both Egypt and India, with only modest week‑on‑week gains but a clearly firmer undertone. Weather has turned volatile in parts of North India and Egypt, yet so far without clear evidence of yield loss, keeping the market more cautious than bullish.
Dried thyme export prices from Cairo (conventional) and New Delhi (organic) are trading slightly above last week, reflecting steady overseas demand and limited farmer selling rather than any confirmed crop shock. Egypt has just come through a rare mix of dust storms, hail and heavy rain, briefly disrupting logistics around Cairo and the Nile Delta, while India’s North has seen unusually changeable March weather with alternating heat, fog and rain episodes. For now, fundamentals remain broadly balanced, but buyers should expect firmer offers if further weather instability overlaps with the next key growth stages.
Exclusive Offers on CMBroker

Thyme dried
crush leaves
FOB 1.32 €/kg
(from EG)

Thyme dried
crush leaves
FOB 5.13 €/kg
(from IN)
📈 Prices & Short-Term Trend
All prices below are approximate FOB levels converted to EUR.
| Origin | Product | Location / Term | Latest Price (EUR/kg) | 1-week Change | Bias (next 3 days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egypt (EG) | Thyme dried, crush leaves, conventional | Cairo, FOB | ≈ €1.32 | +1–2% | Slightly firm |
| India (IN) | Thyme dried, crush leaves, organic | New Delhi, FOB | ≈ €5.13 | +0.5–1% | Stable to firm |
Egyptian conventional thyme has recovered the small dip seen earlier in March and is now trading at the upper end of the recent range. Indian organic thyme continues to command a strong premium, with marginal week‑on‑week gains indicating solid niche demand and tight certified supply.
🌍 Supply, Demand & Weather Drivers
Egypt (EG)
Recent posts from Egypt describe an unusual sequence of dust storms, hail and intense rain around Cairo in the last few days, briefly disrupting local activity but also clearing dust and improving short‑term soil moisture. For thyme and other herbs near the Nile, this pattern is a mixed blessing: better moisture after a dry spell, but localized risk of lodging or leaf damage where hail hit hardest.
No fresh official reports point to large‑scale herb losses, and export‑oriented processors continue to run near normal levels. With global spice and herb trade still adapting to logistics issues on various routes, buyers remain sensitive to any suggestion of Egyptian supply tightness, which helps explain the slightly firmer FOB indications even without clear crop damage.
India (IN)
North India, including Delhi, has seen notably erratic March weather this year, with local observers highlighting a mix of winter‑like fog, rain spells and cooler air interrupting otherwise warming conditions. These swings come on top of recent seasons marked by above‑normal March heat episodes in Delhi, reminding growers and traders of the increasing climate volatility risk.
For thyme – a relatively small but high‑value herb segment – there are no signs of a major production shock in India, yet organic acreage is limited and certification costs remain high. With stable export and domestic demand for clean‑label, organic ingredients, even small concerns about weather or yields tend to translate into cautious offers rather than price discounts.
📊 Fundamentals & Market Sentiment
- Stocks: Working inventories at packers in both Egypt and India appear adequate but not burdensome; sellers show little urgency to discount.
- Logistics: Short‑term, localized weather around Cairo has had some potential to slow movements, but international lanes remain open and functional.
- Demand: Food manufacturers continue to prioritize consistent quality and residue compliance for both conventional and organic thyme, supporting premiums for reliable origins.
- Risk bias: Given the backdrop of climate variability in both producing regions, participants are more inclined to cover near‑term needs on dips rather than wait for lower prices.
📆 Trading Outlook (Next 1–2 Weeks)
- Buyers (importers/packers): Consider topping up nearby coverage for Egyptian conventional thyme at current levels; upside risk outweighs downside over the very short term if further weather instability emerges around Nile‑Delta production zones.
- Organic segment buyers: For Indian organic thyme, strategies should focus on staggered purchases; prices are already elevated, but limited certified supply means sharp corrections are unlikely without a demand shock.
- Producers/exporters: Maintain offer discipline but be ready to close business on firm bids; modest price strength is supported primarily by risk perception rather than hard evidence of crop loss, so upside may be gradual.
📍 3‑Day Regional Price Indication (Directional)
- Egypt – Cairo FOB conventional thyme: Bias: sideways to slightly up. Weather‑related logistics noise and cautious sellers support a narrow €0.01–0.02/kg upside band.
- India – New Delhi FOB organic thyme: Bias: stable to firm. No clear supply shock, but tight organic availability likely keeps offers at or just above current levels.








