Tomatoes feel the squeeze: why your sandwich is suddenly costing more

North America, USASat May 30 2026
Most people don’t think of tomatoes as politics on a plate, but they’re now carrying a heavier price tag than eggs did a couple years ago. A 40 % jump in the past year makes tomatoes the fastest-rising grocery item, beating beef, coffee, and seafood. Economists point to three big triggers: a war in the Middle East that nudged fuel costs up, extreme weather that shrank harvests, and a sudden change in trade rules with Mexico, the source of almost all U. S. tomatoes. When the U. S. walked away from a deal that allowed Mexican tomatoes to enter duty-free, shelves started showing the price pain. By spring, every pound hitting stores came with an extra 17 % tariff that eventually cost shoppers millions. The rule change felt like a win for American growers struggling to compete, yet the biggest losers turned out to be the people buying groceries. Small stores and sandwich chains that once paid $27 for a case of tomatoes now fork out $93. One regional chain says it now spends an extra $1. 7 million a year on tomatoes alone, pushing menu prices higher and squeezing already tight margins. Meanwhile, social media lights up with videos of shoppers grabbing phones instead of produce, vowing to grow their own or just skip the slice.
Restaurants feel it even harder. A supply-tracking firm reports that grape tomatoes shot up 65 % in a single month. The owner of a Colorado-to-Texas sandwich shop summed it up: “A tomato isn’t just a topping anymore—it’s a line item on the profit-and-loss sheet. ” Analysts expect relief later in the year once U. S. farms harvest their own crop and plantings expand, but that cycle takes months. Until then, the red orb stays a symbol of how quickly food policy can hit daily life. The bigger question is whether one ingredient can truly tell the story of inflation or if it’s just a bright red symptom of deeper pressures. After all, eggs once wore that badge of shame, only to swap places with tomatoes when trade policy shifted. The next time the price tag makes you pause, ask who really pays when supply chains break—and who gets the bill.
https://localnews.ai/article/tomatoes-feel-the-squeeze-why-your-sandwich-is-suddenly-costing-more-5646c5cf

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