Carrot prices in Poland began increasing in early December, and the upward trend continues, although from a very low starting point, FreshPlaza informs.
By the end of last year, the average wholesale price rose about 6% over the month, offering a modest but positive development for local producers. The Polish Statistical Office (GUS) recently revised the 2025 harvest estimate upward: actual production reached 611,300 tonnes, up from the October forecast of 599,000 tonnes. Earlier summer projections had estimated 627,000 tonnes. Despite this, output exceeded last year’s volume by roughly 52,000 tonnes, or 9.3%. Graphs indicate that the 2025 crop only surpasses the results of the past two years.


Also read: New yellow carrot program launches
Higher domestic prices are restrained by relatively cheap imports from the Netherlands, which enter the market at 1.00–1.30 PLN/kg (€0.24-0.31) and are likely not of top quality. Dutch producer prices are extremely low: 0.10–0.11 EUR/kg on local exchanges, compared to around 0.13 EUR/kg earlier in the month. Comparisons across Western Europe show large differences: Italy and Belgium report 0.80–0.90 EUR/kg, Germany and France 0.65–0.70 EUR/kg, and even Ukraine is higher at 2.20 PLN/kg (€0.50).
Overall, both Polish and Dutch carrots appear undervalued. Low prices limit larger-scale imports while providing a favorable starting point for exports. If winter remains cold and supply tightens, Polish carrot prices are likely to continue strengthening in early 2026.
The use of the site materials is free if there is a direct and open for search engines hyperlink to a specific publication of the East-Fruit.com website.



