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Omelette prices fell slightly in June 2026 restaurant data

作者

What is the price of an omelette at restaurants?

  • The median price of an omelette at Toast restaurants in June 2026 was $15.00.

  • In June 2026, omelette prices rose 1.9% year-over-year compared to June 2025.

  • In June 2026, omelette prices fell 0.1% month-over-month compared to May 2026.


Key takeaways

Month

Median omelette price

Year-over-year percent change

June 2025

$14.72

+5.1%

July 2025

$14.73

+5.2%

August 2025

$14.75 

+5.4%

September 2025

$14.77 

+4.9%

October 2025

$14.81

+4.9%

November 2025

$14.86

+5.0%

December 2025

$14.86

+4.9%

January 2026

$14.88

+4.6%

February 2026

$14.90

+3.5%

March 2026

$14.91

+2.5%

April 2026

$14.99

+1.9% 

May 2026

$15.01

+1.8%

June 2026

$15.00

+1.9%

资源

菜单工程工作表

这份菜单工程工作表包含复杂精细的菜单工程公式,您可借此分析餐厅菜单的优势与不足。

Served by Toast

What affects omelette pricing?

The primary driver of variations in omelette pricing is egg prices because, after all, as the saying goes: You can’t make an omelette without breaking a few eggs. With an omelette typically using 3 or so eggs, a shift in the price of a dozen is often quickly felt by diners. 

But more goes into the price of an omelette than just egg prices. No menu item is exempt from inflation, of course, which has recently risen significantly. Dairy prices can have downstream effects, too, since eggs are typically whipped with milk and omelettes often feature melted cheese. 

Fillings, too, could affect omelette prices. A classic Western omelette is stuffed with diced ham, bell peppers, and onions. Any shift in the price of those items can move the price of an omelette. And, say, a diner opts to really stuff their omelette versus going for a basic egg-and-cheese variety — that, too, would help push the median figure upward. The possibilities are endless for an omelette, which means the price could shift in any direction.

Key factors in recent years

Egg price conversations holds a somewhat surprisingly strong grip on American discourse. We love our eggs and we eat a lot of them. So we notice when it affects our pocketbooks. 

And it seems every few years consumers in America see egg prices shoot up, for one reason or another. Over the past few years, debilitating Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) outbreaks have typically been the root cause of big jumps in egg prices. The illness culls herd sizes, which leads to shortages and price hikes. A particularly harmful bird flu outbreak in 2025 led, in part, to a more than 350% jump in the price of a dozen eggs. As Data by Toast reported at the time, this helped cause a steady increase in omelette prices. Prices in April 2025 were up 5.4% year-over-year, for instance. 

Eggs prices have since largely fallen and stabilized, but omelette prices haven’t seen a steep drop. It seems restaurants have opted to keep prices relatively flat, even as eggs returned to normal. That choice could act as a small bulwark against inflation, which has shot up even as eggs got cheaper.

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