Vanilla Roots · Market Intelligence

Vanilla Bean Prices,
2012 – 2026

A 14-year record of what Indonesian and Madagascar vanilla has actually traded for — FOB export benchmarks by grade, US retail context, and the events behind every major move.

$600–800 Peak price / kg Madagascar Grade A, 2018
$15–90 Indonesia range / kg All grades, FOB, 2025–26
14 yrs Data span 2012 – Q2 2026
2025–2026 Benchmark Snapshot

Indonesian vanilla (FOB): Grade A whole/split beans trade at $50–90/kg; Grade B extraction-grade at $15–40/kg. Indonesia held anomalously high in 2023 ($104–$258/kg) due to local speculative positions, and has since normalised downward into 2025–26. Madagascar vanilla collapsed sharply after the government export price floor was cancelled in April 2023 — commodity grades briefly fell below $20/kg. The current informal $50–70/kg floor limits downside, while certified premium Grade A holds $60–120/kg. US retail for quality cured beans remains $152–$241/kg (Procurement Tactics, mid-2025), reflecting the multi-layer intermediary margin separating FOB from shelf.

Interactive Chart
FOB Export Price History — Grade & Origin Comparison

Toggle series on/off. Hover for price and event context. Shows mid-range FOB benchmarks for cured export beans.

Indonesia Gr. A (FOB)
Indonesia Gr. B (FOB)
Madagascar Gr. A (FOB)
Madagascar Gr. B (FOB)
US Retail Gr. A (est.)

Chart shows mid-range benchmark prices for cured FOB export beans. Grade A = gourmet/whole (14cm+, 25%+ moisture). Wide within-year variation exists; see full ranges in the table below. Sources: Tridge export trade data; Procurement Tactics (2025); Cooks Vanilla market reports; Monchy Natural Products (2024); Vanilla Roots direct transaction data.

Market Events
What Moved Prices

Every inflection point has a cause. These are the structural and event-driven forces behind each cycle.

2012–14
Post-Crash Base — Decade-Low Prices
Following the 2000–2004 vanilla price crash, the market spent years at historically depressed levels. Madagascar FOB traded around $20–50/kg. Farmers had abandoned vines at low prices, quietly constraining future output.
Supply base
2015–16
Cyclone Haruna + Emerging Supply Tightness
Adverse weather in Madagascar's Sava region and the cumulative effect of vine abandonment began tightening real supply. Madagascar Grade A crossed $100/kg FOB. Indonesia, as a smaller origin, followed with a lag — Grade A moved from the low $30s toward $80–130/kg.
Weather + supply tightening
2017
Cyclone Enawo — The Trigger Event
Cyclone Enawo hit Madagascar on March 7, 2017 with 145 mph winds — the strongest storm in 13 years. It destroyed approximately 30% of the total vanilla crop, including 80–90% of beans in the Sambava and Antalaha growing zones. Prices went near-vertical within weeks.
Category 4 cyclone
2018
All-Time Peak — Madagascar Exceeds $600/kg
The speculative frenzy peaked through 2017–2018. Premium Madagascar Grade A traded at $600–$800/kg FOB — briefly more expensive than silver by weight (TIME, 2018). Indonesian Grade A followed to $180–260/kg. Extract houses faced acute margin and reformulation crises.
All-time peak
2019–20
Planting Boom Matures — Crash Begins
Record prices triggered massive global replanting. Three-year-old vines reached first harvest simultaneously, flooding the market. Madagascar export values fell from $855M (2018) to $573M (2019). COVID hospitality closures removed additional demand, accelerating the decline.
Oversupply crash
2021–22
Continued Deflation — Government Price Floor Set
Madagascar set a mandatory minimum export price of USD 250/kg to protect farmers. The floor created a distortion: official prices looked stable while the real market was far weaker. Buyers began routing via alternative channels. Indonesia held relatively higher due to low export volumes (~150MT in 2023).
Policy intervention
2023
Export Floor Cancelled — Madagascar Prices Collapse
Under international pressure, Madagascar cancelled its minimum export price in April 2023. Prices dropped sharply — from $250/kg to below $20/kg for lowest grades almost immediately. Madagascar 2023 export prices ranged $9–$204/kg (Tridge) — an enormous spread reflecting grade chaos and desperate sellers. Exports only re-opened December 2023.
Floor cancelled — crash
2024
Madagascar Exports 4,300MT in H1 — Glut Deepens
Madagascar alone exported 4,300 metric tons in H1 2024. Combined with Uganda (~300–400MT) and Indonesia/PNG (~300MT), global supply exceeded 6,000MT. A new informal $60/kg floor was set mid-2024. Indonesia, carrying local speculative positions from 2023 ($104–$258/kg), saw prices begin unwinding toward normalised levels.
Global glut
2024
EUDR Traceability Requirements Take Effect
EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) enforcement and tightening FSMA traceability standards added compliance cost. Buyers began prioritising documented, traceable origins — creating a widening premium gap between traceable and non-traceable supply at equivalent grade. Direct-source Indonesian vanilla with lot-level CoA became comparatively more attractive.
Regulatory shift
2025–26
Large Crop, Depressed Market, US Tariff Redirection
The 2025 Madagascar crop was abundant. Madagascar export rules allow shipments only for beans priced $50–70/kg. US retail holds $152–$241/kg. Indonesia has normalised to $15–90/kg depending on grade. Farmgate green vanilla in Madagascar fell as low as $1.50/kg in 2025 — a forward signal of future supply pressure. US tariffs have redirected some procurement interest toward Indonesian origin.
Current market

Annual Data Table
Year-by-Year FOB Price Ranges

Cured export bean price ranges per kilogram, USD FOB. Grade A = gourmet/whole (14cm+). Ranges reflect grade variation, certification premiums, and transaction type.

Year Indonesia Gr. A (FOB) Indonesia Gr. B (FOB) Madagascar Gr. A (FOB) Madagascar Gr. B (FOB) US Retail Gr. A (est.) Key Market Driver
2012 $25–45/kg$10–20/kg$20–50/kg$10–22/kg $80–110/kgPost-2004 crash base; stable low prices
2013 $25–50/kg$12–22/kg$25–55/kg$12–24/kg $85–115/kgGradual recovery; vine abandonment constrains future output
2014 $30–55/kg$14–24/kg$35–65/kg$15–28/kg $90–125/kgSupply tightening begins; demand steady
2015 $55–95/kg$22–40/kg$80–130/kg$35–60/kg $120–170/kgCyclone Haruna; first speculative buying wave
2016 $80–130/kg$35–58/kg$130–220/kg$58–100/kg $160–230/kgSustained supply fear; speculative buying escalates
2017 $130–200/kg$55–90/kg $250–500/kg$110–220/kg $230–340/kg Cyclone Enawo — ~30% of Madagascar crop destroyed
2018 $180–260/kg$75–120/kg $500–800/kg$220–350/kg $310–440/kg All-time peak — Madagascar briefly exceeds silver price
2019 $130–190/kg$55–85/kg$220–380/kg$100–170/kg $260–370/kgPlanting boom matures; exports fall $855M → $573M
2020 $75–120/kg$30–55/kg$180–290/kg$80–130/kg $185–265/kgCOVID demand shock; oversupply compounds; ~$250/kg by Sept
2021 $55–95/kg$22–42/kg$130–260/kg$60–115/kg $170–235/kgMadagascar sets $250/kg export price floor
2022 $50–85/kg$18–35/kg$110–250/kg$50–110/kg $160–225/kgFloor maintained; Indonesia lagging lower on reduced demand
2023 $104–258/kg$35–80/kg $9–204/kg$6–90/kg $155–230/kg Madagascar floor cancelled April 2023 — prices collapse; Indonesia holds high on local speculation
2024 $104–178/kg$25–55/kg $15–125/kg$8–55/kg $152–241/kg Madagascar exports 4,300MT in H1; global glut; informal $60/kg floor reinstated
2025 $50–90/kg$15–38/kg$10–125/kg$8–50/kg $152–241/kg Large crop; Indonesia normalises; US tariffs redirect procurement; Madagascar farmgate falls to $1.50/kg green
2026 YTD $50–90/kg$15–40/kg$15–120/kg$8–55/kg $152–241/kg Current benchmark — EUDR traceability premium emerging; supply still elevated

Sources: Tridge global trade data (HS 090510); Procurement Tactics vanilla price tracking (Aug 2025); Cooks Vanilla Market Report (March 2025); Monchy Natural Products Global Market Report (July 2024); Vanilla Roots direct transaction data (Indonesia). Indonesia 2023 Tridge: $104–$258/kg; 2024: $104–$178/kg. Madagascar 2023 Tridge: $9–$204/kg range reflects extreme grade stratification post-floor cancellation. US retail 2025: Procurement Tactics $152.35–$241.32/kg. All prices USD/kg FOB cured beans unless noted. Contact Vanilla Roots for a current lot-specific quote with CoA.


Reading the Data
How to Interpret These Price Ranges

Why the same year shows such wide price ranges

Vanilla doesn't have one price — it has several simultaneously describing different points in the chain:

  • Farm-gate green bean price (uncured, local currency) — not comparable to FOB
  • FOB cured export price — the standard international benchmark used here
  • Government export floors (Madagascar) — enforced at customs, distorts published ranges
  • Organic, Rainforest Alliance, or traceable premiums — 20–60% above conventional
  • Retail markup — typically 3–5× FOB, reflecting intermediary layering

The Indonesia price anomaly in 2023–24

Indonesia's FOB range of $104–$258/kg in 2023 looks counterintuitive given Madagascar's collapse to $9–20/kg for low grades. The explanation is local speculation:

  • Local Indonesian actors took long speculative positions expecting price recovery
  • Export volumes were limited (~150MT in 2023), reducing price-discovery pressure
  • By 2024–25 these positions unwound; Indonesian prices normalised to $50–90/kg Grade A
  • Current Indonesian pricing reflects genuine market clearing, not a speculative floor

The metric that matters more than price per kg

Cost per gram of extractable vanillin is the real comparison metric for extract houses and manufacturers. Lower headline price with lower vanillin content and higher moisture can cost more per gram of actual flavour compound than premium material.

A CoA showing vanillin %, moisture level, and grade confirmation is the only basis for a true cost comparison. Indonesian Grade B extraction beans at $15–40/kg with 1.5%+ vanillin content often outperform commodity Madagascar at equivalent cost per gram of flavour.

Why current low prices are a warning signal

Madagascar green vanilla fell to $1.50/kg farmgate in 2025. At that price, farmers cannot cover the cost of hand-pollination and curing — so they don't. Abandoned vines take 3–4 years to replace.

The structural conditions that produced the 2017–2018 spike — geographic concentration, slow supply response, speculative amplification — remain entirely in place. Buyers treating today's pricing as a permanent baseline are repeating the mistake of 2014.

Get the full 2025 Indonesia Vanilla Price Report

Seasonal price trends, grade benchmarks, and what's driving cost shifts — straight from the source. Based on real transaction data and direct observation from our curing regions.