Tag: surcharge

  • Egg surcharge hits diners’ wallets: Experts say consumers should fear menu price hikes more

    Egg surcharge hits diners’ wallets: Experts say consumers should fear menu price hikes more

    Consumers are being hit with temporary surcharges due to the ongoing egg shortage in the U.S. food system. But experts told FOX Business that these surcharges are the lesser of two evils when compared to overall menu price increases. 

    Michelle Korsmo, the CEO of the National Restaurant Association (NAR), said that these surcharges are a temporary measure and can be removed from menus when macroeconomic conditions improve. 

    “When a restaurant operator adds a surcharge to their menu in a situation like this, it’s generally because they are optimistic that it will be resolved quickly and because they want to be transparent with their customers about their rising costs,” Korsmo told FOX Business. 

    For instance, the Waffle House, a Southern breakfast food chain, added a temporary 50 cent-per-egg surcharge to all of its menus on Monday. 

    WAFFLE HOUSE, OTHER COMPANIES ADD EGG SURCHARGE AMID SHORTAGE

    The company blamed the ongoing egg shortage caused by highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) – or bird flu – for the dramatic increase in egg prices, saying that “consumers and restaurants are being forced to make difficult decisions.”  

    While the company didn’t specify when the charge would be removed, it said that it will adjust or remove the surcharge when market conditions allow.

    A menu in a Waffle House restaurant displays a sticker advising customers of a 50 cent price hike per egg “due to the nationwide rise in the cost of eggs,” in Houston, Texas, on Feb. 6, 2025.  (Gianrigo Marletta/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Changing the price on a menu will often add to an operator’s costs. It also doesn’t give them the opportunity to have the same transparency with customers about why the price is changing, Korsmo added.

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    “I think that most of the time, what we see with other types of inflation . . . it never really comes back down as low as it was in a pre-inflationary period, which is where we just get this kind of ongoing sense of a tougher economy,” Korsmo said.

    California restaurant

    Customers at a restaurant at the Ferry Building in San Francisco, California, US, on Friday, May 31, 2024. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Sylvain Charlebois, professor and senior director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab, highlighted that surcharges can be adjusted or removed as costs fluctuate, whereas menu price changes are more permanent and noticeable.  

    “Customers tend to react more negatively to visible price hikes than to separate fees, even if the net cost remains the same,” said Charlebois. “While consumers may dislike extra fees, surcharges provide transparency by itemizing specific costs, such as supply chain disruptions, labor expenses or credit card processing fees,” 

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    Forrest Leighton, senior vice president of marketing at customer intelligence platform Chatmeter, told FOX Business that many restaurant customers are questioning the value of higher-priced menu items. 

    Chatmeter helps restaurants analyze customer feedback to inform decisions around menu items, prices, and operations. Its data shows that the number of pricing-related reviews calling restaurants “overpriced” rose more than 40% in 2024, while the number mentioning the word “cheap” dropped over 10%.  

    However, surcharges can provide customers with transparency around why the price is going up, which helps make it more palatable, Leighton said, adding that loyal customers are less likely to walk away from a price increase they deem to be temporary and beyond the brand’s control, which surcharges often are.  

    Diners on the outdoor patio of a restaurant in Atlanta, Georgia, on Monday, Sept. 16, 2024.  (Photographer: Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Max Chodorow, one of the owners of Jean’s in New York City, told FOX Business that he wished he could add a surcharge, but legally, he can’t in the city. 

    “Our costs are constantly growing, and there’s only so much we can raise prices with consumer psychology,” Chodorow said. 

    Chodorow said that a surcharge is easier to implement because people primarily react to sticker shock of the menu price. The only surcharge that restaurants are allowed to apply in New York state is an auto gratuity on parties over a certain size or special events, and it needs to be disclosed to the customer along certain guidelines, according to Chodorow. 

    They are not allowed to do anything with the fee “beyond pass it directly to tipped employees,” Chodorow said. 

  • Waffle House, other companies add egg surcharge amid shortage

    Waffle House, other companies add egg surcharge amid shortage

    Consumers are not only feeling the effects of high egg prices at the grocery store. Now, they’re facing surcharges at restaurants.

    Ongoing outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) “is making eggs as expensive for restaurants as they are for consumers, according to National Restaurant Association Executive Vice President of Public Affairs Sean Kennedy, who noted that the “price increase is especially hard for breakfast-focused restaurants to manage.” 

    A prime example is the Waffle House, a Southern breakfast food chain Waffle House that implemented a temporary .50 per egg surcharge to all of its menus on Monday. 

    The company blamed the ongoing egg shortage caused by highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) — or bird flu — for the dramatic increase in egg prices, saying that “consumers and restaurants are being forced to make difficult decisions.” 

    EGG PRICES AREN’T COMING DOWN ANYTIME SOON, EXPERTS SAY

    In an aerial view, a Waffle House restaurant on July 30, 2024 in Miami Gardens, Florida.  ( Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Experts have long warned that egg prices are likely to remain high as outbreaks of HPAI — or bird flu — continue to impact the U.S. laying hen flock, leading to higher prices in stores. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has predicted that egg prices, which can vary significantly from month to month, will increase by more than 20% by 2025.

    According to the USDA, prices were 36.8% higher in December 2024 than a year earlier, but they were still below peak prices in January 2023.

    Waffle House said, “Rather than increasing prices across the menu, this is a temporary targeted surcharge tied to the unprecedented rise in egg prices,” the company said, adding that eggs will remain a key ingredient in its menu. 

    groceries

    A customer shops for eggs in a Kroger grocery store on August 15, 2022 in Houston, Texas.  (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    With more than 1,900 locations in 25 states, predominantly in the Midwest and the South, the company said it hopes “these price fluctuations will be short-lived” but that it cannot predict how long this shortage will last.  

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    It plans to monitor egg prices, and “will adjust or remove the surcharge as market conditions allow.” 

    Roosters in Texas

    Roosters roam on a farm on Jan. 23, 2023 in Austin, Texas. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Kennedy noted that when shortages arise, operators will collaborate closely with their food suppliers to assess the impact, and subsequently, they will explore various options to mitigate the financial repercussions. This may involve altering their menus and raising prices. Kennedy also mentioned that the association is assisting operators in navigating this situation.

    Eric See, the owner and chef of the New York-based Mexican café and bakery, Ursula, told FOX Business that the prices of whole eggs have doubled, while the cost of liquid eggs has risen by about 25%.

    The other issue, according to See, is that eggs are hard to come by. “Availability is another issue, they arent always in stock,” said See. 

    cage-free-eggs

    Large amount of Cage Free eggs at Costco store, Florida. (Photo by: Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    James Wong, co-owner of the San Francisco bakery Breadbelly, told Eater that his prices have surged by 150% over the past four months as a result of the nationwide outbreaks.

    Wong said the bakery, which sells breakfast sandwiches, may be forced to cut back on menu items since sourcing the right size of eggs has proven difficult as well.

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    “If we can’t get the right size egg, then it’s a different product for the customer,” he told the outlet. 

    FOX Business’ Kristen Altus contributed to this report.