WASHINGTON, D.C. / Content Syndication Services / — Ground beef prices reached a record national average of $6.899 per pound in April, adding pressure to Memorial Day weekend cookouts and household food budgets across the United States. The price, reported for 100 percent ground beef in the U.S. city average, rose from $6.701 in March and $5.801 in April 2025, marking an 18.9 percent annual increase ahead of the traditional start of the summer grilling season.

The latest food price data show that beef inflation is extending beyond a single grocery item. Ground chuck averaged $6.921 per pound in April, up 15.4 percent from a year earlier, while lean and extra lean ground beef averaged $8.512 per pound, up 14.6 percent. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics also reported that uncooked ground beef averaged $7.056 per pound, reflecting broad retail increases for products commonly used in burgers and outdoor meals.
The increase comes as American families face higher prices for several cookout staples during a holiday weekend closely associated with travel, grilling and gatherings. Beef and veal prices rose 3.1 percent from March to April and were 14.8 percent higher than in April 2025. Fresh vegetables were 11.5 percent higher than a year earlier, while fresh tomatoes, a common burger topping, rose 39.7 percent over the same period.
Beef prices strain holiday meals
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has tied elevated beef prices to a smaller national cattle herd and tight supplies moving through the production chain. The national inventory of cattle and calves stood at 86.2 million head as of Jan. 1, slightly below 86.5 million a year earlier. Beef cows totaled 27.6 million head, down 1 percent, while the calf crop was estimated at 32.9 million head, down 2 percent.
Those supply figures are important for consumers because beef production depends on a long livestock cycle, from breeding herds to feedlots and retail meat cases. All cattle on feed were reported at 13.8 million head, down 3 percent from 2025, indicating fewer animals already placed for finishing. The contraction follows years in which drought conditions, feed costs and herd reductions affected ranching regions, limiting the flow of cattle available for processing.
Retail costs widen household pressure
Higher ground beef prices are part of a broader grocery picture that remains uneven across categories. Some food items have moderated, but beef has continued to climb because cattle supplies remain limited and demand has remained present at retail. For families planning Memorial Day meals, the price of burgers has become a visible example of how food inflation affects routine purchases, especially when several related items rise at the same time.
The April price of $6.899 per pound is the highest recorded for the 100 percent ground beef series and places a common cookout ingredient near $7 before regional, store and package differences. For households buying multiple pounds for gatherings, the increase from $5.801 a year earlier adds directly to meal costs. The rise underscores how national food price data are being felt in everyday shopping decisions during one of the busiest U.S. grilling weekends.