bout how much does one sell a dozen farm fresh eggs?

I sell my at $3.00 a dozen and $5 for every 2 dozen. I'm only 13 and trying to get my own business started too, welcome to the club.


Good luck :)

Wow, you have a farm :) Here in the PDX city limits, the ordinance says 3 chickens per household/property without permit.
And yep, no roosters. The folks across the street have a rooster. No one minds.


Don't know who you're referring to, probably not me, but if so, nahhhh i wouldn't call it that :p maybe if/when i get goats it will be LOL and yeah, i feel like it depends in your neighbors. Some will complain about anything and some won't care.
 
Another Californian here (Wine country): Truely free range, organic, mostly soy free eggs are $10 per dozen for large, 8;50 for pullet eggs. That's at the farmers market.


Wow thats expensive


If you go to 'trendy' health food stores around here that is about the same going price, especially when you get into the upper class neighborhoods and small boutique type stores... One of our customers was paying $11 a dozen at her local boutique before she started buying from us...

Egg price varies all over the place based on location and regional cost of living...
 
If you go to 'trendy' health food stores around here that is about the same going price, especially when you get into the upper class neighborhoods and small boutique type stores... One of our customers was paying $11 a dozen at her local boutique before she started buying from us...

Egg price varies all over the place based on location and regional cost of living...


Yeah, actually i guess at the health and specialty stores like that it's probably about the same here. But I've always just bought regular eggs so i wouldn't know the prices. I don't think I'd pay that though lol

That's very true.
 
Wow, you have a farm :) Here in the PDX city limits, the ordinance says 3 chickens per household/property without permit.
And yep, no roosters. The folks across the street have a rooster. No one minds.

Yes, we're on the SW side in unincorporated Washington county on around 5 acres. On the one hand it's good to have neighborhoods close- easy to find people who want to buy eggs and produce without being so far out that nobody will make the drive- but the cities get closer every day!

So glad you're in a rooster friendly neighborhood, ordinances be darned
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IF YOU PAY 8.00 TO $11.00 /DOZ. FOR EGGS ANYWHERE THEY NEED TO BE LOCKED UP FOR EXTORTION. AROUND HERE FOR LARGE BROWN PENNED IN COUNTRY EGGS IS $2.00/DOZ. IF ANY HIGHER THEY LAUGH AT YOU.--COUNTRY BOY CAN SURVIVE
 
IF YOU PAY 8.00 TO $11.00 /DOZ. FOR EGGS ANYWHERE THEY NEED TO BE LOCKED UP FOR EXTORTION.


No one is forcing people to buy them at that price, so it's not extortion...

Price will vary by location just like many other things, you simply can't compare prices in a highly rural low cost of living area to an extremely high cost of living urban area, it's truly two different worlds...

Many people in the rural US are utterly shell shocked when they see 2 bedroom condos with no land in my area sell for $250-500K or even more, or hear that people will buy a 2 million dollar house on 1/4 acre and tear it down because they only wanted the 1/4 of land to build a new multi-million dollar house or just didn't like the house next to theirs and wanted a small play yard... Or hear that yearly property taxes alone on a $500K house on a 1/2 acre lot house is going to be $20K or more a year... And, I don't even live in a real urban area, I'm in the far-far Northern suburbs of Chicago, prices only go up as you head closer to the city...

I don't smoke but another shell shock for many outside the area, is the cost of cigarettes in many major cities, in Chicago there is $6.16 worth of taxes on each package of cigarettes, pushing the sale price of name brand smokes to $12 a pack...
 
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