Wells Fargo: Smart Shopping Pushes Thanksgiving Meal Costs Lower Despite Overall Grocery Inflation

Retail competition and improved supplies are helping offset food inflation, pushing Thanksgiving meal costs modestly lower despite higher prices for beef, eggs, and dairy.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (RFD-TV) — A new report from the Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute shows that Thanksgiving dinner is one of the few bright spots for food budgets this fall.

While grocery prices overall remain up 2.7 percent from a year ago, a traditional 10-person Thanksgiving meal is 2-3 percent cheaper than last year, thanks to lower turkey prices, aggressive retailer promotions, and national-brand competition with private-label products.

Wells Fargo’s analysis — led by Dr. Michael Swanson, Robin Wenzel, and Courtney Schmidt — places an all-private-label dinner at $80, while an all-national-brand basket reaches $95.

Turkey remains the most significant contributor to savings, with national-brand whole-bird prices down 3.7 percent from last year after producers and retailers aligned inventories early.

Frozen vegetables also delivered significant year-over-year declines for national brands, down 15 percent, even as private-label vegetables held steady. Other key meal components showed mixed movement: private-label dinner rolls fell 22 percent, gravy mix, stuffing, and fresh cranberries dropped 3–4 percent, and national-brand pumpkin pies eased 3 percent. Prepared mashed potatoes — a fast-growing convenience item — slipped 1.5 percent on strong supplies and brand-to-brand competition.

Most remaining items were flat or slightly higher. Prepackaged salad mix rose 0.3 percent, and whipping cream gained 3 percent, reflecting broader dairy trends. Beverage categories moved in different directions: beer is up 3 percent, wine is flat, and soft drinks split — 12-oz cans down 3 percent, but 2-liter bottles up 7 percent, though still roughly 31 percent cheaper per ounce than cans.

Overall, Wells Fargo says strategic brand choices give consumers unusual flexibility this year, keeping the cost of a full holiday meal at one of the most affordable points since inflation began accelerating.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Retail competition and improved supplies are helping offset food-inflation pressure, pushing Thanksgiving meal costs modestly lower despite higher prices in beef, eggs, and dairy.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Markets Specialist
Related Stories
U.S. Trade officials announced new deals with El Salvador, Guatemala, Ecuador, and Argentina, as well as a steep reduction in tariffs on Swiss imports.
Some sustainability shifts are not particularly challenging and can be implemented with resources already available to farmers and ranchers on their operations.
Winter weather will challenge livestock producers working to rebuild their herds despite harsh conditions.
Enforceable origin labels could create clearer premiums for U.S. cattle and address concerns some producers have had with competition from foreign imported beef.
Rural businesses report softer sales, tougher hiring, and restrained investment — a backdrop that can pinch farm support capacity even if posted prices cool.
Friday’s release will be the first WASDE report in about two months, and early estimates indicate a corn surplus is still on the way.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Strong demand supports sweet potatoes, but grading challenges and rising costs weigh on returns for Southeastern growers.
Pressure on grain storage capacity and stronger export positioning are pushing more grain onto railroads, highways, and river systems as logistics become a key bottleneck this fall.
The Cotton-4 are pushing hard for new value chain investments. Still, many U.S. cotton producers face unsustainable losses, and weakened regional textile capacity threatens the survival of the Carolina “dirt-to-shirt” supply chain.
Late harvest and tight supplies shape crop progress and agribusiness this week. Here is a regional snapshot of harvest pace, crop conditions, logistics, and livestock economics across U.S. agriculture for the week of Dec. 1, 2025.
Cargill’s commitment to keep plants open helps preserve competition as Tyson removes capacity amid historically tight cattle supplies.
Fair market value shapes taxes, transitions, lending, and sales, making accurate valuation essential for long-term planning.