This Is Why Some Eggs Are Significantly More Expensive

We found out if they're worth the splurge.

eggsSea Wave/ShutterstockIt seems like an egg is an egg. They donโ€™t need pesticides, no egg-laying chickens get hormones, and there are never any ingredients added. So why are some more expensive, and are they worth the price?

Some of the priciest eggs youโ€™ll see in the supermarket are cage-free and pasture-raised. They sound similar, but neither means the chickens are necessarily roaming free on the farm. Most conventional eggs come from chickens that live in indoor cages. The cages are stacked, and each one fits four to twelve birds, according to NPR, so theyโ€™re the cheapest way for a farmer to produce a lot of eggs.

If youโ€™re buying cage-free, the chickens that laid the eggs werenโ€™t confined to the 67 square inches or so. But that doesnโ€™t mean they have prime space to stretch their wings. Even cage-free birds could be indoors, and they have an average of just one square foot to themselves. Find out what other misleading food label tricks you keep falling for.

โ€œCage-free just means they can roam in an open area, whereas with pasture-raised, theyโ€™re actually outside,โ€ says registered dietitian nutritionist Caroline Passerrello, MS, RDN, LDN, spokesperson for the American Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Those pasture-raised chickens spend most of their time outside, where they can eat a natural diet of worms, grass, and bugs with their corn feed.

Still, the conditions for cage-free or pasture-raised chickens can vary. โ€œThese terms are defined by the government, but because they arenโ€™t incredibly specific, they actually vary state to state and even company to company,โ€ says Sara Haas RDN, LDN, a Chicago-based consultant chef and dietitian. So some pasture-raised birds might be on big farms with bushes and trees, while others could be on a small field without much space. Regardless, more space for each bird means itโ€™s more expensive for the farmers, so cage-free and pasture-raised eggs have higher price tags. (On a similar note, find out if grass-fed beef is worth the buy.)

Organic, meanwhile, has stricter requirements. The chickens can only eat organic feed, must be cage-free with access to the outdoors, and canโ€™t be given antibiotics. Like other cage-free eggs, raising organic chickens costs more to produce, so youโ€™ll pay more at checkout. But be extra careful if you decide to buyโ€”shells of organic eggs tend to be thinner and more likely to crack, says Passerrello.

If ethics is your biggest concern, pasture-raised is your best bet. But nutritionally speaking, there isnโ€™t a huge difference between conventional eggs and organic. Some claim that when chickens produce healthier eggs when they can eat their natural diets, but the studies arenโ€™t convincing, says Passerrello. โ€œItโ€™s unlikely to have significant effects,โ€ she says. โ€œTheyโ€™re pretty nutritionally comparable.โ€

One expense that could be worth the price though? Eggs that say they have more omega-3 fatty acids. โ€œTo get omega-3s into eggs, farmers typically add flax seed to the feed,โ€ says Haas. If you’re showing signs your body needs more healthy fats but arenโ€™t crazy about fish oil or salmon, eggs rich in omega-3s could be worth the splurge, says Passerrello.

Pasteurized eggs could also be worthwhile, depending on how you use them. Eggs carry risk for salmonella, but the heating process of pasteurizing them kills the bacteria on the shell without cooking the egg. Salmonella isnโ€™t a concern if youโ€™re cooking the eggs, but pasteurized ones are a safe choice if youโ€™ll be eating raw cookie dough or making eggnog, says Passerrello.

Now that you’re well-versed on American eggs, find out the real reason Europeans don’t refrigerate their eggs.

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Marissa Laliberte
Marissa Laliberte-Simonian is a London-based associate editor with the global promotions team at WebMDโ€™s Medscape.com and was previously a staff writer for Reader's Digest. Her work has also appeared in Business Insider, Parents magazine, CreakyJoints, and the Baltimore Sun. You can find her on Instagram @marissasimonian.