Non-Veg Thali Cost Drops 1% in March; Veg Thali Prices Stable

The cost of a home-cooked non-vegetarian thali decreased by one percent year-on-year in March 2026. Meanwhile, the price of a vegetarian thali remained stable as lower costs for onions, potatoes, and pulses balanced out higher expenses for tomatoes, oil, and fuel. A sharp 33% annual rise in tomato prices, due to delayed transplantation in key states, was a major factor. The report also noted month-on-month declines for both types of thalis.

Key Points: Non-Veg Thali Cost Falls, Veg Stable in March: Crisil

  • Non-veg thali cost fell 1% year-on-year
  • Veg thali price remained flat
  • Tomato prices spiked 33%, onions fell 25%
  • Broiler price drop drove non-veg cost decline
  • Month-on-month, both thali types saw cost reductions
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Non-vegetarian thali cost drops 1% in March; Vegetarian thali prices remain stable: Crisil Report

Crisil report shows a 1% drop in non-vegetarian thali cost in March, while vegetarian thali prices remained stable due to shifting vegetable prices.

"Cost of non-vegetarian thali fell 1% on-year in March, while that of vegetarian thali remained stable - Crisil Report"

New Delhi, April 7

The cost of a home-cooked non-vegetarian thali fell by one per cent year-on-year in March 2026, while the price of a vegetarian meal remained stable during the same period. This difference in pricing emerged as lower costs for staples such as onions, potatoes, and pulses effectively offset the rising expenses associated with tomatoes, vegetable oil, and fuel.

According to the latest Roti Rice Rate report from Crisil Intelligence, the average cost of preparing these meals was calculated based on input prices prevailing across North, South, East, and West India. The monthly indicator report reflected the impact of these price shifts on the common man's expenditure, identifying specific ingredients like cereals, broilers, and spices as the primary drivers of change.

"Cost of non-vegetarian thali fell 1% on-year in March, while that of vegetarian thali remained stable, as lower prices of potatoes, onions and pulses offset higher costs of tomatoes, vegetable oil and fuel," the report stated.

A significant factor behind the flat pricing of the vegetarian thali was a sharp spike in tomato costs. Prices for the vegetable rose 33 per cent year-on-year to Rs 28 per kg in March 2026, up from Rs 21 per kg in March 2025. This increase was driven by delayed transplantation in key producing regions, including Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, which adversely impacted crop development, yield, and the timing of arrivals in the market.

Conversely, "onion prices fell 25% on-year due to excess supply from overlapping late kharif arrivals and rabi harvest, coupled with weak exports, leading to distress sales given the limited shelf life of late kharif onions," the report noted.

Potato prices also decreased by 13 per cent year-on-year, a trend attributed to weak demand from the hotel, restaurant, and catering sectors alongside general stock liquidation.

However, the report highlighted that global supply disruptions led to a six per cent rise in vegetable oil prices and a 14 per cent increase in the cost of liquefied petroleum gas cylinders. These factors limited the overall decline in thali costs for households.

The reduction in the non-vegetarian thali cost was primarily supported by a two per cent drop in broiler prices. "The cost of a non-veg thali fell due to an estimated 2% on-year decline in broiler prices, which accounted for ~50% of the cost, on a high base," the report said.

On a month-on-month basis, the cost of both vegetarian and non-vegetarian thalis declined by three per cent and two per cent, respectively.

The report further showed that tomato and potato prices dipped six per cent each on a month-on-month basis, while onion prices fell 14 per cent. Pulse prices followed a similar downward trajectory, declining six per cent due to higher opening stocks.

"Tur inventories for the July-June marketing year are estimated to be 20% higher, while Bengal gram stocks for the January-December marketing year are ~10% higher this season, exerting downward pressure on prices," the report stated.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
"Stable" vegetarian thali cost is a bit misleading when LPG cylinder prices are up 14%. The gas bill is what's really burning a hole in the pocket. The overall cost of living feels like it's only going up, report or no report.
A
Aman W
Finally some good news for non-veg lovers! A 2% drop in chicken prices makes a difference when you're feeding a family. Hope this trend continues. Onions and potatoes getting cheaper is a blessing for every Indian household, veg or non-veg.
S
Sarah B
Interesting data, but these are average costs. The actual experience in cities like Mumbai or Bangalore is very different from smaller towns. Vegetable prices, especially tomatoes, fluctuate wildly by locality and even by the hour at the market!
V
Vikram M
The report mentions "distress sales" for onions due to weak exports. This is the real tragedy. Our farmers produce a surplus but can't get a fair price. The system needs to support them better, not just give us slightly cheaper thalis.
K
Kavya N
As a homemaker, I track these prices daily. Pulses and onions being cheaper is a big help. But tomato prices are still a worry. We end up adjusting recipes or using less. Hope the government's measures for better crop planning work out. 🙏

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