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Tamil Nadu News Updated Jul 8, 2026

Tamil Nadu Private Dairies Hike Milk, Curd Prices by Rs 4/Litre from July 9

Private dairy companies in Tamil Nadu will increase retail prices of milk and curd by Rs 4 per litre from July 9, marking the second price hike this year. The rise is attributed to higher procurement costs and a worsening shortage of raw milk due to declining production in several southern states. The Tamil Nadu Milk Agents and Workers Welfare Association criticized the move but noted that summer rain failures have impacted output, with farmers shifting from state-run Aavin to private firms for better prices. Arokya Milk has already informed distributors of the revision, and industry observers expect other private dairies to follow suit.

Private dairies in Tamil Nadu to raise milk, curd prices by Rs 4 a litre from tomorrow

Chennai, July 8

Consumers across Tamil Nadu will have to pay more for milk and curd from Thursday, with private dairy companies set to increase retail prices by Rs 4 per litre from July 9.

The latest revision will be the second price hike by private dairies this year and comes amid rising procurement costs and a worsening shortage of raw milk.

The Tamil Nadu Milk Agents and Workers Welfare Association criticised the proposed increase but said the dairy sector was facing an unprecedented supply crisis due to declining milk production in several southern States.

According to the association, the failure of the summer rains has adversely affected milk production in Tamil Nadu, while output has also fallen in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Kerala and the Union Territory of Puducherry.

The shortage has intensified competition among private dairy companies to procure milk from farmers, forcing them to offer higher procurement prices and additional incentives.

The association alleged that many dairy farmers who had earlier supplied milk to the State-run Aavin had shifted to private companies because of the better prices being offered.

It claimed that Aavin's daily milk procurement had fallen to around 25 lakh litres during the previous administration and was yet to recover to earlier levels, further tightening supplies in the market.

The organisation urged the Tamil Nadu government to introduce a scheme to provide free milch cows to farmers, arguing that such a measure would help increase milk production, improve rural incomes and stabilise the State's milk supply in the long term.

Private dairy companies had earlier raised the retail prices of milk and curd by Rs 2 per litre in February, citing higher procurement costs. The association said the latest Rs 4 increase was necessitated by a further rise in input costs, including transportation expenses and the prices of packaging materials and other raw materials used in dairy production.

It also linked the increase in logistics costs to higher international crude oil prices following the conflict in West Asia.

One of the State's leading private dairy brands, Arokya Milk, has informed its distributors and agents that the revised prices will come into effect from Thursday.

Industry observers expect other private dairy companies operating in Tamil Nadu to follow suit, adding to the financial burden on consumers.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Honestly, I understand the farmers' plight. If they're not getting fair prices from Aavin, they will shift to private players. But why should consumers bear the brunt? The government should give subsidies or free milch cows like the association is suggesting. Otherwise, middle-class families will struggle to afford basic dairy products.

Arjun K

Classic case of 'supply and demand'. If milk production is down due to failed rains, prices will go up. Private dairies are not charities. But this is a wake-up call for Tamil Nadu to focus on dairy farming. The government needs to invest in irrigation and animal husbandry, not just freebies.

Kavya N

My monthly milk bill is already ₹1800 for two kids. Now this! 🙄 In my apartment complex, we are pooling together to buy directly from a farmer in Kanchipuram. Cheaper and fresher. The middlemen and these big dairies are the real problem. Good luck to everyone else.

Michael C

Interesting to see how global events like the West Asia conflict affect even our local milk prices. The world is truly connected. But instead of blaming commodity prices, the dairy sector should innovate—maybe use fodder banks or technology to boost production. Just hiking prices is a short-term fix.

Ravi K

I've been buying Arokya milk for years, but this is too much. ₹4 per litre is a big jump. The association says procurement costs are up, but what about profit margins? Private dairies should show some transparency. Also, why is Aavin not able to compete? That's a failure of state planning.

Reader Voices

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