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Valentine’s Day sticker shock: Chocolate prices are spiking
Valentine’s Day sticker shock: Chocolate prices are spiking
Matt Egan, CNN
Fri, February 13, 2026 at 7:00 PM GMT+9 3 min read
Chocolate prices have spiked 14.4% year-over-year during the January 1 to early February window, according to market intelligence firm Datasembly. - Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Chocolate lovers are experiencing sticker shock this Valentine’s Day.
Consumer prices for chocolate have spiked 14.4% year-over-year during the January 1 to early February window, according to market intelligence firm Datasembly.
That’s a significant acceleration from the 7.8% price hike during the same period last year and 10.5% in 2024, according to the research firm, which tracked the best prices for more than 4,000 chocolate products across 57,000 stores across the United States.
The higher chocolate prices reflect the linger effects of a global shortage in the primary ingredient: cocoa beans. That shortage, driven in part by poor harvests caused by extreme weather in West Africa, sent cocoa prices skyrocketing to unthinkable heights.
“Supply suddenly dropped even as demand stayed largely the same. Prices went through the roof,” David Branch, sector manager at the Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute, said in an interview.
Cocoa pods hang on a tree in Divo, West-Central Ivory Coast, on November 19, 2023. A shortage of cocoa beans, driven in part by extreme weather in West Africa, sent prices skyrocketing to unthinkable heights. - Sophie Garcia/AP
West Africa, which produces around 70% of the world’s cocoa, suffered such a loss of supply that cocoa bean futures skyrocketed from around $2,500 per metric ton in mid-2022 to above $12,600 in late 2024.
“We saw unprecedented cocoa inflation,” Stacy Taffet, chief growth officer at The Hershey Company, told CNN’s Kate Bolduan this week.
The Hershey executive said the company is focused on keeping items “as affordable as possible,” noting that around 75% of the company’s products are priced at less than $4.
The good news for consumers (and chocolate companies) is that cocoa prices have since crashed back to earth, recently dropping below $4,000 a metric ton for the first time in years.
The bad news: The chocolate on the shelves today were made with beans priced at or near those crisis-level highs.
“Retail prices remain sticky because candy makers buy cocoa months in advance and work through existing inventory,” Branch wrote in a report.
‘Slow and uneven’ relief coming
Valentine’s Day shoppers in certain cities are facing even bigger price hikes on chocolate.
According to Datasembly data shared with CNN, chocolate prices have surged by 17% in Denver and Los Angeles, while they are up 19% in the Dallas-Ft. Worth region.
For Americans at large, however, Branch said chocolate price hikes may cool by the time of Easter. By Halloween, he suspects chocolate prices will be falling because of the recent plunge in cocoa prices.
“Retail relief will be slow and uneven for consumers,” he said.
Valentine’s Day chocolates on February 12, 2025, in Greenbrae, California. - Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Branch said he does not view steep tariffs on US imports as a primary factor behind the chocolate price increases.
After affordability resurfaced as a major political challenge last November, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that shielded cocoa and other agricultural products not made in the United States from his historic tariffs.
“We can’t make cocoa in the US, so we were happy about that,” Taffet, the Hershey executive, said of the tariff relief.
The chocolate price spike is another reminder of how while the overall rate of inflation has eased from the four-decade high in 2022, prices for some items continue to rise rapidly.
Chocolate is a go-to candy purchased around Valentine’s Day, accounting for about 75% of all candy sold, according to the National Confectioners Association.
Americans are expected to spend $2.6 billion on candy this Valentine’s Day, according to estimates from the National Retail Federation.
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