Egg prices have been a pain point for American families, and this bill targets one reason they stay high: current FDA rules treat surplus eggs from broiler chicken hatcheries the same as regular shell eggs, even though those surplus eggs are headed to processing plants — not grocery shelves. That means hatcheries have to follow cold-storage rules designed for eggs people eat whole, which makes it impractical to sell the extras for processed egg products like liquid eggs. This bill would exempt those surplus hatching eggs from the shell egg storage requirements and direct the FDA to write new, more practical rules within 180 days. More eggs entering the processed egg supply could help bring down prices for products that use liquid eggs as an ingredient.
Congressional Summary
Lowering Egg Prices Act of 2025This bill permits unrefrigerated surplus eggs originally intended for hatching to be repurposed for use in pasteurized liquid egg products intended for consumption.Under current regulations, most eggs intended for consumption must be refrigerated within 36 hours of being laid. The bill would exempt from this requirement surplus broiler hatching eggs (eggs originally intended to be hatched and raised for meat) that are repurposed for sale to an egg breaker (a facility that sells liquid egg to food manufacturers).(Broiler hatching eggs are generally held at a warmer temperature than other eggs in order to facilitate incubation. Because these eggs are not refrigerated, current regulations prohibit the sale of any surplus broiler hatching eggs to egg breakers for use in liquid egg products. Liquid egg products distributed for consumption are separately required under current law to be pasteurized, or treated to destroy bacteria.)The bill also requires the Food and Drug Administration to revise the refrigeration requirement to permit surplus broiler hatching eggs held at temperatures suitable for hatching chicks to be sold to egg breakers for processing as liquid egg products.
Details
- Congress
- 119th
- Chamber
- Senate
- Status
- summarized
- Action
- Introduced in Senate
- Action Date
- 2025-12-10
- Date Added
- 2026-04-06