You Know It’s Bad When Waffle House Is Raising Egg Prices

by | Feb 6, 2025 | COMMUNITY, CULTURE, NEWS, NIGHTLIFE, OPINION & EDITORIAL

Waffle House is the kind of place that doesn’t flinch. Hurricanes, power outages, late-night chaos—it stays open through it all. The idea of it closing or changing is almost unthinkable. But now, something’s shifted.

They’re not closing their doors, but they’re raising egg prices. A bird flu outbreak has sent egg costs through the roof, and even Waffle House—that symbol of consistency and resilience—is feeling it. They’re adding a .50 per egg surcharge to every order, something that would have been unimaginable not long ago.

Waffle-House-egg-prices_Jon-Tyson_RVA-Magazine-2025
Photo by Jon Tyson

For perspective, FEMA uses the “Waffle House Index” to gauge disaster severity. If a Waffle House shuts down, you know it’s serious. But this isn’t about natural disasters. This is about something slower, quieter—a creeping economic strain that even the most reliable institutions can’t dodge.

These days, every egg feels like it’s made of gold. The nationwide average price for a dozen eggs in December was $4.15, but prices have surged since. In the Midwest, a dozen eggs now cost $7.08 wholesale—that’s nearly seven times higher than two years ago, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

In New York City, a dozen cage-free eggs at Whole Foods will set you back $11.99. Some grocery stores in NYC and Chicago have even started limiting how many cartons customers can buy. And the USDA predicts no relief anytime soon, forecasting another 20% jump in prices this year.

Millions of hens have been culled, supply chains are strained, and prices are climbing. It’s a reminder that no place is untouchable. So the next time you’re at Waffle House and you see that extra charge on your bill, it’s more than just a few cents. It’s a sign of the times.

If Waffle House is feeling it, we all are.

Main photo by Moses Malik Roldan


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Salty Oldman

Salty Oldman

A veteran writer from Richmond who’s seen it all. Don’t take what I write too seriously—I certainly don’t.




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