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The Cost of Eating Well: How Price Barriers Are Reshaping America’s Relationship with Healthy Food

Senior woman in the supermarket checks her grocery receipt looking worried about rising costs - elderly lady pushing shopping cart, consumerism concept, rising prices, inflation

Key Takeaways: 



Americans want to eat healthy, but grocery prices are getting in the way, according to
new data from Pew Research Center. The survey of more than 5,000 U.S. adults explores evolving attitudes toward healthy eating, food priorities, and purchasing behaviors. 

Taste and cost take priority

When deciding what to eat, a decisive 83% of U.S. adults consider taste extremely or very important when making food choices, ranking it higher than cost (62%), healthiness (52%), or convenience (47%). This hierarchy of priorities remains consistent across demographic groups. Even among those who seek healthy foods, taste remains the dominant consideration. 

Rising food prices have created significant challenges for consumers striving to eat healthier.  Nine in 10 respondents say healthy food has become more expensive in recent years, and 69% report that these price increases have made it more difficult to maintain a healthy diet.

The economic burden falls disproportionately on lower-income Americans — 46% of lower-income adults say increased costs make it “a lot more difficult” to eat healthy, compared to just 15% of upper-income adults. And 75% of lower-income Americans consider cost highly important when making food choices, compared to 39% of upper-income consumers.

Other key takeaways from the report include: 

Implications for food and beverage manufacturers

1. Prioritize taste while delivering nutrition

The data clearly shows that taste remains the primary driver of food choices across all demographic groups. Successful healthy products must deliver on flavor expectations first, with nutritional benefits as a supporting attribute. Consider investing in flavor technology and culinary expertise to ensure healthier formulations maintain appealing taste profiles.

2. Address the affordability gap

With 69% of Americans saying price increases make healthy eating more difficult, there’s a clear opportunity for manufacturers who can deliver nutritional value at more accessible price points. 

Consider:

3. Support the home cooking trend

With 88% of Americans cooking at home multiple times weekly and home cooks reporting healthier diets, food companies may benefit from developing products that facilitate nutritious home meal preparation, such as:

4. Enhance nutritional education and transparency

Since those with higher nutritional knowledge report healthier diets, manufacturers should invest in clear communication about the nutritional benefits of their products:

5. Address access disparities

With significant gaps in healthy food access across demographic groups and geographic areas, manufacturers should consider:

The Pew Research Center’s findings show that while consumers increasingly value health, they continue to prioritize taste and struggle with rising costs. For food and beverage manufacturers, success will come from developing products that deliver on multiple fronts — exceptional taste, nutritional benefits, affordability, and convenience.

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