New Yorkers Scramble for Free Eggs

Trying to find eggs on New York City grocery shelves can be hit or miss.

Abou Sow hands out cartons of eggs to people waiting in line to receive free eggs from FarmerJawn Agriculture, March 21, 2025, Harlem, New York.
Abou Sow hands out cartons of eggs to people waiting in line to receive free eggs from FarmerJawn Agriculture, March 21, 2025, Harlem, New York.
AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson

NEW YORK (AP) โ€” Hundreds of people lined up Friday morning at three sites in New York City, some arriving more than an hour early, for the opportunity to snag one of the nation's hottest commodities: a dozen free eggs.

People were bundled up against the windy cold as they stood outside a Harlem restaurant, patiently waiting to be handed a carton. Less than 10 minutes later, the 100 cartons were gone, leaving many empty-handed.

โ€œI heard from the news that they will be giving around, like, 1,500 eggs, or something like that. OK? And I just came because I needed some eggs, and then Iโ€™m waiting here in the line, and I donโ€™t see anything,โ€ said Jackeline Tejava, who was in a line that stretched around the block. โ€œThey say that the eggs are gone, but it hasnโ€™t been not even more than 20 people, so I donโ€™t know what happened.โ€

Egg prices hit a record high last month as the U.S. contends with a bird flu outbreak, which has forced poultry farms to slaughter more than 168 million birds since 2022.

Trying to find eggs on grocery store shelves in New York City can be hit or miss. When they are in stock, they can be pricey.

Fridayโ€™s giveaway was organized by FarmerJawn, a 128-acre (52-hectare) Pennsylvania farm thatโ€™s focused on providing organic food to underserved communities. FarmerJawn held other egg giveaways Friday in Brooklyn and Queens. The group also handed out free cartons in New York last month.

โ€œWeโ€™re doing this egg giveaway because, as food producers, we believe itโ€™s our responsibility to support the communities that support us,โ€ the group said in a written statement. It partnered with a local butchery and a upstate New York farm to organize Fridayโ€™s events.

โ€œFood is medicine, and everyone - especially the often-forgotten middle class - deserves access to it,โ€ Farmerjawn said.

Other organizations, including churches, have recently held egg giveaways in New York and elsewhere around the country, including Las Vegas, Chicago, Philadelphia and Richland County, South Carolina.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture expects egg prices to rise 41% this year over last yearโ€™s average of $3.17 per dozen. A carton of eggs in New York City can often run twice or three times that amount, depending on the store.

Marion Johnson, who waited more than two hours at the Harlem giveaway but didn't get a free carton, said she can't afford eggs.

โ€œThey're so expensive,โ€ she said. โ€œThis is not fair. ... They know everybody gonna be on line like this.โ€

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