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Food prices soar in Lahore despite official rates

Published on: December 29, 2025 11:30 PM

Lahore residents faced rising  this week as chicken, vegetables, and fruits sold far above official rates. Market surveys revealed widespread overcharging and weak enforcement of government-set prices. Consumers struggled to find chicken and fresh produce at the notified rates.

Chicken prices led the surge, with live chicken officially set at Rs379–393 per kg but largely unavailable. Chicken meat, fixed at Rs569 per kg, sold between Rs600 and Rs680, while boneless chicken retailed at Rs900–1,100 per kg. Soft-skin potatoes sold at Rs50–80 per kg, onions at Rs80–100, and tomatoes at Rs100–150 per kg.

Read more: FAO Food Price Index drops for third month in a row

Garlic and ginger also traded above official rates. Local garlic, fixed at Rs157–165 per kg, sold at Rs200–250, while Harani garlic reached Rs400 per kg. Thai ginger fell officially to Rs275–290 but retailed at Rs400–450 per kg. Bitter gourd, peas, spinach, and other vegetables continued to trade well above government rates.

Fruit prices showed similar gaps, with apples selling at Rs250–600 per kg, bananas at Rs120–180 per dozen, and guava at Rs120–140 per kg. Pomegranates ranged from Rs700 to 1,400 per kg, and papaya sold at Rs250–350 per kg. Citrus fruits also remained above the notified rates in most markets.

Read more: Global commodity prices to hit six-year low by 2026: World Bank

Traders blamed supply disruptions and rising input costs, while consumers said weekly price lists have become largely irrelevant. Officials have yet to strengthen enforcement, leaving residents to pay significantly higher rates for essential food items.

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: chicken and vegetable rates, food inflation Pakistan, fruit prices Lahore, government price control, Lahore food prices, Latest, Pakistan inflation

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