Records were broken with over 63,435 MT exported in the month of March of cheese alone, an all-time high for single month exports, jumping over 29% from March of 2025. Butterfat and AMF exports also set a single month record at 17,074 MT shipped, 109.9% higher than March of 2025.
The world wants U.S. cheese with a shift in desire for western-style foods, more restaurant and food service demand at a competitive price not found in other countries due to our abundance of supply available her in the United States. Cheese exports are trending higher, with the first quarter of 2026 totaling an increase of 23.2% higher year over year.
Meanwhile, butter production was up 1.2% in March while butter exports year-to-date are up nearly 93.2% from the same quarter last year. Which raises the question if the U.S. can keep up with the export demand despite the increasing production. Churns are running seven days a week with growing milk and cream supply and spring flush is here with outstanding weather for cow comfort.
While cheese and butterfat are the stars of the show, milk powders are the most vulnerable in the export category. Nonfat dry milk (NFDM) and skim milk powder (SMP) broke their four-month year over year growth streak with a decline of 8% lower volume in the month of March 2026 when compared to the extremely high volume traded in March of 2026. All is not lost though, March 2026 was still the highest export volume we’ve seen in five months, it’s comparison to March 2025, being the highest export volume of the whole year, makes the year over year data look poorer than it is.
When looking at the dairy export data, the volume is certainly impressive, however the economic impact is outstanding. The value of dairy products exported reached the high dollar amount of $892.4 million in March, the highest monthly value seen in nearly four years. This is an increase of 6% more value year over year as reported from the USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service.
The biggest markets for U.S. exports of dairy products in total value during the first quarter of the year were Mexico at $675.4 million, up 10% YoY, Canada who declined 19% YoY still came in second with total dollars purchased coming in at $295.4 million, Japan at $156.4 million, up 8%; South Korea at $145.5 million, up 19%; and China dropping 24% in 2026 with ongoing trade negotiations coming in at $123.9 million. All other major customers were under $100 million with anywhere from Colombia up 77% YoY to Philippines down 10% with most showing big increases YoY.
So, while the market wants to focus on the massive amount of production the United States is producing, the export program continues to be a bright light. World demand is continuing to increase, and we have the supply to feed it.
Sarah Jungman is a commodity broker with AgMarket.Net and AgDairy, the dairy division of John Stewart & Associates Inc. (JSA). JSA is a full-service commodity brokerage firm based out of St. Joseph, MO. Sarah’s office is located in Winterset, Iowa and she may be reached at 515-272-5799 or through the website www.agmarket.net.
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